Politics

Reform panic grows as Restore makes waves in Makerfield

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Many predicted that the Makerfield by-election would be a straight up race between Labour and Reform. Surprising many, however, Reform is now fighting on two fronts, with the even-more-hardline Restore Britain challenging the party from its right.

As we reported, this state of affairs has led to Reform panicking and lashing out. And the signs are that Reform’s decision to openly go to war with Restore may be working in the latter party’s favour:

Reform panic stations

The leader of Restore is ex-Reform MP Rupert Lowe. Lowe formed the party after a falling out with Farage (and quite a dramatic falling out at that). In his own words:

Farage and Reform tried to put me in prison because I backed the mass deportation of Pakistani child rapists and their foreign wives/relatives who allowed it to happen.

My home was raided by armed police late on a Friday night as a direct result of Reform’s allegations. My guns were seized. They tried to ruin my life. In every way.

Farage admitted on national television it was all because I backed mass deportations.

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He said that was the moment they realised they ‘had to get rid’ of me.

Not the bullshit allegations they went to the police with, but the fact I want the Pakistani rapists removed from our country.

He admitted it.

That all happened.

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The polling post comes from Charlie Simpson of the right-wing GB Politics. While Simpson isn’t even old enough to vote, he does seemingly have contacts in Reform UK, because he’s broken several stories which later proved to be accurate.

If the data provided to Simpson is correct, Restore is doing significantly better than previous polls suggested. This is big news if so, because Farage was already panicking about Restore potentially ‘stealing’ a victory from him:

Splitters

On the matter of Restore ‘stealing’ votes, many have pointed out that Farage isn’t best placed to make this argument. After all, you could say Reform stole victory from Rishi Sunak in 2024 by appealing to former Tory loyalists. This is why Restore supporters are making the same argument that Farage himself made in 2024 (the video shows Farage criticising Robert Jenrick – the Tory who would later join Reform):

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The hypocrisy doesn’t end there either:

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As Labour has a huge majority and more than three years before it needs to announce a general election, it seems unlikely Burnham would call one. Reform politicians do need to give people a reason to vote for them, though, and this strategy shows they’re worried Restore is doing a better job of appealing to the far-right element of their base than they are.

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If you’re wondering why Restore is hoovering up those voters, by the way, it’s because Lowe is pulling the same trick Reform pulled with the Tories – i.e. just being further right on everything.

The Reform UK account, meanwhile, has claimed the party has “all the momentum” in response to a national poll:

If Restore is gaining traction in Makerfield, however, this just isn’t true.

The media erupts

It’s not just Reform politicians gunning for Restore, either; it’s also the party’s allies in the establishment media. The genocide-denying Islamophobe Melanie Phillips wrote this for the Times:

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Alex Phillips of Talk TV completely lost it when talking about Lowe:

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GB News is covering what Farage said, but the outlet is somewhat guarded overall – possibly assuming their audience contains a lot of Lowe fans (what you might call ‘Lowe-lifes’):

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This guardedness hasn’t stopped Lowe from suggesting GB News is part of the establishment:

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Getting to the weirder side of the right-wing press, spiked published the following:

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Restore Britain has also won the support of Twitter/X owner Elon Musk, with Farage responding as follows:

As much as we don’t want to defend the vile Lowe, it does seem he’s not wrong:

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Also, if Restore was “just one man with a social media account”, Reform wouldn’t be dedicating so much time to attacking it.

A losing strategy

Reform’s Makerfield candidate Robert Kenyon had this to say:

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It’s likely not the case that voters are telling him ‘it’s a two horse race‘, because that’s not the sort of thing a person would say to a political canvasser. It could be residents are only talking about Reform or Labour, but given the polling, we know that’s likely not true.

In other words, it’s almost certainly another instance of Reform trying to convince voters they have to vote for the party – not that it’s in their best interests. This is the strategy Labour and the Tories increasingly relied on, and we know in the long run it’s a loser.

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If there’s anything the last few years have proven, it’s that British voters are sick of being told who they have to vote for. People aren’t playing by the establishment’s rules anymore, and Reform is clearly just another establishment-continuation party.

Featured image via Ryan Jenkinson (Getty Images)

By Willem Moore

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