Nigel Farage’s rival from Britain’s governing Conservative (Tory) Party in the Clacton constituency (electoral district) is complaining his mega rallies are “reminiscent of the big rallies at Nuremberg” under Adolf Hitler.
“It’s a personality cult that’s been created. There may be no evil intent, but it feels wrong and bad,” Conservative candidate Giles Watling whined, apparently unable to conceive of a politician popular enough with the public to draw a substantial crowd.
Raheem Kassam, Editor-in-Chief of The National Pulse, attended a “massive, Trump-style rally” for Nigel Farage and his Reform Party in Birmingham, England’s second city, over the weekend, describing it as “incredible” and observing that “this sort of thing doesn’t really happen in England.”
Watling concurs, but considers the idea of a politician capable of attracting mass support “chilling” and claims the rallies are a “very un-British way of doing things.”
Farage is defending his supporters, chastising Watling for having “contempt for the thousands of decent people who turned up in Birmingham… and those who come to my rallies in Clacton.”
“They are decent, law-abiding citizens. How dare he insult them like that?” he said.





