
has sold us out. In secret, without a vote or a mandate, he's handing power to European judges and foreign officials all over again. This so-called security pact is nothing more than a backdoor deal to drag us back under Brussels control. It's everything Starmer and his Remainer mates have always wanted. But while he prances around the globe, who's protecting our security at home?
What about stopping the illegal boats? What about securing our borders against the endless stream of undocumented, military-aged men arriving from ? Nowhere to be seen. Because this is all part of the plan. One quiet agreement, then another - and before we know it, we're right back where we started. A rule-taker, and having to pay for the privilege.
And while Starmer gives away power abroad, his top team are tightening their grip at home - lining up to raid your wallet and restrict your freedoms.
They don't want you to enjoy a pint, light a cigarette, or make your own choices. They look down on how ordinary people live - and they're not even subtle about it.
They're banning disposable vapes. They've taxed rolling tobacco so heavily it now costs more than silver. They want new levies on meat, alcohol, and anything else they disapprove of. It's not about health, it's about control.
This is the reality of Starmer's Britain: surrender our freedoms abroad, strip them away at home.
One threat of tariffs from our supposedly friendly European neighbours was all it took for Starmer to bend the knee - again. Why should we be surprised?
Time and time again, two-tier Keir has shown that he is a weak leader out of touch with ordinary Britons' concerns.
When it comes to the issues that matter to the people of this country, Starmer is failing on all fronts.
At the start of this month, the good people of Britain voted for change - proper change - in council and mayoral elections up and down the country.
They voted to tear down the inherited reign of the cloth-eared metropolitan elite, bringing an end to decades of broken promises, managed decline, and the uniparty stitch-up. They voted to reject Labour's nanny statism and raids.
Against the punishing levies driving family-run businesses into the ground and strangling growth. Against the warped economics that punish work, reward failure, and make everyday life more miserable.
They voted for that simple principle: that people, not the government, know best how to spend their own money and live their own lives.
They voted to protect the right to enjoy a pint, a cigarette, a laugh and to speak their minds - without being fined, banned or locked up.
They didn't vote to go crawling back to the very institutions we walked away from. They didn't vote to be ruled again by European judges or overruled by foreign courts.
They voted overwhelmingly for Reform - because Reform speaks for people who've been ignored for too long. They want strong borders. Common sense, low taxes, free speech, national pride.
And most of all, they want a country that works for them - not one run by technocrats abroad and out-of-touch elites at home.
We said no in 2016. And we mean it even more today.
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