Britain is a ‘two-tier state against white people’, Nigel Farage has declared.
In a lengthy essay, Reform UK’s leader claimed that ‘anti-white racism’ is ’embedded’ in every part of the public sector.
He set out how in everything from housing and policing to healthcare and education, he believes official policies only benefit minorities and discriminate against white Britons.
‘On the surface, the objective seems unobjectionable: the Government should strive to be a little bit kinder, a little bit more understanding, in its dealings with minority groups,’ Mr Farage wrote in a 6,000-word post on Substack.
‘In practice, it is a deeply sinister act of social cleansing.’ He gave examples of how the ‘toxic ideology’ of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) has taken over Whitehall with powerful staff networks focused on race and religion.
Mr Farage vowed to abolish Labour’s Equality Act if his party comes to power, banning ‘positive action’ which allows employers to choose minority candidates over white ones.
He said that a third of social tenants in London, who benefit from discounted rents, were born overseas. Under a Reform government, foreign nationals who cannot find private rented accommodation will lose their right to remain and be eligible for deportation, he vowed.
Mr Farage cited the Nottingham triple killer Valdo Calocane as an example of how ‘lethal’ diversity policies can be in healthcare, following claims that the paranoid schizophrenic was allowed to go free because staff feared too many black men were being sectioned.
Britain is a ‘two-tier state against white people’, Nigel Farage (pictured) has declared
And in schools he said that white British pupils have the worst GCSE results of any large ethnic group, yet teachers instead focus on ‘white privilege’ and ‘systemic racism’.
He also hit out at the ‘sinister’ commitment by chief constables to treat white people differently to other races.
Mr Farage concluded by warning that ‘white Brits will become a minority in this country before the end of the century’ as a result of migration, adding: ‘Without a voice to speak up for them, the future will be manifestly unjust.’
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The Reform leader also hit out at Sir Keir Starmer’s responses to angry protests that sprang up over the police’s arrest of stabbing victim Henry Nowak as he lay dying.
He said the Prime Minister’s ‘outrage’ was ‘not at the actions of the officers, or at the guidelines that led them to treat different ethnic groups in different ways, but at those who dared to point this out’.
And after the alleged ‘barbarous’ stabbing in Belfast last week, Mr Farage said the response was ‘rightful condemnation of the unrest, yes, but also of those who asked how the attack on Stephen Ogilvie came to happen’.
One Tory MP said it was no coincidence that Mr Farage had published the diatribe ahead of the Makerfield by-election in which Reform’s vote is being squeezed by Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain party.
Last night, Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey said: ‘Nigel Farage has turned into the Enoch Powell of the social media age. He’s trying to excuse racist disorder and violence against police officers.’
Former home secretary Suella Braverman, who defected to Reform earlier this year, agreed with Mr Farage, telling Sky News: ‘The institutions, the laws, and the high-level policies in this country treat white people less fairly than non-white people.’
But Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said the Reform leader ‘should take his nasty hate and anger and division somewhere else’.


