🚨 BREAKING: THE SICKENING COVER-UP AT THE VERY TOP EXPOSED.
Nigel Farage has just dropped an absolute nuclear bomb on the Westminster establishment.
He has revealed that both outgoing Prime Minister Keir Starmer and the Devon and Cornwall Chief Constable privately told him Ann Widdecombe's brutal murder was just a "botched burglary." 🤡
Farage completely dismantled their fake narrative, pointing out that a burglar does not park his car directly on your drive and walk right into the house.
We already know that counter-terrorism police have taken over the case and officially declared her murder an act of terrorism!
Yet, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and the head of the police force were actively colluding behind closed doors to try and convince the opposition that a political assassination was just a break-in.
They are so utterly terrified of the public finding out the truth about our lawless streets that they will literally lie about the murder of a prominent politician to protect their open borders agenda.
This is not just incompetence. This is a coordinated, state-sponsored cover-up at the highest level of government.
RT to completely blow up the UK timeline and demand a full inquiry into this corrupt uniparty! 🔁🇬🇧🔥
One of the things I dislike most about diversity is how we have replaced beauty with ugliness. I miss seeing pretty blonde girls everywhere, now replaced by burqa-donning beasts. I miss seeing Englishmen in their suits on my commute, now replaced by charmless Uber Eats & Deliveroo drivers. I miss our gorgeous architecture, now replaced by soulless new builds and high-rises to house the Third World. I miss our high streets, now covered in vape and fast-food shops. I miss seeing happy groups of young Brits, now replaced by young Africans in Trapstar tracksuits and ski masks, blasting drill music from their stolen iPhones. I miss when nightlife was fun and easy, just people out to have a laugh, instead of packs of creepy foreign men looking for drunk girls to prey on.
I'm young, but old enough to remember when our country was still somewhat British. Manners. Clean pavements. Happy, carefree young people. Negligible levels of crime. A time when you weren't the only White person on every street. A high trust society.
They've taken so much from us. It is an unforgivable crime.
Given the way this headline is worded, many are (understandably) taking it to mean Reform MPs have been given police protection by the state.
I want to clarify that the opposite is true.
The state is providing no protection whatsoever.
In fact, based on what I have seen in the last 48 hours, none of the government, the Speaker nor the police care at all about the security of Reform MPs.
Several of our MPs have written to the above in recent months about distressing, escalating security concerns, asking for help.
Their correspondence was not even replied to.
I will let you draw your own conclusions from this.
They Didn’t Just Blink… They Ran.
Well, you have to hand it to Nigel Farage.
Love him or loathe him, he has once again managed to get every other political party dancing to his tune.
His decision to resign as MP for Clacton and seek a fresh mandate from the people wasn’t just a bold political move it was a masterclass in putting the establishment on the back foot. Within hours, Westminster was in a spin. The commentators were scrambling, party headquarters were holding emergency meetings, and then came the announcements.
“We’re not standing.”
One after another, the opposition parties decided they would rather sit on the sidelines than take Nigel Farage on in front of the British public.
Now they’ll dress it up however they like. They’ll call it a stunt. They’ll say it isn’t worth contesting. They’ll produce every excuse imaginable.
The reality is that many people will conclude they simply don’t fancy the fight.
Because if they genuinely believed Reform UK was on the ropes, this was the golden opportunity to prove it. Instead, they have handed Farage the political stage all to himself.
Restore Britain deserves a special mention.
Only a short while ago, Rupert Lowe was confidently talking about taking Nigel Farage and Reform UK on anywhere, anytime. Strong words. Yet when Britain’s biggest political contest landed on the doorstep, Restore Britain quietly disappeared into the long grass.
For a party trying to establish itself, being beaten heavily by a well-drilled Reform campaign could have been politically devastating. Standing aside may avoid that immediate risk, but it also invites questions about whether the party truly believes it can compete at the highest level.
The Conservatives have their own problem.
Kemi Badenoch is trying to persuade the country that the Conservative Party is ready for government again. Yet when presented with a contest that would have dominated the national news, the party has chosen not to test that claim in front of the voters.
Politics is about asking for support. If you stop asking, people are entitled to wonder why.
But the biggest loser from all this may not be the Conservatives or Restore Britain.
It may be Prime Minister in waiting Andy Burnham.
Because Nigel Farage has done something very clever.
He has said to the people of Clacton: “You decide.”
Not the media.
Not political opponents.
Not Westminster.
The voters.
That is democracy in its purest form.
The people of Clacton now have a simple choice. They can back Nigel Farage, or they can sack him. There is no hiding behind opinion polls or television studios. The ballot box will deliver the answer.
And if that answer is another emphatic victory for Reform UK, the political consequences will echo far beyond Essex.
It will raise one unavoidable question for the Prime Minister.
If Nigel Farage is prepared to put his political future directly into the hands of the electorate, why shouldn’t Andy Burnham do the same?
If Labour believes it has the confidence of the British people, then seek a mandate.
Put up or shut up.
Farage has rolled the dice. He has invited the public to judge him. That takes confidence.
Now all eyes turn to Downing Street.
Will the Prime Minister ask the British people for the same endorsement, or will he decide that now isn’t quite the right time?
Politics is often described as a game of chess.
This week it looked more like poker.
Nigel Farage pushed all his chips into the middle of the table.
Everyone else folded.
Round one goes to Reform UK.