Libby Brooks Scotland correspondent 

Nigel Farage rolls back on vow to deport all small-boat arrivals to the UK

Reform leader tells event in Scotland deporting women and children is not part of his party’s plans for the next five years
  
  

Former Conservative MSP Graham Simpson, left, and Nigel Farage at their press conference on Wednesday
Former Conservative MSP Graham Simpson, left, and Nigel Farage at their press conference on Wednesday Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

Nigel Farage has rolled back on his pledge to deport “absolutely anyone” arriving in the UK on small boats just 24 hours after making it at a combative press conference in Oxford that led to accusations of ugly and destructive rhetoric.

Farage announced plans to deport hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers in the first five years of a Reform government and to pay despotic regimes such as the Taliban to take them back. He also said: “Yes, women and children, everybody on arrival, will be detained.”

At a press conference near Edinburgh on Wednesday, however, when asked whether his comments on securing women’s safety in the UK rang hollow when he had committed to deporting women and girls back to countries where they faced oppression and sexual violence, Farage said that was not true.

At an event to introduce the MSP Graham Simpson as the latest defection from the Scottish Conservatives to Reform, Farage said: “We’re not even discussing women and children at this stage, there are so many illegal males in Britain.”

Asked if that meant women and children were exempt from the plans, he said: “I didn’t say exempt for ever, but at this stage it is not part of our plan for the next five years.”

Farage similarly rowed back on his proposal to renegotiate the Good Friday agreement after political parties in Northern Ireland condemned his comment as reckless and irresponsible.

He said “the Northern Ireland situation is deeply complex” and “that will not be at the forefront of what we do”.

Farage also denied having a “woman problem”. He said increasing numbers of women had joinedReform over the summer and that they were “becoming very strong forces the party”.

Describing Reform is a “rapidly evolving political movement in Scotland”, he hailed his party’s “remarkable result” at the Hamilton byelection in June, when his candidate Ross Lambie won 26% of the vote and said there were 200 potential candidates being vetted across the country. He predicted “pretty much a wipe-out” for the Scottish Conservatives at next May’s Holyrood elections.

Simpson becomes Reform’s sole MSP sitting in the Scottish parliament, and its second MSP overall after the former Tory Michelle Ballantyne’s defection in the last parliamentary session.

Appealing to former colleagues, Simpson said: “I say to those who have great ideas for Scotland and who may have felt ignored: ‘Talk to me, you will find my door – wherever I am put in parliament next week – open and receptive to the kind of fresh thinking that we need in politics.’”

A number of anti-immigration protests have taken place outside asylum seekers’ accommodation in Scotland over the summer, in Falkirk, Perth and Aberdeen, but not on the scale of those in England. Participants were often outnumbered by anti-racism counter-protests.

The Scottish Tory leader, Russell Findlay, said on Monday that recent protests outside an asylum hotel in Falkirk were understandable after an Afghan asylum seeker raped a local teenager.

Sadeq Nikzad, 29, was jailed for nine years in June after attacking the 15-year-old in Falkirk town centre in October 2023.

Farage said that his press conference on Tuesday had “sparked the beginning of a national debate”, and that “even the prime minister hasn’t attacked me on the idea that we should be deporting people that come illegally”. Downing Street accused him of not being serious about his plans.

Simpson also denied at Wednesday’s event that he had been obliged to apologise for his behaviour towards a junior female staffer, after a Scottish Conservative source briefed reporters that he was “a pathetic, nasty little man who won’t be missed”.

“Just last year, he had to apologise to a young female member of staff for acting in a totally inappropriate, bullying and intimidating way towards her,” the source said.

Simpson said the allegation was “absolutely untrue”. “Anything internally will be dealt with internally and that’s the way I’ll leave it,” he said. “I certainly don’t have a problem with women.”

 

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