
Nigel Farage uses visit to Scotland to double down on attacks on Anas Sarwar
Nigel Farage has doubled down on his attacks on Anas Sarwar, with the Reform UK leader using a visit to Scotland to again accuse him of 'sectarian politics'.
Mr Farage claimed the Scottish Labour leader has a 'record of obsession' – citing a speech he gave in Holyrood in 2020 as evidence of this.
His comments came as he unveiled a new defection to his Reform UK party, with councillor Duncan Massey, who had been a Conservative representative on Aberdeen City Council, now a member.
Mr Farage also promised another defection, this time from Labour, would come on Monday afternoon as he visits Hamilton, where a Holyrood by-election is taking place.
That by-election has been dominated by a row over a Reform advert which has been branded 'racist' by Reform's opponents, and which claims that Mr Sarwar will 'prioritise' the Pakistani community in Scotland.
Asked about this, Mr Farage insisted Reform UK 'don't talk about race at all'.
He pointed out his party's chairman, Zia Yusuf, was someone who 'is Scottish born, but comes from parents who come from the Indian subcontinent'.
Mr Farage continued: 'We think everybody should be treated equally. We object, very strongly, to the segmentation of people into different types.'
Adding that the Scottish Labour leader has a 'record of obsession on this issue', he went on to reference a speech Mr Sarwar gave in 2020 where he noted that key figures across Scotland, from the judiciary, to council chief executives to head teachers, were all white.
Mr Farage said: 'I think that speech he gave was sectarian in its very nature – we are the south Asian community, we are going to take over the country and take over the world.
'We believe what he said was a form of sectarian politics and we don't like it one little bit.'
His comments came after First Minister John Swinney claimed the Reform UK leader 'doesn't care about Scotland'.
With an opinion poll having suggested Reform could be the second-largest party at Holyrood after next May's Scottish elections, the SNP leader spoke about the 'deeply concerning rise in support for Farage'.
Mr Swinney added: 'Be in no doubt, Nigel Farage doesn't care about Scotland. He poses a threat to our values and must be stopped, and only the SNP can do that.'
Mr Farage however declared that his party had 'made remarkable strides in Scotland over the past year'.
Speaking as protesters gathered outside, the Reform UK leader said if the polls are to be believed 'we are beginning to eclipse Labour to be the second most popular party in Scottish politics'.
Mr Farage again spoke out about the 'madness' of the net zero policies being pursued by the governments at Holyrood and Westminster.
He told reporters these had left the oil and gas industry, which is centred in Aberdeen, 'in serious decline'.
This 'to a large extent… is wholly unnecessary', the MP insisted, hitting out at the taxes imposed on the oil and gas sector, and also at the Labour Westminster Government's opposition to licensing new fields.
Mr Farage continued: '2025 will be a year of record consumption of fossil fuels.
'We can con ourselves as much as we like, there will be more coal burnt this year than has ever been burnt in the history of mankind, and the same applies to gas and oil.
'Even the most ardent proponent of net zero has to accept the world will still be using oil and gas up until 2050 and beyond.
'And yet we have decided to sacrifice this industry as a consensus around net zero has emerged.'
As a result of this he said parts of Scotland, England and Wales were 'literally deindustrialising before our very eyes'.
Mr Farage said: 'The madness of this is almost completely and utterly beyond belief.'
Asked about the upcoming Hamilton by-election, Mr Farage said he was confident his party would place at least third, but if Reform won it would be the 'biggest earthquake Scottish politics has ever seen'.
Responding to the Reform UK leader's latest comments on Monday, Mr Sarwar said: 'Today the chief clown Nigel Farage finally found his way to Scotland and showed just how totally out of touch with our country he is.
'Nigel Farage turned up, admitted he can't win the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election, and pledged to cut funding for Scotland's NHS and public services.
'Nigel Farage is a dangerous clown and the people of Scotland see right through him.'
In an interview with the Scottish Sun on Monday, Mr Farage described Mr Swinney as 'anti-English' following his outspoken attacks on the Reform leader.
'Swinney's words are deeply provocative, which suggests the SNP leadership has learned nothing,' he told the newspaper.
'It suggests there is still that sort of quite unpleasant anti-Englishness.
'Why on earth would the top man in Scottish politics today come out with those sort of insults?'
Speaking to the PA news agency on Monday, Mr Swinney rejected the claims.
'I've always taken forward my politics on the basis of inclusion, of welcoming people, of working with others – that's what I'm about,' he said.
'Nigel Farage is the opposite of that.
'Nigel Farage stokes division, he seeks to put people against each other and we're bringing people together in Scotland to create the best future for our country.'
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Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Every time Nigel Farage has fallen out with his colleagues
Nigel Farage's bust-up with Zia Yusuf is only the latest in a string of extraordinary sackings, resignations and break-ups in his political career. Mr Yusuf, the former Reform UK chairman, quit on Thursday following a disagreement over a Reform MP's call for a burka ban. But Mr Farage has fallen out with multiple senior figures in the party and its predecessors, Ukip and the Brexit Party. Godfrey Bloom Nigel Farage was forced to suspend the Ukip party whip from economist Godfrey Bloom after he described women at a party conference in 2013 as 'sluts'. Mr Bloom also hit journalist Michael Crick over the head with the conference brochure. Mr Farage, furious that one of his conference speeches had been overshadowed, said: 'We can't put up with it. We can't have any one individual, however fun or flamboyant or entertaining or amusing they are, we cannot have any one individual destroying Ukip's national conference and that is what he's done today.' Douglas Carswell Douglas Carswell was Ukip's first MP after defecting from the Conservatives in 2014. He won the Clacton seat twice for the party but soon fell out with Mr Farage, who accused him of trying to block efforts to put him in the House of Lords. The party leader branded Mr Carswell a 'Tory party posh boy' and accused him of trying to 'undermine everything we've stood for for a very long time'. Mr Carswell quit Ukip at the 2017 election to stand as an independent, but he lost to the Conservatives. Suzanne Evans Suzanne Evans was the most senior woman in Ukip but fell out with Mr Farage over his leadership style in 2015. She called for two of the Ukip leader's advisers to resign and praised Patrick O'Flynn, economy spokesman, after he accused Mr Farage of being 'snarling and aggressive'. Ms Evans later went on TV to say Mr Farage was seen as 'very divisive' – a move that saw her sacked and party officials told not to have any further contact with her. Diane James Diane James was elected leader of Ukip in 2016 after Mr Farage quit in the wake of the Brexit referendum victory. But within three weeks, he was back, after senior party figures refused to accept her as leader. The story of Mr Farage's role in Ms James' departure is not fully understood. Ben Habib After leaving Ukip in 2018, Mr Farage set up the Brexit Party, which campaigned for a final ending of ties with the EU, and later Reform UK. Its co-deputy leader was Ben Habib but he was sacked soon after last year's general election. He later quit Reform, saying Mr Farage needed to learn that the party 'should not be controlled by one man'. Asked what impact his departure would have, Mr Farage said: 'None whatsoever.' Rupert Lowe Businessman Rupert Lowe was one of five Reform MPs elected last year – but his ego clashed with that of Mr Farage. After he accused Mr Farage in an interview of acting like a 'messiah', Mr Lowe lost the party whip and was reported to police over allegations he had physically threatened Zia Yusuf, then party chairman. Mr Lowe said at the time: 'I am 67 years old, and I have a 67-year-long unblemished record with the law. These are false allegations, designed to maliciously smear my name and ruin my reputation after I dared to bruise [Nigel] Farage's ego.' A party source told The Telegraph: 'This is what happens when you mess with Nigel.'


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
SNP ‘running down the clock' before losing power, claims Anas Sarwar
The SNP's 'balloon has burst' and John Swinney is 'running down the clock', Anas Sarwar, Scotland's First Minister, has said after Labour won a shock by-election victory. The Scottish Labour leader said his party's knife-edge win in the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse contest showed voters wanted to oust the SNP from power in next year's Holyrood election. Labour's Davy Russell won the Scottish Parliament seat by 602 votes from the SNP's Katy Loudon, with Reform's Ross Lambie only 887 votes behind her. The Tories finished a distant fourth, barely saving their deposit, after their support collapsed. Mr Swinney was left humiliated by the loss of the SNP seat after repeatedly claiming the by-election was a straight fight between his party and Reform. Alex Neil, the former SNP minister, said the First Minister should resign. Speaking the morning after the victory, Ms Sarwar accused Mr Swinney of running a 'disgraceful campaign' that 'deliberately' encouraged people to vote for Reform. Mr Sarwar said the result demonstrated that next year's Holyrood election would really be a 'straight choice' between the SNP and Labour, with Reform merely a 'spoiler' who could not win power. But Prof Sir John Curtice, the country's most eminent psephologist, said Reform had achieved a 'highly creditable' third place by attracting a slew of former Labour voters. Writing in the Telegraph, he warned Nigel Farage's party risked 'severely denting' Mr Sarwar's hopes of being First Minister. Sir John also said Labour's performance, its vote share in the constituency declined, was 'well short of what is needed to demonstrate it is currently on course to win next year's Holyrood election.' He said Labour still managed to scrape victory thanks to a 17-point drop in support for the Nationalists, with independence supporters 'less forgiving than they once were of what many perceive as the SNP's poor record in government.' The contest was called following the death of Christina McKelvie, the Scottish Government minister, who won the seat for the SNP with a 4,582 majority in the 2021 Holyrood election. 'An outsider' in the contest Although Labour won the equivalent seat at Westminster by almost 10,000 votes in last year's general election, the party's collapse in support during the early months of Sir Keir Starmer's government meant it was viewed as an outsider in the contest. However, Labour insiders attributed their victory to Mr Russell's popularity locally and a strong get-out-the-vote operation that saw more than 200 activists travel to the constituency on polling day. Speaking at a press call in Hamilton town centre with Mr Russell, Mr Sarwar said he was 'confident' that he could replace Mr Swinney as First Minister in 2025. The Scottish Labour leader said: 'I think what we're seeing now is the running down of the clock. This is an SNP government that's lost its way, the balloon is burst, they are out of ideas, they are out of steam. 'They have no positive offer for the people of Scotland, they've got no positive record to put in front of the people of Scotland and they're running down the clock.' He said there was a 'lesson' for pollsters and commentators who believed Mr Swinney's claim that the by-election was a straight fight between the SNP and Reform, arguing they should stop listening to the First Minister's 'nonsense.' Pressed on Sir John's view that Reform's strong performance would make it difficult for Labour to win power next year at Holyrood, he said the psephologist was only looking at a 'snapshot' of a particular by-election. Mr Sarwar argued this approach ignored 'the general mood music and the general momentum of a campaign going into next year'. He added: 'On the ground, people believe the SNP are done. They are sick to the back teeth of think they're a busted flush. They want them out.' Sir Keir sent his congratulations to Mr Russell on his 'fantastic victory.' In a post on social media, the Prime Minister said: 'People in Scotland have once again voted for change. 'Next year, there is a chance to turbo-charge delivery by putting Labour in power on both sides of the border. I look forward to working with you.' Speaking in Edinburgh, Mr Swinney said: 'Clearly, we're disappointed that we didn't win last night, but we made progress in the election compared to the general election last summer, and we've got to build on that and make sure that we strengthen our support in advance of 2026. 'So the SNP made progress last night, but it's not nearly enough and we've got to build on that.' Asked if it was a mistake to call the by-election a 'two-horse race' between the SNP and Reform, he said: 'I called it the way I saw it.' The First Minister argued the Labour vote had collapsed compared to last year's general election and 'we saw the Reform vote surging, which it has.' But Mr Neil, who served in Alex Salmond's and Nicola Sturgeon's Cabinets, tweeted: 'Poor by-election result for the SNP despite having the best candidate 'It shows that the opinion polls appear wide of the mark. Most importantly, it shows the current SNP leadership needs to be replaced urgently.' The SNP under Mr Swinney was also routed in last year's general election. Labour won the by-election with 8,559 votes (31.6 per cent), despite its vote share declining by two percentage points compared to the 2021 Holyrood election result in the seat. The SNP finished second with 7,957 votes (29.4 per cent), a huge drop in support compared to 2021, when Ms McKelvie won 46.2 per cent of the popular vote. Reform finished third with 7,088 votes (26.1 per cent), which Sir John noted was 'well above' the 19 per cent support recorded in Scotland-wide opinion polls, despite the seat not being 'particularly fertile ground for Nigel Farage's party.' Richard Tice, Reform's deputy leader, attended the count and insisted he was 'delighted' with the result. He said it was 'truly remarkable', adding: 'We've come from nowhere to being in a three-way marginal.' But the result was disastrous for the Scottish Tories, who won only 1,621 votes. Their vote share declined from 17.5 per cent in the 2021 election to only six per cent. 'A very competitive political environment' Speaking ahead of next week's Scottish Tory conference in Edinburgh, UK leader Kemi Badenoch said: 'Larkhall is not the place where the Conservative Party fightback starts'. She said it was 'interesting' that Reform was 'causing problems for all parties' and noted that 'we live in a very competitive political environment.' Miles Briggs, the shadow education secretary for the Scottish Tories, said the party knew it would be a 'difficult' by-election and blamed 'protest voting' for Reform and Labour. He told BBC Radio's Good Morning Scotland programme: 'We know what that challenge is and we have no doubt of the fight that we have to take forward into the election next year.'


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
How Scottish Labour's ground war delivered victory in key by-election
It was never a simple two-horse race between the SNP and Reform, despite claims by both those parties which were accepted at face value by too many observers. Labour may have lost the 'air war', but in an era when the perceived wisdom is that elections are now digital battles, Anas Sarwar's team proved that a well-oiled, old-fashioned door-to-door campaign still matters. An STV debate – which Labour's candidate Davy Russell ducked – would have been a colossal waste of time. It would have taken the candidate, senior MSPs, and the backroom team away from the streets for days to prep. What mattered was holding as many local conversations as possible. So while the media gaze was seen through a national prism, Scottish Labour gathered data on what its target voters were interested in. During the campaign, around 500 pieces of local casework were picked up, providing valuable insight on what to focus on. The decline of Hamilton town centre and the future of the neonatal unit at University Hospital Wishaw were identified as key triggers for voters. As polling day approached, seasoned activists focused on squeezing every voter they could before time ran out. In the 2023 Westminster by-election in neighbouring Rutherglen, these conversations were quick. This time, they were far longer. There was anger towards Keir Starmer's government and what is seen as an unfulfilled promise of 'change'. But widespread dissatisfaction, too, with the SNP's long record in office and the state of public services. Read More: The result hinged on how many of these conversations would take place before polling day. And thanks to an army of activists – outnumbering their rivals – and extensive data, 7,000 target voters were spoken to on Thursday alone in a co-ordinated 'get out the vote' (GOTV) strategy. Since becoming leader in 2021, Sarwar has built a backroom team that knows how to analyse data, run co-ordinated campaigns, and spend money effectively. Party 'organisers', as they are called, got Labour over the line. They were helped too by a candidate who was popular locally, despite the dismissive comments by those who dubbed him the 'invisible man' or snobbishly suggested he couldn't 'string a sentence together'. Being recognised in the bowling clubs and pubs mattered far more than taking part in a radio interview. Known for crooning Frank Sinatra songs, Russell should add Ol' Blue Eyes' version of 'They All Laughed' to his repertoire – which ends with the lyric 'who's got the last laugh now?' Scottish Labour's effective ground campaign wasn't matched by the other parties. Alan Roden (Image: Greg Macvean) The SNP has lost some of its highly respected election-winning backroom team, and the visibility of so many ministers in the constituency was a clear sign of a shortage among rank-and-file activists. However, the party did run a successful air war, with Katy Louden a polished performer in front of the media. John Swinney's team crafted a narrative that it was a two-horse race with Reform, and – with no local polling to say otherwise – the message landed in the media. Will such claims be so readily accepted again? Reform had little ground campaign to speak of, and scant data on its target voters. It threw everything at the wall to see what would stick, which was enough to come within 1,500 votes of victory. South of the border, in May's Runcorn and Helsby by-election, Reform gathered voter ID through a local petition. It is bound to adopt these kind of smart tactics as its operation grows and professionalises in Scotland. Reform must now be treated as a serious force in Scottish politics, adding to the complex dynamic and uncertainty of next year's Holyrood election. As Sarwar said yesterday, it's time for everyone to 'change the script'. Alan Roden is co-founder of Quantum Communications and a former director of communications for Scottish Labour