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Friday, June 19, 2026

Furious Nigel Farage threatens to boycott the BBC over race row

Nigel Farage turned the tables on the BBC today in a furious row about racism.

The Reform UK leader has been dogged by questions from the corporation about alleged schoolboy racism, which he denies.

At a dramatic press conference on Thursday, he rounded on the BBC for ‘double standards’, pointing out that much of its own output in the 1970s and 1980s would be considered racist, sexist and homophobic by today’s standards.

He said that if the corporation wanted to apply the standards of today to the 1970s it should issue an apology for ever broadcasting programmes like The Black And White Minstrel Show, which is now seen by many as racist.

Mr Farage suggested he would be boycotting the national broadcaster, adding: ‘I’m done with you. Until you apologise, I’m not speaking to you.’

He rounded on a BBC reporter who asked him again about his days as a schoolboy, saying: ‘The double standards and hypocrisy of the BBC are absolutely astonishing.’

Mr Farage pointed out that during his schooldays in the 1970s and 1980s, the corporation’s own output included programmes such as The Black And White Minstrel Show, It Ain’t Half Hot Mum and Til Death Us Do Part, which are all now deemed beyond the pale by many.

‘At the time I was alleged to have made these remarks, one of your most popular weekly shows was the Black and White Minstrels – right? The BBC were very happy to use blackface.

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage speaks at the Institute of Directors in Central London yesterday

Huge following: The Black and White Minstrel Show ran for 26 years

He added: ‘What about Alf Garnett? Remember that word he used to describe Marigold on prime-time, national TV? I better not repeat that word, otherwise you will use it and say that I used it.

‘Homophobia? Perfectly happy at the exact same time for Bernard Manning to appear on prime time national BBC comedy telling jokes which these days you’d probably get a knock at the door from the police and a 31-month prison sentence.’

Last century, when TV was so VERY different 

Nigel Farage cited several sitcoms and shows that once brought in millions of viewers for the BBC, but are now considered racist.

The Black and White Minstrel Show filled prime-time weekend slots for 26 years from the late 1950s. It featured country songs and lavish music hall numbers, often performed by singers in blackface. At its height, 21million Britons watched the show, and then-teenage comedian Lenny Henry became the first black performer to appear in 1975.

Sitcom It Ain’t Half Hot Mum ran throughout the 1970s. Indian characters were often depicted as stupid, and white actor Michael Bates played Indian bearer Rangi Ram in blackface.

In comedy Till Death Us Do Part, which ran from 1966 to 1975, racist Alf Garnett’s rants went largely unchallenged.

Garnett was played by Warren Mitchell, a Jewish socialist who said the role exposed and mocked the bigotry he despised. In one episode, comedian Spike Milligan wore blackface to play a half-Irish, half-Pakistani character who was mocked by Alf.

Are You Being Served?, which ran during the 1970s and early 80s, featured the iconic pairing of Mrs Slocombe and the irrepressibly camp Mr Humphries. Some of its double entendres and innuendo are now considered homophobic.

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The row came as it emerged Reform has received the biggest single donation in history to a political party from a living person

The Electoral Commission revealed that British businessman Christopher Harborne gave the party a record £9million in the summer.

Mr Harborne is a cryptocurrency investor and aviation entrepreneur who lives in Thailand. He has previously donated large sums to the Brexit Party and the Conservatives under Boris Johnson’s leadership.

The BBC has reported extensively in recent weeks on claims made by some contemporaries of Mr Farage from his days at Dulwich College, in London, who allege he made racist and anti-Semitic comments, including one who claims the Reform UK leader told him: ‘Hitler was right.’

Today programme presenter Emma Barnett yesterday asked the party’s deputy leader Richard Tice to discuss Mr Farage’s ‘relationship with Hitler’.

Mr Farage said the framing of the question was ‘despicable, disgusting beyond belief’, adding: ‘Are you surprised that half a million people every year refuse to pay the licence fee?’

The Reform leader continued to deny he ever made racist remarks in a ‘malicious or nasty way’. But he said the culture in the 1970s was ‘very, very different’ from today.

He also read out a letter from another Dulwich schoolboy, who painted a different picture of his time there.

‘I was a Jewish pupil at Dulwich College at the same time and I remember him very well,’ he read.

‘While there was plenty of macho tongue-in-cheek schoolboy banter, it was humour, and yes, sometimes it was offensive … but never with malice.

‘I never heard him racially abuse anyone. If he had, he would have been reported and punished. He wasn’t. The news stories are without evidence, except for belatedly, politically dubious recollections from nearly half a century ago.

‘Back in the 1970s the culture was very different … especially at Dulwich. Lots of boys said things they’d regret today or just laugh at.

‘Whilst Nigel stood out, he was neither aggressive nor a racist.’

Mr Farage said he had ‘plenty’ of similar messages over the last few days, and later claimed he has seen about half a dozen or so.

Michael Bates and Windsor Davies in It Ain't Half Hot Mum which ran throughout the 1970s

In Till Death Us Do Part in the 60s and 70s, racist Alf Garnett's rants went largely unchallenged

Several former Dulwich contemporaries have made accusations against Mr Farage to the BBC and Guardian newspaper.

His former classmate, Peter Ettedgui, who is Jewish, has claimed that Mr Farage had ‘repeatedly’ approached him and said ‘Hitler was right’, while they were pupils at the school.

Mr Tice on Thursday said his accusers were ‘lying’, adding: ‘This is made up twaddle by people who don’t want Nigel to be prime minister.’

The BBC has been asked to comment. 

Labour Party chairman Anna Turley said: ‘Nigel Farage can’t get his story straight. It really shouldn’t be this difficult to say whether he racially abused people in the past.

‘So far, he’s claimed he can’t remember, that it’s not true, that he never ‘directly’ abused anyone, that he was responsible for ‘offensive banter’, and deflected by saying other people were racist too.

‘Instead of shamelessly demanding apologies from others, Nigel Farage should be apologising to the victims of his alleged appalling remarks.’

A Conservative spokesman said Mr Farage’s tirade showed ‘Reform’s one-man band is in chaos once again.’

The spokesman added: ‘Nigel Farage just called a press conference and used it to rant at journalists over historic allegations of racism and antisemitism – allegations he has just admitted are true.

‘Farage is too busy furiously defending himself to defend democracy from the Labour Party’s elections delays.’

The row came as it emerged Reform has received the biggest single donation in history to a British political party from a living person. The Electoral Commission revealed that British businessman Christopher Harborne gave the party £9million in the summer.

Mr Harborne is a cryptocurrency investor and aviation entrepreneur who lives in Thailand. He has previously donated large sums to the Brexit Party and the Conservatives under Boris Johnson.

Now ‘dictator’ PM postpones four polls Reform might win

The Prime Minister was branded a ‘dictator’ who is ‘running scared’ after he cancelled four mayoral elections that Reform had been tipped to win.

Keir Starmer was also accused of ‘electoral fraud’ by Nigel Farage for putting back next year’s polls until 2028.

He even faced anger from a former Labour minister who said the Government had a ‘moral and legal obligation’ to go ahead with the mayoral elections on time.

But Downing Street repeatedly refused to apologise for the postponement, despite claims that town hall leaders were ready to set up the new combined county authorities. 

Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice told the BBC: ‘Generally it’s dictators that cancel elections. Some 7.5million people are now going to be denied the opportunity of voting in mayoral elections.

‘Funny isn’t it, we’ve just announced our mayoral candidates for all of these areas and all of a sudden the Government, terrified of losing to Reform, are cancelling them. I think they’re just running scared.’

Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a meeting at 10 Downing Street in London on Wednesday

Mr Farage said: ‘I spoke to a senior member of an Essex council this morning who told me, word for word, ‘the councils are ready for these elections, and we have spent millions across the county of Essex alone in preparation’.

‘The fact that these mayoral contests are to be postponed for a further two years is monstrous given, firstly that the electorate was told they would go ahead, given the amount of money that’s been spent in preparing for them.’ 

He pointed out that Electoral Calculus polling suggested Reform was in line to win all of the cancelled elections – in Essex, Sussex and Hampshire along with Norfolk and Suffolk.

‘The Government are basically committing electoral fraud upon the electorate, who had every opportunity to put the four mayors in place.’

Mr Farage also indicated his party may try to challenge the Government’s decision in the courts, forcing it to hold the mayoral polls in 2026 as originally planned. 

Shadow communities secretary Sir James Cleverly said: ‘Democracy is being denied yet again after the council elections cancelled by Labour this year.

‘There is no credible justification for this move. The Labour Government must reverse it immediately.’

In the Commons, Jim McMahon – who was local government minister until September’s reshuffle – said: ‘We need to be better than this.

‘The Government have a moral and a legal obligation to honour their side of the bargain. Following a statutory process, all involved had a reasonable expectation that these elections would go ahead.’

But his successor Miatta Fahnbulleh said the delay would allow the new authorities to be properly set up before mayors are in post.

No 10 declined to say if Sir Keir was happy with how long it was taking to set up the new authorities. A spokesman said: ‘Holding these elections in May 2028 gives these areas time to finish reorganising first so devolution can work properly from day one.’

QUENTIN LETTS: The genius of Starmer… just put off any election you look like losing!

Sir Keir Starmer’s people have hit on a brilliant way of not losing elections: keep postponing them. This, admittedly, means a junior minister must face tricky questioning in the Commons. But junior ministers, like wooden legs, are replaceable.

The poor thing delegated to face the House yesterday was Miatta Fahnbulleh, parliamentary under-strapper for local government. Became an MP only last year. Expendable.

News had broken overnight that four much-vaunted mayoral elections were to be delayed by two years. This followed the cancellation, earlier this year, of local elections in nine areas of England. The reason? ‘Are you mad? Look at our opinion poll ratings! We might lose to Reform.’

Ministers did not quite put it like that. Instead there was stuff about ‘needing more time to organise local devolution’.

Ms Fahnbulleh burbled. Waved her hands. Spoke of ‘our commitment to the creation of strategic authorities and mayors who can unlock economic potential and deliver for communities’. She looked up and went misty-eyed as the following line dropped huskily from her lips: ‘That will always be our guiding star, our lodestar.’ Pure Keats.

As an opponent of cynicism, I take no pleasure in reporting that this poetic, nay, astrological claim was greeted by burpy laughter from Tories.

Ms Fahnbulleh was deputising for her secretary of state, Steve Reed, who had tried to get away with a written ministerial statement.

The furtive Reed, like David Lammy, does not enjoy answering urgent questions. He considers them below his own magnificence. Same with Rachel Reeves, who on Wednesday was asked an urgent question about the resignation of the Office for Budgetary Responsibility’s boss. The speed at which Ms Reeves dashed from the chamber immediately after PMQs, when that matter was about to be raised, was remarkable.

She’d be mustard in a regional athletics relay team. At last. Something she might actually be able to do.

With her swift exit she ensured that urgent question was answered instead by James Murray. The mortuary attendant. One moment you are enjoying life, the next you feel a whiff of formaldehyde at your neck and there’s Murray the Morgue, lisping his sympathies on your loss and asking if you’d like Grandpa shaved and dressed in his novelty waistcoat for the wake.

Back to poor Ms Fahnbulleh. Try as she might to waffle about ‘strong strategic authorities’, ‘time frames’, ‘investment pipelines’ and ‘our partners on the ground’ (Mr Murray prefers them ‘in’ the ground), she was accused of running from the electorate.

Even her predecessor, Jim McMahon (Lab, Oldham W), had a go.

‘We need to be better than this,’ intoned gloomy Jim. ‘The Government is worried about being trounced in elections,’ roared Sir Edward Leigh (Con, Gainsborough). Nigel Farage (Ref, Clacton) managed to say something about ‘a dog’s dinner’ before he was halted by the Deputy Speaker for breaking Commons protocols. Brother Farage has yet to conquer the House.

Few Labour MPs bothered to attend. It was the same earlier at Cabinet Office questions. Indeed, that session had to be suspended because the House had run out of MPs.

Two government Whips, Nesil Caliskan and Deirdre Costigan, were startled when this occurred. They should have spent less of their time gawping at their mobile phones and more time watching what was going on in the chamber.

The government Whips’ office is a mess at present. Labour backbenchers possibly realise this, which may be why so many are agitating for the Chancellor to be sacked before Christmas. The Chief Whip looks semi-detached. His deputy, Mark ‘Smarmy’ Tami, is seldom seen. Another Whip, Christian Wakefield, trudges round Westminster day after day in the same crumpled suit and filthy yellow shoes, looking panicked. The only one who seems to do any work is Genevieve Kitchen, 30.

Downing Street should do something but it won’t. After all, one Whip is married to Sir Keir’s chief poisoner, Morgan McSweeney, and another is married to Amy Richards, one of Sir Keir’s top munchkins. What a crew.

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