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Lib Dems denounce new Reform UK chair as ‘Trump sycophant’ – UK politics live

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Lib Dems denounce new Reform UK chair as ‘Trump sycophant’

The Liberal Democrats have criticised Nigel Farage for appointing someone they describe as a Trump sycophant as Reform UK chair.

In a statement about the appointment of David Bull (see 11.55am), Daisy Cooper, the Lib Dem deputy leader, said:

The conveyor belt of Trump sycophants appointed by Nigel Farage rolls on.

Reform is more interested in advancing Donald Trump’s agenda over here, not standing up for the communities that they are supposed to represent.

This elevation of yet another Trump lapdog is just further evidence of this.

To justify their comment, the Lib Dems highlighted this tweet from Bull celebrating Trump’s election victory last year, and another showing that, as a Talk TV presenter, Bull once went on air with a bandage over his ear show he could show “solidarity” with Trump after the assassination attempt.

New Reform UK chair David Bull presenting TalkTV with a bandaged ear
New Reform UK chair David Bull presenting TalkTV with a bandaged ear Photograph: TalkTV

With Labour reluctant to criticise President Trump because they have to negotiate with him, and the Tories reluctant to criticise him because they admire him, the Liberal Democrats are the biggest party in the Commons with ample scope for Trump-bashing, and they rarely miss a chance indulge.

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Key events

Farage admits Reform UK does not know how it could implement its plan to deport 1.2m illegal immigrants from UK

I’ve already covered some of what Nigel Farage said at his press conference this morning. (See 12.20pm, and 3.44pm.) Here are some of the other lines from the Q&A.

  • Farage, the Reform UK leader, admitted that the party does not have a plan for implementing its policy on illegal immigrants, which is to deport all of them from the UK. Yesterday Zia Yusuf, the former Reform UK chair, told the Today programme:

I want to be crystal clear about what my position is, and Reform UK’s position is, which is we will deport everybody who is here in this country illegally, which is roughly about 1.2 million people.

Asked for details of how this would happen, Farage replied:

As President Trump is discovering in Los Angeles, this is not an easy thing to do, which is why, whilst it has to happen, I’ve always been cautious about about delving into specifics on it.

I will say this, there’ll be no deportations until we leave the ECHR [European convention on human rights]. There’ll be no deportations until British judges are freed to make their own decisions. Although, even when that comes, given our current crop of judges, then there may still be challenges, given the politicisation that has happened of the judiciary and the civil service and all the things in a post-Blair time.

  • Farage defended Reform UK’s decision to call its council cost-cutting teams Doge, after Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency in the US, even though the Musk has fallen out with Donald Trump. Asked about this, Farage said:

We thought hard about this. We thought about we did have a name; there was a UK name that we thought we’d use. And then what polling showed us is one of the things that’s wildly popular in the UK that’s happening in America is the concept of Doge, and that Doge had seeped into public consciousness, and that to attempt to rebrand that would be a hell of a difficult effort. So that’s why we’ve stuck with it.

Virtually everybody I know that has been successful in business is considering leaving this country. The last official figures were the 10,800 of the wealthy left Britain. The next set of figures – I don’t know what they’re going to be, 20,000, 25,000.

You’ve only got to look at property prices in Westminster, Chelsea, Kensington and see they’ve all fallen by over 20%. Now that doesn’t really matter, and nor does it benefit ordinary folk, because these are houses priced in millions.

But you don’t make those that are not doing so well in society better off by getting rid of your biggest taxpayers.

Do I think, in cultural terms, the burqa fits in with the British way of life? Not really, no.

Asked about this a second time, he replied:

This is about priorities. I don’t like to see the burqa. I think it probably is anti British …

But is it absolutely front line and centre of what we’re going to campaign for? Not given the other major crises we face.

Rows and resignations? Yes, that’s right. Seven Chairman since 2022, and four leaders. They’re called the Conservative party, and they’re like ferrets in a sack.

He also insisted that he was good at retaining the loyalty of colleagues, using language much the same as when he addressed this during his press conference yesterday.

  • He rejected claims that today’s figures showing donations to political parties in the first quarter of the year were a disappointment. The figures show the party received £1.5m. Asked if the party was over-reliant on big donors, Farage said the donations were up ten-fold on the previous quarter. “The trend is in the right direction,” he said. He also said that, unlike the bigger parties, he was not able to attract donations by offering people peerages. This was a joke, because selling peerages is illegal, but no one at Westminster thinks there is no link between donations and honours. Farage said the honours system was “corrupted beyond belief”.



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