PULSE POINTS:
❓ What Happened: Nigel Farage launched Reform UK’s largest-ever local election campaign, announcing a full slate of candidates across the country for the May 1st vote, and torching both the Conservative Party and Britain’s bloated public institutions.
👤 Who Was Involved: Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, party chairman Richard Tice, and a packed crowd of supporters. Targets included the Conservative Party, the civil service, Net Zero agenda, teaching unions, and the Labour opposition.
💬 Key Quotes:
“We genuinely are the party of the working man and woman.”
“There will be no more work from home for anybody in the civil service.”
“We will… go to war with the left-wing teaching unions.”
“Steel is not just an ordinary commodity. It is a vital strategic asset.”
“Only Reform can fix it.”
📉 Fallout: Farage confirmed Reform’s intent to leave the European Court on Human Rights (ECHR), repeal the Human Rights Act, and stop illegal immigration. He pledged to scrap inheritance tax on farms, raise the income tax threshold to £20,000, and gut the public sector—starting with the civil service’s remote work culture. He also promised to abolish Net Zero, citing the collapse of British steel production as proof of its failure.
📍 Where: Birmingham, England.
🧭 Significance: Farage positioned Reform UK as the only credible opposition to Labour and declared the Conservatives unfit for purpose. With bold tax pledges, anti-globalist rhetoric, and sweeping reforms, he laid the groundwork for a political insurgency aimed squarely at Britain’s ruling class.
IN FULL:
At a raucous rally in Birmingham, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage unveiled what he called the “most ambitious launch ever for a local election campaign,” confirming the insurgent party would field a full slate of candidates across the United Kingdom for the May 1st vote.
Farage confirmed Reform will contest the Runcorn and Helsby by-election, all six mayoralties, and all local races—up from just 12 percent of seats last year.
“Be in no doubt,” said Farage, “we are standing everywhere.”
The speech quickly escalated into a broader attack on the political status quo, with Farage hammering both Labour and the Tories as weak, wasteful, and ideologically captured. He expressed outrage that “five and a half million people… have been denied their vote” due to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s authoritarian cancellation of elections, but declared that Reform would “concentrate on the cards we have been dealt.”
Farage reaffirmed the party’s signature platform: withdrawing from the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), repealing the Human Rights Act, deporting foreign criminals, and ending illegal migration. He also doubled down on economic nationalism, warning that the departure of British billionaire Lakshmi Mittal—and projections that half a million top taxpayers will leave by 2028—spells disaster.
“If the richest leave, the poorest have to pay more,” Farage said, outlining bold tax reforms, including eliminating inheritance tax on family farms and raising the income tax threshold to £20,000, calling it “vital” for working Britons.
“I reiterate that on the national stage we are the only party that will leave the ECHR, repeal the Human Rights Act, genuinely stop the boats and deport foreign criminals. I confirm that on taxation we will remove inheritance tax on farms and in so doing save British family farms.”
– Nigel Farage, March 2025.
Anticipating media backlash over how to fund it, Farage introduced a new acronym for the UK, mirroring Elon Musk’s efforts in America: DOGE—“no more work from home for anybody in the civil service.” He insisted that the public sector must be dramatically reduced.
Farage then turned fire on Net Zero carbon energy policies, calling them a “ludicrous, self-defeating act of economic unilateralism.” He cited the near-certain closure of Scunthorpe’s steelworks—Britain’s last primary steel plant—as evidence of national decline.
“Steel is not just an ordinary commodity. It is a vital strategic asset,” he declared.
The rally took a cultural turn as Farage slammed the National Education Union and what he called its “Marxist boss,” accusing it of “poisoning the minds of young people.” He vowed to “go to war with the left-wing teaching unions” if Reform enters government.
Positioning Reform as the true opposition, Farage declared: “We have massive opportunities here to replace the Conservative Party as the party of opposition to the Labour government.”
“You’ll wake up on May 2nd very surprised by how well we’ve done.”
Armed with 3,000 FOI requests and data on local government debt and waste, Farage’s closing line was blunt: “Local government in Britain is broken. Only Reform can fix it.”