⚖️ Reform’s law and order hypocrisyGregory Davis and Harry Shukman “Reform UK will restore Law and Order on Britain’s streets,” promises the party’s manifesto. Nigel Farage has made crime a key campaigning issue this summer, claiming that the country has become lawless under a Labour government. With Reform in power, their website says, there will be a “clampdown on all crime and antisocial behaviour”. But is the party as tough on crime as it claims to be? A HOPE not hate analysis of senior Reform figures suggests it has a more hypocritical approach to lawbreaking — cuffs for opponents, leniency for friends. Nowhere has this been more obvious in how the party has treated those protesting, and indeed rioting, at anti-migrant demonstrations. Last July, after the riot in Leeds, Reform’s Lee Anderson MP criticised “disgraceful scenes”. The rioters were incorrectly perceived to be entirely Muslim. On X, he wrote: “Import a third world culture then you get third world behaviour. These animals need locking up for good… I want my country back.” Compare this to Anderson’s comments after the Southport riots, in which he dismissed the violence. “We all do daft things when we’re young,” he said. “These are not far-right thugs, they’re just young idiots who got carried away.” He added that many of those arrested “probably had one too many”. Instead of locking up the criminals, Anderson suggested, the prime minister should “sit down with them, find out what the problem is and try to come up with some solutions rather than just banging them away”. No such mercy should be afforded, however, to environmental protestors. “Lock these nuisances up,” Anderson said in 2022. His colleagues are no different. “Arrest them, lock them up & throw away the key,” said Richard Tice that same year. He welcomed the jailing of Just Stop Oil demonstrators as “excellent news”, and has said he wanted them to receive “long sentences”, calling their actions “selfish antics”. Reform’s leaders frequently adopt contrary positions to protesting. Farage himself has attended the farmers’ inheritance tax demonstrations, in which hundreds of tractors drove into central London and blocked traffic. “These kinds of protests need to be in every market town in England,” Farage told GB News. Asked about the impact of tractors blocking busy roads, he said: “The level of disruption in people’s lives is minimal.”
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