National Exhibition Centre, Birmingham
“If anybody in this room is motivated by hatred and loathing of others because they’re different,” Nigel Farage pronounced in front of a reported 4,500 people in Birmingham yesterday afternoon, “I invite you to leave now.” Besides posing a dilemma for audience members in need of the bathroom, this was a clear statement of intent from the leader of Reform UK: whatever charges the media lobs at us, we’ll prove that we are a modern, diverse and welcoming party.
This kind of talk doesn’t happen in a vacuum. Reform is still dealing with the consequences of the revelation last week that one of its canvassers in Clacton, Andrew Parker, made racist remarks about Rishi Sunak and called Islam a “cult”. Though Farage, speaking yesterday at Birmingham’s National Exhibition Centre (NEC), reiterated his belief that Parker was an actor paid by Channel 4, Reform candidate Liam Booth–Isherwood nonetheless defected to the Conservatives later in the day, citing a “significant moral issue” in the party.
Birmingham was a canny choice of location for Farage’s mega-rally in the aftermath of a race scandal. Less than half the city’s population is white, with British Asians making up almost a third of the total; 30% are Muslim, compared to the 34% who identify as Christian. The make-up of yesterday’s NEC audience went some way in reflecting this: not exactly a white British minority, but more diverse than Reform’s critics would suggest.
Besides punters, one of the speakers at the rally was Zia Yusuf, a 37-year-old Muslim entrepreneur who has given Reform hundreds of thousands of pounds — the exact figure has not yet been reported — and in doing so has become the party’s single biggest donor. During his speech, Yusuf stated: “My parents came here 40 years ago, and have given half a century’s service to our NHS.” He added: “Nobody knows better than I do the good that immigrants can do for Britain.”
The benefits of immigration is not a talking point usually associated with Farage’s party. And for Reform’s opponents, this young Muslim entrepreneur is an unexpected poster boy. Yet borders remain a key issue for many Muslim voters too. One attendee I spoke to, 29-year-old software engineer Mahir, said that he and his family liked Reform because “no other party is telling the truth about immigration here.”
Reform’s manifesto doesn’t make explicit reference to British Muslims or radical Islam, but it does propose a “one in, one out” migration policy, which it bills as “smart immigration”. Four in 10 ethnic-minority Britons believe immigration is too high; the figure for British Indians is 61%, with 36% of British Pakistanis and Bangladeshis — who are predominantly Muslim — thinking the same.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe