Nigel Farage heckled at launch of Reform Jewish group

A picture


Jewish activists have heckled Nigel Farage at the launch of a Jewish members’ organisation for Reform UK and accused the party of planning to use the new group as cover for persecuting other minorities.Farage spoke at the inaugural event on Tuesday night of the Reform Jewish Alliance (RJA), which he said would help the party target up to 15 parliamentary seats.Activists stood up in the middle of Farage’s speech and accused him of advocating policies under which past Jewish refugees would have been barred from the UK.They included Carla Bloom, who recalled her own family’s history of facing persecution and of fighting the far right in the 1930s.She said: “My mother didn’t fight the Mosley fascists in Cable Street for this.

”Farage told the event, held in a function room of the Central synagogue in London and attended by about 200 people, that “Judeo-Christian principles” were the foundation of everything Britain had achieved,He said he decided to set up the organisation after meeting the family of Emily Damari, a British woman taken hostage by Hamas during its attack on Israel in October 2023, because there had been no effective campaign seeking her release,The hecklers, from the group Na’amod, questioned Farage’s credibility and said they believed the allegations of the MP’s former schoolmates from Dulwich college who have accused him of making antisemitic comments,Farage has rejected allegations of antisemitism and racism,Josh Cohen, 32, said he had been disgusted to hear talk at the event of Jews as “model immigrants”, because it was aimed at paving the way for persecution of other minorities.

“We are disgusted by antisemitism but we believe Reform are an active threat to the Muslim community and to immigrants and asylum-seeker communities in the UK,” he told the Guardian,“Our own family experience of escaping persecution and our knowledge of Jewish history is instructive, so when they attack immigrants we feel a moral duty to stand up,We know our history and as a Jewish group we refuse to be pitted against other minorities,”Na’amod describes itself as a movement of British Jews seeking to end the community’s support for Israel’s occupation,Outside the event, activists from another group, the Jewish Bloc for Palestine, held placards bearing comments that Farage is alleged to have made to Jewish students with whom he attended Dulwich college.

Amy Kershenbaum, 58, who was among those inside the event, said: “Many of us would not be here if Reform policies were in place when our ancestors sought refuge,”Referring to the allegations against Farage from Dulwich alumni, she said: “I believe the reports and the victims and I am profoundly offended that he ridiculed them,I am offended that parts of the Jewish community could want to launder and whitewash his politics,”Farage has called allegations of racist and antisemitic bullying during his time at Dulwich college “complete made-up fantasies”, saying his accusers are “people with very obvious political motivation”,Those involved in heading up the RJA include Gary Mond, a former senior vice-president at the Board of Deputies, the largest body representing British Jews, who resigned from the organisation in 2022.

A political divide is emerging among British Jews, according to research, with support rising fast for the Greens and for Reform.Support for Reform among British Jews rose from 3% in August 2024 to 11% in June 2025, though this was below Reform’s ratings increase among the wider electorate.Farage was introduced at the event by Alan Mendoza, the executive director of the Henry Jackson Society, a thinktank, and a councillor who defected from the Conservatives to become Reform’s adviser on global affairs.“There is an absolute smear campaign against this man in the press,” he said of the allegations against Farage.“I can tell you, and all of you know this, there is not an antisemitic bone in this man’s body.

”Mendoza said in his speech: “More recent immigrants have not taken on the lesson of British values and try to import their values into the UK,”
politicsSee all
A picture

Labour can win political argument for closer EU ties, says Rachel Reeves

Rachel Reeves has insisted Labour can win the political argument for a closer relationship with the EU, calling it the “biggest prize” for UK economic growth.Some Labour strategists have been wary of making the case for stronger alignment with the EU, believing it could alienate pro-Brexit voters.But Reeves said on Wednesday: “I am confident this is a political argument, as well, that we can win.” She pointed to the recent agreement to rejoin the Erasmus student exchange scheme, calling it “one of the most popular things that we’ve done.”Underlining the overriding importance of EU trade for the health of the UK economy, because of the bloc’s close geographical proximity, she said: “Economic gravity is reality, and almost half of our trade is the EU

A picture

Anas Sarwar says Starmer can campaign in Scotland after calling for him to quit

The Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, has agreed that Keir Starmer can campaign for the party in the Holyrood elections just days after calling for the prime minister to resign.In a marked change of position, Sarwar said Starmer and other cabinet ministers were welcome to support Scottish Labour’s faltering effort to win in May, but only if they demonstrated how the UK government was improving lives in Scotland.Sarwar caused uproar two days ago by calling on Starmer to quit. He also said in early January that he wanted the prime minister and his colleagues to “stay behind their doors” in London during the campaign because of the UK government’s deep unpopularity with voters.He said they had been left “angry, frustrated and impatient” by its repeated policy failures and missteps

A picture

Anas Sarwar says Starmer welcome to campaign for Labour in Scotland, days after after urging him to resign – UK politics live

Last week Gordon Brown, the former prime minister, wrote to the Metropolitan police urging it to open an investigation into Peter Mandelson and evidence that he leaked confidential government documents to Jeffrey Epstein when he was a minister. Later that day the Met confirmed they were starting a criminal investigation.Brown has not left it at that. He has been looking at the Epstein files in considerable detail and, in a long and powerful article for the New Statesman, he says it has led him to conclude that a much more extensive investigation is required. He says:What I discovered about the abuse of women by male predators and their enablers – and Britain’s as yet unacknowledged role – has shocked me to the core

A picture

The Real Keir comes out fighting and turns the tables on deluded Kemi | John Crace

To have one Labour peer with a close association to a child sex offender may be regarded as a misfortune: to have two looks like carelessness. This was never going to be an easy prime minister’s question for Keir Starmer.The opposition was spoilt for choice. The peers in question – Peter Mandelson and Matthew Doyle – as well as the topics of Morgan McSweeney, Tim Allan, Wes Streeting … These were just some of the crisis points of the past seven days. Even by the political psychodramas of the past 10 years, it’s fair to say Starmer has had the week from hell

A picture

Peers under pressure: how to reform Britain’s House of Lords | Letters

Jenny Jones is right to argue for reform of the House of Lords (Peter Mandelson is fleeing the House of Lords: now let’s throw out all the other rogues and idlers, 4 February). But can I offer a word of caution?There is talk of remaking the Lords as another elected chamber. I think that would be a mistake. It would generate a competing democratic mandate, which is the last thing we need (just look at the US if you need proof). What is required is a chamber devoted to scrutiny (of draft legislation and executive action), advice and accountability in public office

A picture

Nigel Farage heckled at launch of Reform Jewish group

Jewish activists have heckled Nigel Farage at the launch of a Jewish members’ organisation for Reform UK and accused the party of planning to use the new group as cover for persecuting other minorities.Farage spoke at the inaugural event on Tuesday night of the Reform Jewish Alliance (RJA), which he said would help the party target up to 15 parliamentary seats.Activists stood up in the middle of Farage’s speech and accused him of advocating policies under which past Jewish refugees would have been barred from the UK.They included Carla Bloom, who recalled her own family’s history of facing persecution and of fighting the far right in the 1930s. She said: “My mother didn’t fight the Mosley fascists in Cable Street for this