Britain Hurtles Towards Revolutionary Change
But Will it be Destruction or Salvation?




First picture: Rembrandt? Next, the Comandante on Pont Mynwy (Monnow Bridge), Monmouth; the Comandante before Glyndwr’s parliament at Machnylleth; the final picture is in Chichester: I took the photograph but can’t remember the artist’s name.
The elections of May 7 indicate a sea-change in British politics. In the parliamentary elections in Wales and Scotland, Labour have been crushed—a particularly bitter blow for them in Wales, where they have been unchallenged for close to a century—and in the local elections in England, where voter turnout was far higher than usual (about 49%, compared to the usual 29-30%), both Labour and the Conservatives have been thrashed. If this is a harbinger of the next General Election, it’s clear that the duopoly is over. Considering how utterly both the major parties have failed the nation in the past decades, consistently ignoring the interests of the native population, particularly the working-class, and indeed flouting the political will of the people who voted for them, again and again, especially on immigration, that must be a good thing. The question is, which parties will benefit, and how will the emergence of a truly multi-party polity change the nation? On this, there are grounds for optimism, but only very cautious optimism. It could all go disastrously wrong; indeed we may be heading for authoritarianism of one kind or another—or even of both kinds. I’ll explain!
First, the obvious beneficiary of Labour’s abandonment of the British working class is Reform, in both England and Wales. And for the time being at least, Reform are looking like the de facto opposition of Labour, and Farage could become the next Prime Minister, if current trends continue. That scenario doesn’t fill me with hope, because Farage, despite occasionally expressing ‘based’ views, has proven again and again that he is a turncoat with no genuine principles, a pragmatist who will do anything to gain power. Not only has he welcomed Tory defectors into the parliamentary party—most of them not very intelligent, with the exception of Danny Kruger—but he has also fielded dozens, possibly hundreds, of immigrant candidates, some of whom even campaigned in their own languages. Although his current stance on immigration is ostensibly tough—it has to be, given Restore’s meteoric rise—he has previously said that mass deportations would be politically impossible. Besides, as an ex-City man and avowed Thatcherite, in office he would almost certainly be neo-liberal and globalist. In other words, more of the same. Many on the right, for example Jacob Rees-Mogg, the former Tory cabinet minister, are urging that the Right should unite, and I think an alliance between Reform and the Conservative Party before the next election is very likely. It wouldn’t change anything essential.
The other big winner in the elections in England was the Green Party, a far-left amalgam of neo-Marxism and Islamism, two very strange bedfellows who share almost no values, except for a hatred of England, of Christianity, and our entire heritage. It may seem too lunatic to take seriously, but that would be unwise: remember that the Nazis were elected with only 12% of the popular vote in 1933. And the Muslims, like the British working-class, have comprehensively abandoned the Labour Party. In 2019, 86% of Muslim voters cast their votes for Labour; in this election it was down to 33%. Not all of the deserters voted for the Greens, of course: many turned to ‘independent’ Muslim candidates who run openly on support for Gaza. We can be sure that in the next General Election there will either be an openly Islamist Party, or else Muslims as a community will be supporting the Greens, as they understand that the Greens are too ingenuous to perceive that they are being used as a Trojan horse. The Green vote is growing, largely because of Muslim defection from Labour, and the defection of ‘educated’ women, especially young women, from Labour, who have been so brainwashed that they are not capable of critical thought.
I doubt if the Greens could garner an overall majority, but in alliance with Labour and the LibDems (who did quite well in the elections, at the expense of Labour and the Tories), could conceivably command a majority. That would almost certainly mean an overtly authoritarian government, as both the Islamists and the neo-Marxists have authoritarian goals. Zack Polanski, the leader of the Greens, has actually stated that there would be no place for ‘people with toxic views’ in his Britain. He didn’t spell out how he would remove them, but the options are obvious: prison, banishment, or execution. And we know that the Islamists favour forced compliance. The blasphemy laws they have pushed for, and which seem certain to be enacted by a now shaken Labour government which will do all it can to appease them, will effectively destroy free speech in Britain and make Islam the only protected religion in the country—in effect, the state religion. The Green wokeists claim to oppose authoritarianism, but their willingness to cancel and exclude anyone who disagrees with them is proof of their insincerity. In fact Equity, or equality of outcome, can only be enforced by a removal of freedom. People will not stand for it voluntarily.
Furthermore, we are a step closer to the end of the Union. In Scotland, the Scottish National Party was again the biggest party in the parliamentary elections, for the fifth time running, although it still lacks an overall majority. (Two of the SNP MPs elected are transgender immigrants, one on them actually on a student visa! You couldn’t make this up, could you?) In Wales the nationalist party Plaid Cymru is the biggest party in the Senedd, though here too it lacks an overall majority. The problem with both parties is that they are neo-Marxist, and if they do achieve independence, will govern at the expense of their native populations, not in their interests. (In the gallery, I put a couple of pictures of myself in my beloved Wales, looking suitably concerned!)
Apart from the destruction of the traditional parties, there is one more great ray of hope: Restore. Because it’s a very new party, and could not yet field candidates nationally, its results may appear insignificant. However, in Great Yarmouth, where Rupert Lowe, its leader, is MP, they stood for, and won, every single seat on the city council. (Farage had predicted that they wouldn’t even get 1% of the vote!) Although the mainstream media is still calling them ‘far-right’, they are not: they are simply a patriotic party reflecting the will of ordinary British people. And I believe they have a very real chance of winning the next General Election, particularly if it is held in 2029. This is why I am not in favour of an immediate General Election, despite Starmer’s and Labour’s obvious unfitness to govern. If it were held in the next couple of months, it seems certain that Reform would win, perhaps needing the support of the Conservatives to form a majority. We have to hope that the enormously popular Restore will win the next election, with an overall majority. If that happens, we would see the end of illegal immigration immediately, the drastic reduction of legal migration, the deportation of all foreign criminals, Britain leaving the ECHR, and the end of the power of the Blob, the quangos and civil servants who are throttling the country, largely in order to increase their own wealth and power. Britain could still be saved—though I suspect that Scotland will be independent in the next couple of decades, and Northern Ireland will join Eire. I’m not sure about Wales.
One of the problems is that the first-past-the-post system is designed for the duopoly. That doesn’t mean that proportional representation would be better: we’ve seen how that works in most European countries. You get coalitions of parties that can’t agree on anything and end up governing ineffectively, succumbing to the influence of their unelected civil servants, who serve the globalist world order. If that happens, Britain will remain mired in open borders immigration, with an ever-growing Muslim population that will come to dominate politics, and a compliant London-based globalist elite who will appease them. Britain as we know it will cease to exist.
Rupert Lowe and Restore Britain really are the country’s last realistic hope. The one thing both Nigel Farage and Zack Polanski agree on is that Labour and the Tories are dead. I agree with them on that. But let’s hope they are both wrong that they are the future of the country: either of them would be disastrous. As Britons, we must remember who we are, and make ourselves heard, while we are still the majority.
We must take the country back before it’s lost forever.



Not being British, I have no dog in this fight directly. But noting that Australian politics (and meta politics) tends to follow British or American trends, I’m actually heartened to see the number of minor parties you have, representing a saner approach to politics.
If I were British, I’d almost certainly vote for the Social Democratic Party under William Cloustone, or alternatively Restore.
Both healthy alternatives to the neoliberal consensus, in my opinion.
how did you get the NSDAP only getting 12% of the 1933 vote in Germany?
a quick Google suggests 43%