Posts Tagged ‘MAGA’

Open Britain on Farage Telling His Donors He’ll Merge with the Tories

December 3, 2025

This message also contains an appeal for donations. I haven’t donated to them, but I’m leaving it in for anyone who wants to support their campaign for democracy.

‘Dear David,

Nigel Farage is telling donors that a Reform UK–Conservative pact – or even a merger – at the next General Election is “inevitable”.

Not the public, but his wealthy donors. Because that’s how our politics works right now. The people with the chequebooks get the roadmap, and everyone else gets the rehearsed denials.

Farage and Kemi Badenoch will insist there’s nothing in it. But behind closed doors, the conversation is very different.

Reform has momentum. But it doesn’t have the machinery to turn momentum into power: candidates, ground game, data, compliance, local infrastructure – all the unglamorous stuff that actually wins elections. The Conservatives do.

So if you’re a wealthy would-be Reform donor, worried Farage’s party is all heat and no engine, the pitch practically writes itself – don’t worry. We’ll plug Reform into the Conservatives’ ruthlessly effective election-winning machine.

And Farage, reportedly, is already laying down the terms. He’s said to feel “betrayed” by the arrangement he made with Boris Johnson in 2019 over no-deal Brexit – even though, in the long run, it delivered almost everything he wanted. This time, he wants control.

Farage told the Financial Times he’s planning a “reverse takeover”, code for swallowing the Conservatives whole.

Because the real scandal won’t be that politicians said one thing in public and did another in private.

The real scandal is the system that makes this kind of stitch-up not just possible, but rational. Our electoral system rewards it.

First-Past-The-Post turns politics into a zero-sum contest in a handful of seats. It pushes parties into cynical alliances, encourages backroom carve-ups, and lets a minority movement hitch itself to a major party’s infrastructure – and walk into power without ever winning a real national mandate.

A Reform UK–Conservative pact would be Britain’s closest equivalent to MAGA: a long-standing political institution captured by far-right populism, dragging the country towards scapegoats, culture wars, and authoritarian “solutions”.

Whatever you think of the Conservatives now, this would create a new beast entirely.

We’re expected to watch the theatre and pretend we don’t know what’s happening. But we can’t let that happen.

That’s why we’re fighting to fix our broken democracy and make it work for everyone. A system that rewards polarisation, backroom deals, and the wealthy donors bankrolling it is not a system that will ever deliver the solutions we desperately need, including an end to the cost of living crisis.

If you can, please chip in today to support our work. We’re up against a super-wealthy elite trying to buy the system, but if we don’t fight back, who will?

Thank you so much for your support! This is a team effort and we rely on everyone pitching in if we’re to get the change necessary.

Best,

Conor

Conor McKenzie

Digital Engagement Manager
Open Britain’

On the other hand, this may turn many Reform supporters away from them. Farage has based much of his political appeal since UKIP on pretending that his succession of wretched parties aren’t like the others – ‘liblabcon’, as he sneered at them. This would show that Reform are. And very many Reform supporters hate the Tories because of the mass immigration launched by Boris Johnson. So any merger between the two could bring them both down.

We hope.

Open Britain – Is MAGA Collapsing?

August 17, 2024

’16/08/24

80 Days to go until the US election.

Dear David,

Per our new Friday tradition, I’m once again going to dive into the political news from the States. For better or for worse, US politics has a massive impact on what happens here in the UK and around the world. The decision American voters take on November 4th – and the potential political violence that could come after – will shape our own fight for democracy here at home in myriad ways. So let’s get into it.

If this kind of thing is not for you, don’t worry. You can opt out here.

Is MAGA Melting Down?

It’s only August 16th, and this election cycle has already been full of surprises. Just a month ago, Donald Trump was ascendant in the polls and emboldened by an attempted assassination. MAGA seemed to be a cold and calculating political machine, delivering blow after blow to a beleaguered Joe Biden and jumping up in key swing state polls.

But the Democrats’ abrupt decision to shift their ticket seems to have caught the Republicans almost entirely off guard. They had put all their eggs in the “anti-Biden” basket, leaving them devoid of talking points and opposition research. Worse still, the Democrats’ rising momentum seems to be opening up internal feuds within MAGA, revealing the cracks in their facade.

Republican party campaigners have expressed concerns that Trump is self-sabotaging, accusing him of entering a “self-destructive spiral” since Biden dropped out.  His usual name-calling strategies (questioning Kamala Harris’ racial background, and calling her stupid) are not working in the eyes of his own strategists, and his repeated feuds with Republican swing-state governors like Georgia’s Brian Kemp are making the party look chaotic and amateurish.

Let’s also not forget that Trump was found guilty in May of falsifying business records in an attempt to conceal a hush-money payment to a porn star. His new gambit has been to try and delay sentencing until after the election, arguing that it would amount to “election interference.”

Then there’s the small matter of JD Vance. While conventional wisdom holds that Vice-Presidential picks don’t matter all that much, Trump has had a very light campaign event schedule, often leaving his VP pick to do his talking for him. Vance, a charisma blackhole with views that are polarising even to ardent right-wingers, is only further alienating the campaign from regular people.

A series of incredibly cringey “X” features with Elon Musk, including a weird sycophantic (and technologically disastrous) digital interview and a dumb AI deep-fake video of the two billionaires dancing to “Stayin Alive”, showcase a campaign that has all but lost its populist allure.

As I said at the beginning though, it’s only August 16th. Anything could happen in the next few months. But we do seem to be witnessing a turning point in Trump’s strategy, and the same old 2016 campaign tricks just don’t seem like they’re going to work again.

In other US election news…

  • The Democratic National Convention kicks off next week, set to be a huge make-or-break moment for the Harris/Walz ticket and their momentum.
  • Trump’s campaign have accused Harris of “stealing” a proposal for ending taxes on tips – many service industry workers in America are paid around $2/hour and rely mostly on tips.
  • Debate season is nearly upon us, with Harris-Trump facing off on September 10th and Walz-Vance going head to head on October 1st.

That’s it for this week.

All the best,

Matt Gallagher

Communications Officer

Open Britain Team’


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