
Former Farage adviser claims Britain should not have fought in WW2
In his personal blog, Jack Anderton also suggested Britain should not support Ukraine in its fight against Putin's illegal invasion, saying: 'Russia is not our enemy'.
The 23-year old, who helped to run Mr Farage's TikTok account, has never been an official Reform UK employee.
The blog, first revealed by the Observer, also saw Mr Anderton claim the UK could 'regain' former colonies such as Australia, Canada and South Africa, as well as suggesting the UK should copy the policy of mass incarceration carried out in El Salvador, which has been condemned as a breach of human rights.
In a post from June 2024, titled 'A Self-Interested British Foreign Policy', Mr Anderton wrote: 'Britain spent nearly £3trn on WW1 and WW2. What did we get for that? We are no longer the great power we once were, we don't even get a thanks anymore.
'We impoverished ourselves for decades, we didn't finish paying the loans off to America until 2006.
'Our economy stagnated, we lost an empire, and we are pushed around by America. And Germany, a country we beat, has been richer than us since the 1970s.'
He said the only wars that were truly in Britain's interests were the Falklands war and the invasion of Egypt for control of the Suez Canal, adding: 'If Britain had not fought in WW1 and WW2, it would not have had to rely on America for economic support, and it would have had the independence to act accordingly.
'Britain could have developed India, Cyprus, Fiji, Malta, Saint Lucia, Seychelles, The Bahamas, Australia, Canada, South Africa, Ireland and New Zealand. In the coming Meritocracy, perhaps Britain could regain some of these nations.'
Suggesting Britain should not be supporting Ukraine, he wrote: 'Whilst yes, we are not at war with Russia, we are sending billions of pounds (that we cannot afford) to prop up a country that we have no allegiance to.
'Russia is not our enemy, they have not attacked Britain. It's perfectly acceptable and preferable to state that Russia is not our enemy, but they are not our friend either, we treat them with suspicion, but we do not escalate a conflict with them.
'Why are we fighting a European war? We do not border any of these countries. In their pursuit of all that is good and a handshake from Zelensky, the British ruling class is pushing this country into a war that we have nothing to do with.'
He added: 'At least in WW1, we got some land in the Middle East, we get nothing in return for our support of Ukraine.'
In a second post from, also from June 2024, Mr Anderton issues an endorsement of Nayib Bukele's policies - the president of El Salvador who has been accused by Amnesty of committing 'massive human rights violations, including thousands of arbitrary detentions and violations of due process, as well as torture and ill-treatment'. At least 18 people have died in state custody, the organisation said.
Seemingly endorsing his policies, Mr Anderton said: 'Extraordinary times require extraordinary measures. I'd even argue the measures aren't that extraordinary and should be in place in times of normalcy.'
He added: 'El Salvador is perhaps a lesson for those in Britain who wish to take back control of their country. Power works, and it is all that matters. State power when used effectively is basically omnipotent.
'The meritocracy will be established, criminals and corrupt officials will be jailed, immigration will drop to zero, houses will be built, and our citizens will once again feel proud of the country they call home.'
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17 minutes ago
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Rugby league told £16m government funding will be stopped unless questions answered
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The Guardian
17 minutes ago
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Jack Straw urges Labour not to panic about threat of Nigel Farage
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Although he admitted he did not expect such a plummet in popularity for Starmer and Labour, he urged the party to remain calm. 'In 2000 of course we lost the mayoral election to Ken Livingstone; that was regarded as a great humiliation for Labour. 'So, not being Pollyanna-ish about this, but my instinct is that things will gradually improve.' He said he hoped a sceptical UK public would begin to make the connection between Starmer's successful diplomacy, especially with Donald Trump, and the kind of statesman he could be at home. 'The way Starmer has navigated the challenge from America has been extraordinary,' he said. 'This government has made missteps, which all governments do, and not least about things like [welfare]. 'But at some stage I think that people will start to make the connection between the stalwart international statesman and Starmer the domestic prime minister, and realise that we're talking about the same person and the character.' 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'The second thing is considering ways in which you progressively decouple the Human Rights Act from Strasbourg. The Human Rights Act says British courts should 'take account' of the decisions of the ECHR. But that's basically been interpreted as 'to follow'. And that was never, never our intention.' He said the court should be 'concentrating on the original purposes, which was to stop really serious breaches of rights, not everyday asylum issues.' As home secretary, it was also Straw's Terrorism Act that introduced the proscription of terror groups – used against al-Qaida and others. At the time, addressing concerns that it would affect civil disobedience by organisations such as Greenpeace, Straw said there was 'no evidence whatever' they would be affected. But he said now he was fully behind the decision to proscribe Palestine Action, because of the attack on military planes at RAF Brize Norton. 'This was a very, very serious breach of the security of the base. And if I'd have been in Yvette's position, which I have been, I would have done exactly what she's done,' he said. 'You can't proscribe on a whim. And you need clear evidence. Much of that evidence is based on intelligence, but also just the fact that they are attacking our military assets and military bases. I think we certainly would have taken the action that she has taken.' But Straw said he had been delighted to see Starmer take the decision to recognise a Palestinian state – saying it was 'barefaced cheek' of the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to say it was playing into the hands of Hamas. 'I applaud the decision which Keir Starmer has taken. I'm really glad that he's done that. I think that the conditions imposed were quite skilful,' he said. Straw said he did not know yet whether the Israeli offensive in Gaza would ultimately be deemed a genocide. 'Whatever label you put on it, it's absolutely amoral and unacceptable and just terrible.