Andrea Jenkyns belts out own song in bizarre Reform conference entrance
Andrea Jenkyns belts out own song in bizarre Reform conference entrance
Dame Andrea Jenkyns walked onstage at the Reform UK conference, belting out a song entitled “Insomniac” that she said she wrote. The mayor of Greater Lincolnshire, walked onstage at the party’s two-day conference at Birmingham’s NEC on Friday (5 September) in a sparkly jumpsuit before breaking into song. She said: “Are this awful Labour government giving you sleepless nights as well?,” adding that she co-wrote the song 20 years ago with a friend. Dame Andrea’s website says she is a soprano who has been singing since her childhood.
Tom Watling6 September 2025 01:04
Rayner’s resignation shows this government is worse than the last, Farage declares in Reform conference speech
Tom Watling6 September 2025 00:00
Scottish Labour leader thanks Murray for ‘service’
Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar has thanked the outgoing Scotland minister Ian Murray for his “service”.
Tom Watling5 September 2025 23:15
Reform football shirts go on sale at party’s 2025 conference
Tom Watling5 September 2025 22:16
Mahmood to deliver ‘tough message’ on immigration, report claims
Home secretary Shabana Mahmood will deliver a “tough message” on immigration as she looks to regain control of the narrative following a summer of unrest, sources have claimed.
The former justice minister took over from Yvette Cooper today after the resignation of deputy prime minister Angela Rayner triggered a major cabinet reshuffle from Sir Keir Starmer.
Sources have told The Telegraph that Ms Mahmood is expected to take a more hardline approach to the small boat crossings than her predecessor.
“She has coped with the prison crisis pretty well without a drastic kind of backlash. Now it’s about getting Shabana in that position to try to claw back some of the ground that Labour has lost on immigration,” said a source.
“She will be able to deliver some tough messages around immigration because of her Pakistani heritage, which Yvette Cooper might have found much harder.”
Tom Watling5 September 2025 22:06
Reform UK council leader George Finch, 19, says sixth form is a ‘complete joke’
A teenage Reform UK council leader has called sixth form a “complete joke” and said it only helps young people develop a “woke mindset”.
George Finch, the 19-year-old leader of Warwickshire County Council, called for more hands-on courses at the Reform UK party conference in Birmingham.
“The education system is broken. I’m probably one of the closest to being in school (on this panel) and being in sixth forms and universities.
“It’s a joke. It’s a complete joke. Sixth forms you’re meant to develop your learning from GCSEs – you don’t develop anything.
“The only thing you do develop is a woke mindset.
“You’re not allowed to question what’s going on. You’re not allowed to question the way you think. You’re just told to think a certain way.
“So in our politics classes, it was why I always asked – it was very simple – why so accepting? Why are we so accepting of the things that are happening?”
Tom Watling5 September 2025 21:46
Reform UK’s Zia Yusuf praises Tommy Robinson for grooming gang campaigning
Reform UK’s newly-appointed head of policy has praised Tommy Robinson’s campaigning on grooming gangs, but has repeated that he will not be allowed to join the party.
Zia Yusuf, Reform’s former chairman, told a fringe event at the party’s conference at the NEC in Birmingham that he recognised Mr Robinson’s activism.
Mr Yusuf was announced as the party’s new head of policy by Nigel Farage on the first day of the two-day conference on Friday.
Mr Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, who founded the English Defence League (EDL) has previously been jailed for contempt of court after repeating false allegations about a Syrian refugee who successfully sued him for libel.
In 2019, he also served time in prison for putting grooming trials in Huddersfield at risk by breaking reporting restrictions that were in place to ensure the proceedings were fair.
Speaking to Spectator editor and former education secretary Michael Gove at an event on Friday, Mr Yusuf was asked who was worse, former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn or Mr Robinson.
Mr Yusuf said Mr Corbyn was worse as he said he would not use the nuclear deterrent, “rendering our entire Trident programme null and void”.
He went on to say: “I would say this too. Tommy Robinson has said things about the rape gangs, and was making those arguments for years, and was disparaged and has been proven to be correct on those matters and deserves some credit for that.”
The answer was applauded by some members of the audience.
He was asked by Mr Gove whether Mr Robinson would be allowed to join Reform, with Mr Yusuf immediately saying “No”.

Tom Watling5 September 2025 21:15
Farage predicts 2027 general election in warning over Labour ‘rift’

Farage predicts 2027 general election in warning over Labour ‘rift’
Nigel Farage said he thinks there is “every chance now of a general election happening in 2027” as he addressed Reform UK’s party conference in Birmingham shortly after Angela Rayner resigned on Friday, 5 September. The Reform leader warned of a “big rift” in Labour and told attendees in a keynote speech: “Before long, there’ll be Labour MPs that reckon they’ve got a better chance on the Jeremy Corbyn sectarian ticket … they’ve got a better chance of being re-elected under that ticket, under Corbyn, than they do under Sir Keir.” His comments came following the deputy prime minister’s announcement that she would step down after ethics adviser Sir Laurie Magnus found that she had breached the ministerial code over her underpayment of stamp duty on her £800,000 flat in Hove, East Sussex.
Tom Watling5 September 2025 21:01
Richard Tice stumbles in grilling over Keir Starmer and Kim Jong Un comparison

Richard Tice stumbles in grilling over Starmer and Kim Jong Un comparison
Richard Tice fumbled his words as he was grilled on why Sir Keir Starmer was like Kim Jong Un after both the deputy Reform UK leader and Nigel Farage compared the UK to North Korea. Appearing on BBC Radio 4 on Friday (5 September), Mr Tice was repeatedly questioned by Nick Robinson on the comparison and said that Sir Keir is “authoritarian”. After he was asked whether Sir Keir was like Kim for a third time, Mr Tice said that it is “good to use anecdotes and analogies at times”. Mr Robinson fired back, calling it “offensive” to compare the prime minister to “one of the worst autocrats on the planet”. Mr Tice said “what is really offensive” is punishing those who are “concerned about illegal immigration”.
Tom Watling5 September 2025 20:45











