Farage claims Reform UK can be party of workers and of entrepreneurs – UK politics live | Politics

Farage claims Reform UK can be party of workers and of entrepreneurs – UK politics live | Politics

Farage: ‘no contradiction’ in Reform UK being ‘the party of workers but also the party of entrepreneurs’

Nigel Farage claims that “the exodus in London and in some other parts of the country is now in full flight.”

He says it is “the biggest brain drain we’ve had since the 1970s, and yet no one seems to have woken up to it.”

Farage says “there is absolutely no contradiction in saying that we are the party of workers but also the party of entrepreneurs. The two can’t survive and exist and succeed without each other.”

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Nigel Farage: Keir Starmer ‘doesn’t believe in anything’ and his leadership is ‘dismal’

Nigel Farage says prime minister Keir Starmer doesn’t believe in anything, and that “while I don’t bear him any personal grudge, I don’t think there’s any malice in him at all” he did not appear to have a plan for government. He makes a point of saying that Starmer had to refer to his notes a lot when speaking outside Downing Street.

He accuses Starmer of being “clearly without any great feeling, meaning or passion for the job that was ahead.”

Farage says:

This prime minister has no connection with working people, no connection with what we used to call working-class communities. He doesn’t understand what it’s like to get up at five o’clock in the morning and go out and work physically hard for the day.

He doesn’t seem to understand that the tax burden, the cost of living, energy bills, have meant that people genuinely have had a lower standard of living quite consistently over the course of the last 10 years.

He has absolutely no conception as part of the north London set of the genuine damage to community that has been done by mass immigration over the course of the last 25 years.

His leadership, frankly, is dismal. It is uninspiring. It is disconnected from real life. It is, in my view, unpatriotic.

As expected, he has challenged Keir Starmer to go to “a working man’s club somewhere in the ‘red wall’, and we’ll sit there, and we’ll let them ask us questions”

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