
Farage claims Scottish Labour councillor has defected to Reform
Nigel Farage has claimed a Scottish Labour councillor has defected to Reform UK on the eve of a pivotal Holyrood byelection, as he defended a controversial advert attacking Anas Sarwar that has prompted accusations of racism.
The Reform leader said he would disclose the councillor's identity when he campaigned in the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse byelection later on Monday, with opinion polls suggesting Reform and Labour are neck-and-neck in Scotland, albeit behind the Scottish National party.
Farage did not name the councillor but Scottish Labour sources were sceptical, and speculated whether it could be someone who had already quit the party to sit as an independent.
Speaking as he unveiled another Scottish Conservative defector to Reform in Aberdeen – a local councillor called Duncan Massey – Farage played down the prospects of Reform delivering a shock win in Hamilton, despite its surge in England.
'We just don't know,' he said, at a press conference at the Silver Darling fish restaurant overlooking the mouth to Aberdeen harbour. 'Are we confident of coming third? Yes. Are we confident of coming second? Well, I don't know. If we do, it'll be a very nice surprise.
'Do I realistically think we can win? Well, if we do, then that will be the biggest earthquake Scottish politics has probably ever seen. You never know. On a low turnout election with a disenchanted electorate, I guess it's not impossible, but I think it's improbable.'
Farage said he was buoyant about Reform's chances in Scotland. The latest opinion poll, by Norstat for the Sunday Times, has put his party one percentage point behind Scottish Labour in a Holyrood vote, at 18% and 19% respectively.
Massey is the 13th councillor in Scotland, out of a total of 1,226, to have defected to Reform. The party has yet to win a single council or parliamentary seat in Scotland, but did come second ahead of Labour in a recent council byelection.
Farage said he was justified in calling Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, 'sectarian' after Reform circulated a video of Sarwar praising the successes of Pakistanis in public life.
With anti-Reform protesters loudly chanting outside, Farage claimed Sarwar meant south Asians wanted to 'take over the world', but admitted under questioning that Sarwar's speech was to commemorate Pakistan independence day.
Sarwar, who was campaigning in Hamilton on Monday morning, said Farage's remarks were 'pathetic, poisonous and obviously deliberate misinformation'.
Farage's focus on race was doing a disservice to voters he said, who 'should be hearing a debate about how they get investment in their town centres, how we improve their NHS facilities, how we give skills and opportunities to young people'.
Farage was with his deputy leader, Richard Tice, to call for Westminster to drop the windfall levies and steeply cut taxes on North Sea oil and gas, and to drop the levies on household energy bills.
Tice claimed that with the UK's North Sea reserves contributing only 1% of global emissions, limiting drilling and heavily taxing the sector was the 'greatest act of financial self-harm ever imposed on this nation'.
Farage said the concept of net zero was misleading, since growing imports into the UK meant the country was off-shoring its carbon emissions. Instead, the UK ought to be mining Cumbrian coal to keep steel mills open, rather than importing it.
He was asked three times by the Guardian whether it was Reform policy that all the world's oil, gas and coal reserves should be exploited, given he believed all the UK's fossil fuels should be burned, but refused to give a direct answer.
'You know, mankind this year is going to burn 8bn tonnes of coal,' he said. 'I share with you reservations about what this is doing to the atmosphere … But does it make sense to commit economic hara-kiri in this country, whilst this is happening across the rest of the world? No, better to refine in this country. Better to produce chemicals in this country. Better to manufacture cement.'
Pressed by the BBC on whether extracting all the UK's North Sea oil and gas reserves would cut energy prices, he acknowledged they were traded globally. It would increase jobs and wealth for those firms involved, he said.
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BBC News
an hour ago
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'My credit score has been destroyed by fake energy debt'
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The energy firm said: "We've shared with credit reference agencies that she has a prepayment meter with a zero balance, which should have a positive impact on her credit score."The error began when Scottish Power wrongly believed she owed them more than £2,000, which eventually led to the firm forcibly installing a prepayment meter into her Glasgow home in late 2022, while she was out of the country visiting was later discovered that the false debt had arisen because Scottish Power had wrongly opened and closed multiple accounts in her name. The company has since recognised the mistakes, apologised and wiped the Favour said she remains unable to take out a loan, phone contract or get a credit card because of the default on her account. It comes as thousands of energy customers are set to receive payouts, and could see debts written off, in response to widespread controversy over the force-fitting of prepayment meters into people's announcement last month followed a review by the energy regulator Ofgem, and could see eligible customers receiving payments starting at £40 and rising up to £1, years, energy companies were allowed to force-fit prepayment meters into people's homes when bills went unpaid but a scandal erupted during the energy cost crisis of 2022 when suppliers were found to have forced the meters on vulnerable intense criticism, Ofgem introduced a moratorium on forced installations in 2023 but allowed companies to restart the practice less than a year later – albeit with stricter rules in place to protect vulnerable customers who have been affected by the practice of force-fitting prepayment meters over the years have told BBC Scotland News that the compensation payments do not compare with how heavily their lives were impacted. Favour told the BBC: "It's really affected me emotionally, financially, and it's also ruined my credit score because a bill that wasn't mine was forced into my name and given to the credit agencies."For the last six years I have been on the list for not getting any credit from anywhere due to that."My credit score has been ruined, I can't apply for anything at the moment. What I've been through compared with £1,000 is not enough."Favour said she no longer trusts energy companies after the ordeal. 'No compassion' The review from Ofgem into this practice had an assessment period of 1 January 2022 to 31 January 2023, meaning Favour could be eligible for compensation. But many other customers may not has epilepsy and asthma and says that a long-running disagreement with her energy company at the time had a severe impact on her 34-year-old nursing student told the BBC she was so distressed by having a prepayment meter forcibly installed into her home that she had multiple seizures which resulted in who lived in a one-bedroom council flat in Fife at the time, says her then-energy supplier Npower increased her monthly bills from £60 a month in 2014 to about £200 - and said she had a debt of about £1, disputed this which led to a row that would continue for another three claims that a wiring issue with her storage heating meant that it was turning on when it shouldn't have been, including when she was at work. When she called Npower to ask them to assess the issue the company was "really forceful and harassing" and "threatening with bailiffs"."They had no compassion or consideration that there was clearly a huge issue for a one-bedroom flat," she said several appointments were made for the firm to visit and investigate an issue with the heating, but nobody showed up. 'It was torture' Then, in 2017, she returned home from work to find that her flat had been broken into and a prepayment meter installed."They couldn't attend to check my meter but they could attend to force entry into my house," she said."I was having a lot of seizures at the time because of the stress. 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"They'd broken in and put a prepayment meter in."Susan said she had fallen into debt of about £3,500 with energy provider EDF after struggling with the death of her father alongside having a disability and mental health issues."I know it was my fault for racking up the debt and I buried my head in the sand, but they never gave me the option to pay it off in instalments at all and I didn't know they'd break in when I wasn't there," she said."It was so upsetting because I couldn't talk to anybody about it and I was embarrassed about the debt. I didn't want my family to know."Susan thinks there are not enough protections in place to support vulnerable customers who find themselves in debt, and says she would have agreed to a repayment plan if she had been made aware it was an said: "If they'd have told me they were coming, I would have arranged to take time off work so that at least there wouldn't be people in my house when I wasn't there."I'm not vulnerable now like I was then, I am doing much better, but there were not measures in place to protect vulnerable people."It was just awful. They could see that a kid lived here, that it was Christmas. What a time of year to do that to somebody."Susan said because prepayment meters are generally more expensive than other payment methods, her bills are a "fortune" and she is still paying off the debt to this has been approached for comment. Distressing cases As of 2024, Ofgem has introduced rules which means companies cannot force-fit meters if an occupant of the house is over 75 with no other support, is under two years old, needs energy for health reasons, or suffers from a chronic or terminal Vyas, chief executive of Energy UK, which represents energy firms, said suppliers had been working closely with Ofgem to meet the regulator's requirements, but said there were instances where forced fittings were Advice Scotland director of impact David Hilferty said the compensation scheme is welcome said: "We have always opposed forced installations as they take away people's choice, pushing them to pay money upfront which they often can't afford."Our network has seen many distressing cases over the years of people who have been forced to disconnect their heating supply or go into debt as a result of this, so it's right that they should be compensated."What's important now is that suppliers deliver this compensation quickly and do the right thing for those who have experienced unnecessary harm."


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Polls to open in Hamilton by-election
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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
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