❓WHAT HAPPENED: A group of government-funded schools in London, England, has been accused of political indoctrination for presenting teaching materials labeling Nigel Farage’s Reform Party “fascist”.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: The Orion group of schools, Reform deputy leader Richard Tice, and education leaders.
📍WHEN & WHERE: South London schools in London, England.
💬KEY QUOTE: “To present such inflammatory and misleading content to young people is a serious failing in duty and professional responsibility.” – Richard Tice
🎯IMPACT: Calls for investigation by the education regulator, Ofsted, and action against the schools for breaches of neutrality and teaching standards.
A group of secondary schools in London, England, has come under scrutiny after allegations that pupils were exposed to politically biased teaching materials. The Orion Education group, which operates eight government-funded schools in South London, reportedly gave students a political spectrum chart that placed Nigel Farage’s Reform Party alongside Adolf Hitler’s National Socialist German Workers’ Party under the label “fascism.” The chart also claimed that supporters of Reform hold “extremist views.”
A separate handout on political extremism featured a photograph of Reform deputy leader Richard Tice and suggested that rejecting “British Values” or democracy, or using words such as “flood” or “invasion” to describe illegal immigration, could be linked to far-right extremism. The materials also warned that newspapers like the notionally right-leaning Daily Mail and The Sun use sensationalist headlines about immigration that can be exploited by extremist groups, while advising students to rely on outlets such as the biased BBC and overtly leftist Guardian for trustworthy reporting.
Richard Tice condemned the lesson content, calling it “factually inaccurate and grossly offensive but also defamatory in nature.” In a letter to Orion Education’s chief executive, Simon Garrill, Tice warned of possible legal action, arguing the organization had breached its duty to remain politically neutral as a registered charity. “To present such inflammatory and misleading content to young people is a serious failing in duty and professional responsibility,” he said.
Serge Cefai, executive headteacher of St Thomas the Apostle School, described the materials in an interview with GB News as a “blatant breach of teaching standards” and called for an investigation by schools regulator Ofsted. “Teachers should teach facts, not opinion,” he said. “If they start teaching opinion, they’ll get into real trouble. I don’t like to use the word grooming, but that’s what it feels like. It’s not education, it’s indoctrination.”
The controversy comes as Reform UK experiences a surge in support. Recent polls suggest the populist party could overtake both Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour Party and the formerly governing Conservatives, with one survey showing Reform with enough support to win a majority in Parliament.
Another poll found Farage to be more trusted than Starmer to lead Britain, with 45 percent of respondents saying he understands the concerns of ordinary people, compared with 36 percent for Starmer. The Labour government has faced accusations of delaying local elections amid fears of major Reform gains.
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