Re Haiti v Scotland you really have to wonder about the prospects for such a team. A war ravaged country with people living in extreme poverty & criminals everywhere……
and the other one is a Caribbean Island! 🤣
For those suffering from amnesia: just four months ago, the Islamic regime in Iran slaughtered over 40,000 people in only two days, for the sole ‘crime’ of protesting for freedom.
Remarkable story in Telegraph revealing just how useless recent Tory governments were:
A secret Whitehall report found that more than £28bn in foreign aid and Covid-19 loans was handed to terrorists, hostile states and gangsters!
The misappropriation of taxpayer funds from 2015 to 2021, includes millions sent to the Islamic State and Russia.
Those responsible remain unpunished and the dossier was buried to spare official embarrassment.
Allowing Reeves to become Chancellor is like giving a Chimpanzee a loaded machine gun in a lift!
She is utterly clueless despite her economic credentials!
Absolutely every politician currently crying about "not politicising Henry Nowak" has at least one tweet politicising George Floyd.
Seriously, search his name in their history and you'll find one for all of them.
If the 'current' costs of #HS2 were known at the time of Notice to Proceed (15 April 2020) its benefit cost ratio would be 'between 0.3 and 0.4' according to the Department for Transport
As a survivor of rape gangs, I have spent years living with the consequences of crimes that should never have happened and failures that should never have been allowed to continue. Like many other survivors, I know what it feels like to be let down by people and institutions that were supposed to protect vulnerable children. I know what it feels like to see endless debates, inquiries, promises and statements while victims continue to wait for the truth and for justice.
For me, this issue is not about political point-scoring. It is not about personalities, factions or political rivalries. It is about victims and survivors. It is about accountability. It’s about ensuring that the full truth is brought into the open and that those responsible for these horrific crimes, and those who failed to stop them, are properly held to account.
That is why I feel compelled to speak publicly about my own experiences and observations.
I was invited to attend a press conference with Nigel Farage, where I had the opportunity to meet and speak with several members of his team, including Lee Anderson, Richard Tice and Laila Cunningham. Going into that room, I did not have any expectation that politicians would suddenly have all the answers. As a survivor, I have become naturally cautious when it comes to promises made by public figures.
What I witnessed during my time there left a lasting impression on me.
The discussions I observed were focused on the seriousness of the issue itself. There was a clear recognition that what has happened in towns and cities across this country represents one of the most devastating failures to protect vulnerable children in modern British history. The conversations were not centred on media headlines or political gain. Instead, the focus appeared to be on how these crimes were allowed to happen, why warnings were missed or ignored, and what must be done to ensure justice is delivered.
What stood out most to me was the genuine concern I saw for victims and survivors.
As someone who has lived through this reality, I have become very familiar with the difference between people who simply talk about these issues and people who genuinely want to understand them. The impression I came away with was that the people in that room cared deeply about uncovering the truth and addressing the failures that allowed so many children to suffer.
I saw people asking difficult questions. I saw people discussing the importance of getting to the facts. I saw people who appeared determined not to allow this issue to be buried, ignored or forgotten. Most importantly, I felt that there was a genuine desire to ensure that victims and survivors remained at the centre of the conversation.
What I saw most, was people with huge hearts, working towards healing decades of damage. I saw Laila’s maternal determination to protect our children fiercely, I saw Nigel’s paternal instincts to talk me through the whole conference, check my comfortability all the way through. I saw Lee and Richard, heartbroken at the fracture our county has endured for decades. I saw very important people genuinely listening to something that would shred their heart, yet educate them enough to logically make changes.
That experience is one of the reasons why I personally have greater confidence in Nigel Farage's approach to pursuing justice than I do in Rupert Lowe's approach. That is not a statement made out of political loyalty. It is not an attack on anyone. It is simply my honest assessment based on what I have witnessed and the conclusions I have drawn from those experiences.
As a survivor, I am interested in results, not slogans. I want to see the truth fully exposed, no matter how uncomfortable it may be. I want to see failures acknowledged. I want to see those responsible brought to justice. I want to see lessons learned so that no child ever has to endure what so many victims and survivors have endured.
I find the establishment hysteria about my position on deporting foreign child rapists and their accomplices quite remarkable.
If a Pakistani woman was fully aware that her husband has been gang-raping dozens of white English girls, but failed to report it? Or do anything?
Then yes, she should be deported along with her scumbag husband.
To be entirely honest, deportation is the moderate option for the rapist and it's one a Restore Britain Government may well ignore for a harsher and more permanent alternative.
We know that this has been happening for decades, across almost every town and city in Britain.
Everywhere. It continues today.
If a foreigner comes to our country and facilitates child rape, a Restore Britain Government will deport them before their feet touch the ground.
How many end up leaving is secondary - the principle is what matters.
If don't agree, fine. Vote Tory, Labour or Reform. Farage has made his objection to our policy very clear. There are plenty of options for you.
If you do agree? Then there is now a democratic route for you to take.
Restore Britain.
There more context to the story than just a headline of “Net migration nearly HALVED in the year to December 2025, falling to 171,000”.
Here’s the wider context: Net migration data by status:
British nationals: -136,000
EU nationals: -42,000
Non-EU nationals: +349,000
#HS2 was a cross party political project. MPs were whipped to vote it through with many not even looking at the shocking lack of detail in the original plan or understanding that the case had not been properly made.
@Labour@Heidi_Labour
@Penny_Gaines@Outoftweet123 Adonis was a historian. The HS2 Technical Director didn't understand basic maths or physics. Civil servants place value on unnoticeable time savings & ignore the environment. Lobbyists lobby. Wrong decisions get made. No-one wants to say they got it wrong. £100bn+ wasted.