Nigel Farage's false claims exposed as journalist brutally calls him out at speech - The Mirror

Nigel Farage's false claims exposed as journalist brutally calls him out at speech - The Mirror


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Nigel Farage's false claims exposed as journalist brutally calls him out at speechReform UK leader Nigel Farage has been embroiled in a row over a 'racist' attack advert put out by his party


against Scottish Labour leader Anas SarwarCommentsNewsSophie Huskisson Political Correspondent14:34, 02 Jun 2025Updated 14:40, 02 Jun 2025 Nigel Farage's false claims about Scottish Labour


leader Anas Sarwar have been brutally called out by a journalist during a live press conference.


The Reform UK leader has been embroiled in a row over an attack advert put out by his party against Mr Sarwar. The ad, which has been branded "racist", claimed Mr Sarwar said he would


"prioritise" Pakistani people in a 2020 speech - when he had actually said the Pakistani community should be represented in politics.


‌ Speaking to reporters in Aberdeen today, Mr Farage also took aim at Mr Sarwar highlighting a lack of diversity in top positions in Scotland in separate comments in 2020. The Labour


politician noted that key figures across Scotland, from the judiciary, to council chief executives to head teachers, were all white.


‌ Mr Farage claimed Mr Sarwar had "a record of obsessing on this issue" and said his speech "was sectarian in its very nature", adding: "We are the South Asian community. We are going to


take over the country and take over the world."


But a journalist sitting at the press conference hit back at the outspoken politician, calling out to him on the stage: "He didn't say any such thing."


READ MORE: Nigel Farage savaged as 'poisonous man' by MP after defending 'racist' Reform UK advertNigel Farage's false claims about Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar have been brutally


called out(Image: Getty Images)Article continues below Brazen Mr Farage replied: "Well he did actually, very, very clearly." To which the journalist said: "He did not say that the South


Asian community would take over the country or the world, nor did did he use the word prioritise. I hear what you're saying but why can't you just accept what he literally said and not


mischaracterise what he said?"


The Reform leader said: "We believe what he said was a form of sectarian policies and we don't like it one little bit."


Mr Farage's visit to Scotland comes ahead of Thursday's Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election. The Clacton MP said he was confident his party would place at least third, but if


Reform won it would be the "biggest earthquake Scottish politics has ever seen".


‌ Asked about the attack ad having dominated the campaign, Mr Farage insisted Reform UK "don't talk about race at all". He said: "We think everybody should be treated equally. We object,


very strongly, to the segmentation of people into different types."


Anas Sarwar branded Nigel Farage a 'poisonous man who doesn't understand Scotland'(Image: PA) Labour and the SNP condemned the ad as "racist" and called for Meta to remove it from Facebook.


Mr Sarwar last week branded Mr Farage a "poisonous man who doesn't understand Scotland".


‌ Mr Sarwar, who was born in Glasgow to Pakistani Muslim parents, today spoke of the "guilt" he feels as his children have to experience attacks against him.


Mr Sarwar grew up as the son of a politician - the UK's first Muslim MP Muhammad Sarwar - and told journalists on Monday he had grown to normalise the racist attacks levelled against his


family.


Asked how his family deals with racist attacks levelled at him throughout his career, the Scottish Labour leader told journalists in Hamilton: "To be honest, it only motivates me and drives


me, and makes me want to work even harder.


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"I think what gives me a bit more perspective is there were similar kinds of attacks, not identical, but similar kinds of attacks when I was growing up and my father was trying to be a


politician, when he was trying to get elected as the country's first Muslim MP, and there was threats, there was abuse, there was violence at that time.


"I think that probably has added resilience for me, and therefore it's water off a duck's back. I think the challenge is, where I feel a wee bit of guilt and where I feel a wee bit of


trepidation, is the impact it has on my kids."


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