The beginning of the end of Reform UK as a popular movement is underway. Whatever hope the party has engendered in the hearts and minds of desperate people around England will now atrophy due to the folly of the party joining the Zionist ranks. Fearing the consequences of acting independently of Zionist imperatives, Reform will find itself in a corner, unable to pursue policies that might appeal to British people who primarily care about their own lives and communities, not Israel.
Contract
The Reform manifesto for the 2024 general election was a well-conceived political document. Titled ‘Our Contract with You’, it presented a programme for government that attracted over four million votes with promises of action on the NHS, tax, energy prices and immigration. And although Reform only gained five MPs, they finished second in 98 constituencies, 89 of which are held by Labour. Reform followed this up by winning 41% of seats contested in 2025’s local elections.
The Reform brand was built, as its name implies, on being different to the established parties and convincing people that Nigel Farage and co. were sincere in wanting to make Britain a fairer country for its people. One of the selling points of the policy platform was the absence of interest in wars abroad. Aside from vowing to cut foreign aid in half (Reform view it as a failed system) the party’s manifesto did not mention foreign policy. Reform was not expressing a commitment to peace – they want to offer tax breaks to Britain’s arms industry, after all – but war and its synonym “security” were absent. The name Israel did not feature.
During campaigning in ’24, Farage observed that NATO had provoked Russia into intervening in Ukraine. The Reform leader faced a backlash from across the narrow political spectrum for this indiscreet bit of truth-telling, a backlash that only boosted his carefully cultivated image of anti-establishment outlier.
In 2025 Reform has departed from its winning formula and deformed itself, conforming to norms of Westminster politics by pledging allegiance to the ubiquitous Zionist lobby even as Israel carried out its genocidal slaughter in the Gaza Strip.
£
An influx of Zionist donations to Reform’s coffers has been rewarded with a dramatic increase in support for Israel from Farage’s supposedly Britain-first party. The shift of focus away from domestic to Zionist messaging has been led by Richard Tice MP, Reform’s Deputy Leader.

Tice shored up his bond with the Zionist movement by visiting Israel in September. Following a propaganda visit to the Gaza border, Tice rewarded his newfound friends by putting his name to an article for extremist Zionist publication The Conservative Woman. Titled ‘On the Gaza front line, I find the famine is a blatant lie’ Tice parroted genocidal propaganda. He had either been fooled by his Zionist handlers or was consciously lying when he claimed that sufficient aid was going into besieged Gaza. More likely, Tice’s Zionist handler wrote the article, the Reform deputy boss signed off on it, unaware of the down side of forming a pact with genocidal extremists. Whatever his logic, these were not the words of an independent-minded or Britain-first man leading a British political party.
After his visit to Israel, Tice’s social media output was that of a Zionist fantasist. But Tice’s Israel infatuation is so standard in British politics that it has not provoked public criticism from any mainstream politicians or commentators. They are unable to criticise Reform for their murderous Zionist utterances without implicating themselves as fellow travellers in an epic and ongoing crime. They do not even criticise him for losing his focus on British concerns. Are they loyal to our country or to a transnational ideology that seeks to dominate and subjugate any resistance to it? Do they even differentiate between their Britain and the ethnic supremacist state of Israel, or have they merged, hence “bring them home”?
Hate
It isn’t just money bending the Reform knee to Zionism. The establishment circles these individuals move in are Zionist-dominated. Tice’s partner is anti-Palestinian journalist Isabel Oakeshott, while Farage hosts a programme on the Zionist channel GB News, earning £2000 per on-air hour.
More importantly, there is a convergence of interests meaning Reform and the global Zionist movement will seek out every opportunity to marginalise, scapegoat, and stoke hatred against Muslims. On the Zionist payroll is Robert Yaxley-Lennon aka “Tommy Robinson” – the face of the British far right who staged their biggest ever demonstration through London in September. The Zionist movement needs figures like “Robinson” and Tice, pig-ignorant about the Middle East, to generate Islamophobia and social unrest across western populations. If millions of Muslims in Britain can be presented as the enemy within, then it’s a small step to persuade people to support or acquiesce to Israel’s wars on its neighbours.
And Nigel Farage has sought to leverage Islamophobia throughout his career:
2013: The Reform leader said that some Muslim immigrants were “coming here to take us over”.
2014: Using his spidey senses, Farage announced “quite a sharp rise in antisemitism” across Europe. When asked what was fuelling the (invented) problem, he explained: “What’s fuelling it is that there are many more Muslim voices,”
2015: He claimed that fears about immigration were based on people believing that some Muslims wanted to become “a fifth column and kill us”.
2025: Farage abandoned the non-interference Britain First approach that had served Reform so well in 2024 and followed Tice into an embrace of Zionism, framing it as an act of loyalty towards the Israeli victims who were “running out of friends”.
Remarkably, despite leading a right-wing party that has committed itself to the Zionist worldview, Farage is still to the left of Labour when it comes to Palestine…
But being not quite as bad as Keir Starmer on foreign policy won’t save Reform. The folly of entering a one-sided relationship with the Zionist movement will expediate a decline in popularity, caused by contradictions that many of their current voters will soon recognise as incompatible with genuine Britain First policies. For the “patriotic” Reform, dual loyalty cannot work; just as Trump is finding as his support is collapsing in direct response to his unmasking as a man of the swamp in which he serves the Greater Israel Project and the Epstein network, which might be the same thing.
Coalition
Reform’s phony patriotism has already been sold to the highest bidder. They won’t be able to pursue policies that serve the British public when they have to constantly find ways to make everything about Israel’s agenda and hating its opponents. Their Zionist benefactors won’t give them the political space they need to win a majority.
If there was a political movement that believed that being British (a British citizen or under the protection of Britain because of asylum rights) meant you were guaranteed a dignified standard of living under a government that sincerely believed in human dignity, it would sweep the board.
In the absence of a galvanising force, expect Labour and the Tories to act in parallel at the next election to keep out the Reformers who they will decry as a fascist threat. All three parties will serve Zionism, and the olde British system will have to adapt to survive. I predict a Labour-Conservative coalition government, with big business spreading its bets across the three parties and the younger generations choosing whatever left-wing parties are on the ballot, and Reform getting their karmuppence due to the incongruence of their commitment to Zionism.
We won’t get Reform. But we also won’t get reform, which is what we need.
by Tom Charles @tomhcharles





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