Farage vows to ‘end population explosion’ with migration pledge in tax-cutting manifesto targeting Labour heartlands

NIGEL Farage today unveiled huge tax slashes vowed to and end the “population explosion” as part of his “contract with the people”.

The Reform leader launched the “Great British Tax Cut” and said he would end the small boats crisis in 100 days as he unveiled the party’s election manifesto in Gurnos, South Wales.

RexNigel Farage arrives at a community centre in Gurnos, South Wales[/caption]

ReutersFarage pledged he would drive migration down to ‘net zero’ for ‘a few years’[/caption]

RexBut Farage conceded he would not win this General Election as a ‘relatively new party’[/caption]

Farage, 60, said once again his “unashamedly radical” party would be the “real opposition” to the Conservatives and pledged to offer “real, genuine change” in a dig at Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour and PM Rishi Sunak.

The Reform leader, alongside chairman Richard Tice, launched the document – titled “Our Contract With You” – in a run-down community centre.

He said the building showed “exactly what happens to a country when Labour is in charge” as he repeated the claim Britain was “skint”.

Farage has repeatedly refused to call his pledges a “manifesto”, blasting that the word is “associated with lies” for other political parties.

In the ‘contract’, Reform said they would end small boats crossing the channel within 100 days, slash income and corporation tax, leave the ECHR and cut funding to woke universities that threaten free speech.

He also said that under Reform the British Army would expand to at least 100,000 troops from its current 300-year low of 73,000.

Farage also promised to radically reform the benefits trap, which “massively disincentivises” going back to work.

And St. George’s Day and St. David’s Day would also become bonus bank holidays.

At Reform UK’s manifesto launch, Nigel Farage…

Announced a new tax on employers who hire foreign workers

Pledged to stop the boats by taking illegal migrants back to France

Promised a “freeze” on non-essential immigration “to protect our culture and identity” Promised to leave the European Court of Human Rights 

Pledged to commence zero-tolerance policing, with drug dealing and trafficking crimes receiving life imprisonment

Proposed to increase stop and searches “substantially” by recruiting 40,000 new cops in the next five years

Pledged to force all job seekers to accept a job within four months, or after two job offers, or lose all of their benefits

Promised to introduce a patriotic curriculum in primary and secondary schools including teaching European imperialism

Vowed to make St George’s Day and St David’s Day extra bank holidays

Pledged to increase defence spending to 3 per cent with 30,000 more full-time members of the Armed Forces

Pledged to introduce a 25 per cent transferable tax allowance for married couples

Vowed to increase the tax-free income tax allowance to £20,000

In a speech marking the launch of the document, he said: “The reason they voted for Brexit is we would get back control of our borders.

“And none of that has happened – in fact, the opposite has happened.

“Some people say to me, Nigel, that’s a failure of Brexit. It isn’t. It’s the failure of a sovereign government.”

He continued: “We are not pretending we are going to win this General Election.

“We are a relatively new party.

“This is the first step on our road to 2029. Our first step is to establish a bridge step in Parliament to become the opposition to a Labour government.

“I can’t see Sir Ed Davey offering that opposition.

“Meanwhile the Conservatives are tearing themselves down the middle, especially when it comes to me”.

He went on: “We believe in the family, we believe in the country.

“Our aim is to provide clear, consistent and growing leadership in the course of the next Parliament.

“I believe we should turn this into a mass movement of people… it seems highly, highly likely.”

“We want to have a radical re-think of the way our public services are run, and yes, that includes the National Health Service.

“All we want, is an NHS that is free at the point of delivery, that actually works. How we get there, most people can’t give a damn about.”

“And we want the state to take far less of our money than it is currently doing.”

Farage also blasted the Tories on immigration, fuming that they had promised for the “fifth manifesto in a row” to reduce net migration.

He continued: “One in 30 people on the street have come here in the last two years. We have never seen anything like this before.

“Labour, in their six key priorities, didn’t even mention immigration.

“We believe an overall freeze on net migration is what we need for a few years, at least until we get back on track.

“We are doing what a sensible country would do, recognising that the first duty of a British government is to look after its own people.”

And pledging to pull out of the ECHR, he said: “The only way to fully restore sovereignty and decide who can come in and who can stay is by leaving that European Court of Human Rights.”

“It is completely out of date. It’s not serving the purpose for which we signed up to it 70 years ago.

“We want to be a party that is on the side of working people.”

Blasting Labour-run Wales, Farage said he chose to launch there as there are “higher taxes” and “worse delivery”.

He said: “NHS waiting lists are exactly 50 per cent longer than in England.

“Education has drifted in a lefty, woke, PC, direction. Wales has fallen behind England on education, not that I believe England is any good.”

“And of course the crowning glory of 25 years of Labour government in Wales… the imposition of 20mph speed limits.

“Since devolution, the Welsh have been ignored by the London political establishment and let down by the Labour administration they elected.”

Farage also insisted Reform was “not a protest vote” and was offering “positive solutions for the future”.

In the foreword of his contract, Mr Farage says: “The Tories have broken Britain. Labour will bankrupt Britain. A vote for either is a vote for more dishonesty and defeat.”

He adds: “Once and for all, we will take back control over our borders, our money and our laws.”

The first two of the party’s five core pledges are on immigration, as it pledges to freeze “all non-essential immigration”.

It claims the measures will “boost wages, protect public services, end the housing crisis and cut crime.”

The party also claims to be able to stop all small boats crossing the English Channel within 100 days in Government with a four-point plan including pulling our of the European Convention on Human Rights.

The remaining three core pledges ask voters to “imagine no NHS waiting lists”, “imagine good wages for a hard day’s work” and “imagine affordable, stable energy bills“.

Further measures include ditching all net-zero green policies, and ending “woke” policing.

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The Brexit campaigner also said he would legislate for “comprehensive free speech” that promises “no more de-banking, cancel culture, left-wing hate mobs or political bias in public institutions”.

It comes after Farage said he would try to become Prime Minister at the next election in 2029.

Mr Farage had previously declared his return to lead the right-wing Tory rivals was part of a “five-year plan”.

Last week he also declared himself to be the “new leader of the opposition” and said he’d win “many” seats after one poll showed Reform above the Conservatives.

Speaking to the BBC this morning, he blasted that the Tories “can’t agree on anything”.

He continued: “They’re split down the middle, and we know what we stand for, we know what we believe in, and for democracy to function properly there needs to be a proper voice of opposition.

“And our plan – and this is our first big election as a party – our plan is to establish that bridgehead in Parliament and to use that voice to build a big national campaigning movement around the country over the course of the next five years for genuine change.”

Asked if he would stand to be prime minister at an election in 2029, Mr Farage replied: “Yes, absolutely.

“I think the disconnect between the Labour and Conservative Westminster-based parties and the country – the thoughts, hopes and aspirations of ordinary people – are so far apart from where our politics is.”

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