Restore Britain being the only option in the 2029 general election appeared to be an established fact already on the British (and, indeed, international) online right. Pretty much anyone independent with an audience immediately got behind Rupert Lowe’s Restore party when it launched on 13 February, and who can blame them!
Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, until now, was the only serious opposition party in the country. The Tories and Labour were both hurtling towards extinction and on the right the only other party with any serious membership base was Advance UK, an absolute joke of an outfit ran by Pakistani-born Benyamin Naeem Habib. Only begrudgingly, very begrudgingly, was anyone serious on the right planning to vote for Reform, ‘at least he will deal with the illegals’, we reasoned. Farage was far from a trusted figure anyway, but in recent months especially the party has just made mistake after mistake. Reform is now increasingly just seen as the Tories 2.0, and rightly so after packing the leadership with Boriswave Tories and Muslims. The catastrophe over there is worthy of its own article.
Over the past week or so there has been much debate about who ‘our guys’ should be backing and, besides from the atrociously orchestrated takedown attempt of Restore by the usual Tory boy crowd which triggered this debate, there were well meaning criticisms or concerns from others who gave their two-cents. I figured it would be worth me giving my take on why Restore is the clear choice.
Getting Involved
This is the elephant in the room when it comes to who ‘our guys’ (our used VERY broadly here considering how harsh Reform vetting is) should back. For as long as most of us reading this have been alive our politics have been considered beyond the pale, anyone who is in even remotely in favour of radical immigration changes has been screened out and removed from the major parties. ‘Infiltration’ has never worked, that’s by now a proven cope. None of us have ever managed to put on a presentable front, get into the Tories and somehow push our politics from the inside. It just doesn’t work that way. The ‘infiltrator’ either ends up adopting the views of those around him, considerably waters down their own views (making the entire operation redundant) or gets expelled.
Reform UK is absolutely no different in this regard. If you’re British and politically involved then you’ll know someone who has joined Reform and ended up getting booted out, no matter how mild their politics. Reform UK, and UKIP (Nigel Farage’s former party) before it, used Hope Not Hate for vetting their candidates, they are now saying they are open to MI5 doing it! Hope Not Hate, for those who aren’t aware, is an organisation which exists solely to dox (by legal or illegal means, they get away with it either way) anyone even remotely right wing in an attempt to ruin their lives to put people off right wing politics.
The only young ‘right wingers’ left within Reform are the most disgusting careerists you’ve ever seen. In private many openly admit that they disagree with Reform, but they don’t want to give up that cushy seat they’ve been vaguely promised at the next election, so absolutely all of their actions will be towing the line and attacking the further right position. Everyone else has been purged or left. Only a small minority of people are willing to sell out their country when our demographics and existence hang in the balance. To do so at this point, when Reform’s intentions are so clear, is treason.
Restore, meanwhile, is refreshingly different. Last year, when the party was just a movement, an attitude of me ne frego was immediately adopted when it came to leftists like Hope Not Hate crying about the perceived wrongdoings of Restore’s members or supporters. Since the launch of the party Charlie Downes has successfully parried comments regarding Steve Laws or other supporters on interviews. This in itself is extremely respectable and, indeed, this is all anyone has had to do this entire time. A bit of common sense.
Obviously people like myself and Steve Laws do not get directly involved. We aren’t stupid. That isn’t our job and we would only give Restore’s enemies a stick to beat them with. Our job is to drag the political scene to the right which, in turn, creates space behind us which is seen as more ‘acceptable’, a space Restore now occupies. Rupert himself has frequently sung the praises of the ‘online right’ for doing exactly this.
For anyone else, though? Those with more ‘sensible’ (dare I say… sensible nationalist) optics? The overwhelming majority or the ‘online right’? They’ve been allowed in with open arms. Common sense has been used with vetting and, indeed, there has been vetting from the right, as opposed to from the left. Restore are screening against radical Zionists, open border civic nationalists, and these types. In short? ‘Our guys’ can actually get involved in Restore. The decision on who to back is made for us.
Immigration Policy
A lot of nonsense has been said in recent days about Restore’s immigration policy, one misinformed opinion that springs to mind was from Bronze Age Pervert when he said ‘Rupert Lowe is on interview a few days ago having the same immigration policy as Reform btw’. Obviously this is a million miles from the truth. Allow me to explain what Restore’s immigration policy actually is.
First, for comparison, here is what Reform is pushing. For the longest time Reform ran on ‘net-zero’ immigration, something we haven’t seen consistently since the 1980s. This is, of course, not quite good enough. More immigration or not, we are doomed to become a minority unless the people already here go home. Previously Nigel Farage famously dismissed mass deportations of illegal immigrants as ‘impossible to do’ and expelled Rupert Lowe from the party for even using the term, calling it’s usage ‘very grave, dark and dangerous.’ Under intense pressure from the right Reform did later go back on this, using the term mass deportations and promising to detain and deport every single illegal immigrant. Very tentatively, especially since the founding of Restore, Reform have vaguely promised net negative immigration.
Restore, meanwhile, have been very clear from the get-go, making a serious statement of intent with their launch video. ‘Restore Britain will not just stop mass immigration, we will reverse it’, Rupert proclaimed, before pledging that all illegals would be deported, as well as legal foreign nationals who are unable to speak English, living in social housing, claiming benefits, refusing to work or failing to integrate. Foreign criminals, naturally, are also on the chopping block. Most importantly and vaguely of all, any foreign national who ‘even actively hates our way of life and wishes to do us harm’ will be ‘made to leave’. Rupert also states that ‘for the foreseeable future, far more people must leave Britain than arrive.’ ‘If that means millions go, then millions go’ Lowe famously claimed, a clear statement of intent. Restore, like Reform, has pledged to deal with the Boriswave (the mass influx of about 1 million foreigners a year under the Tories) by making sure those immigrants do not receive citizenship. Restore have said explicitly that they will reverse the Boriswave. There is also the matter of banning Halal and Kosher as well as the Burqa and cousin marriages in an effort to pressure foreigners to leave. Charlie Downes, meanwhile, has openly spoken out in favour of (and, importantly, used the term) Remigration whilst Harrison Pitt met with Martin Sellner and Renaud Camus merely days ago, two of the most outspoken Remigration activists in continental Europe.
The exact number of foreigners that would potentially leave under either Government is obviously up for debate, we do not have exact figures of illegal immigrants, never mind all the other categories of people on the list that need to go, but it’s irrelevant. What we do know is that a Restore Government would deport significantly more foreigners than a Reform Government, millions more. Reform have also been dragged kicking and screaming to their current position whereas Restore have only just launched with their much tougher policies. I know who I trust.
There is also, of course, the matter of foreigners coming here in the first place. Nigel Farage has repeatedly disavowed ethnonationalism, calling himself the ‘antidote’ to the far right (and repeatedly boasts of his role in taking down the BNP), being English is about ‘how you feel’ he says. Last year he famously claimed that you are Welsh if you’ve lived there for 5-10 years and paid taxes. What can we expect of the immigration we do see during a Farage Government? Well, famously, Nigel Farage has often boasted that Brexit and his immigration policy would make it easier for non-Whites to come to Britain, as opposed to EU migrants like Poles. He’s also made the ‘food’ argument for why non-White immigration is good. Farage’s track record when it comes to immigrants is clear, he favours the ‘Commonwealth’, not meaning Australia or Canada, but, rather, places like India. Nationalists have been warning about this for over a quarter of a century!
Rupert Lowe, meanwhile, happily admits who the English people are. ‘Britain is not just an idea, Britain is not just a passport, Britain is a nation’ he proudly proclaimed in Restore’s launch video. In the examples of immigrants that Rupert would want, like spouses, his examples are almost always the former Dominions or the US, and, on the rare occasion when it’s a non-White example, it’s Japan. His red list countries would not be allowed to use his spousal liberalisations.
Who makes the red list? Well, it’s a long list of third world nations and Albania, which, famously, is a nightmare European exception when it comes to immigration and crime in Britain. Connor Tomlinson, who is obviously close with the Restore inner circle, has said that it is certain that India and Nigeria will be on the final list. Apart from that? ‘We will take a small number of ultra high-skilled migrants – on one condition. It benefits the British people.’
Trust and Expectations
Many an X response has read along the lines of ‘you don’t trust Farage, why do you trust Lowe?’ An excellent question. The examples above of vetting as well as Farage’s track record, I hope, will give you some example of why I trust Rupert, but not Nigel. More than anything else, however, it is the people who Rupert has around him. Charlie Downes, Lewis Brackpool and Harrison Pitt, Rupert’s circle, are all people we actually know something about. They have always been more ‘establishment’ or however you’d like to term it, actively wanting to get involved in parties and projects in London. A better image than people like myself or Steve Laws, but, ultimately, not from a different world entirely. We all know someone who knows these people (amongst others, many of the early additions have been absolutely splendid people) and we can all completely vouch for them. Their hearts are in the right places, their politics are reflective of their generation and they haven’t been absorbed by the Westminster bubble. I trust them, as do most people I know.
Many on X have tried to use Charlie’s personal comments regarding Christianity as an attack on the party, but, this is the great thing about Restore. The core message, clearly, is immigration, and at the very least everyone involved understands that millions must go. There are plenty of people with differing opinions on various things, but opinions are not policy! Everyone and their varying opinions have been allowed into the party as long as they understand the mission at hand. There are no problems there at all for me, there will, of course, be people involved that we don’t agree with 100%, ideas put forward that we aren’t totally on board with as well as plenty else that I’m sure we’ll get annoyed in private by. Ultimately, though, we know what Restore is and what it isn’t. Our eyes remain on the task, and if things ever go too far in the wrong direction we will (and have) made our voices heard. There will be no question of a MAGA-esque cult attitude.
When it comes to focusing on the message, one issue above all others is the elephant in the room. Farage, Jenrick and Tice especially are essentially owned by foreign interests, Israeli ones especially. When the Israeli-Iranian war kicked off recently Reform were clapping like seals, demanding we send our boys to go and die in the foreign war, ‘the right one’ as he puts it. This quickly backfired and boy did they notice given that within days they were backpedaling like crazy. Restore, meanwhile, demanded that we keep out from the get-go. A green flag if I’ve ever seen one.
Now, how about expectations? Steve Laws actually lays out the nationalist position rather succinctly. We’ve had plenty of bad faith criticisms along the lines of ‘Rupert doesn’t want to deport every single third world immigrant, you fell for it.’ We know what Rupert is and what he is not. Rupert’s deportation policies will see us deal with untold millions of the invaders in our country, a large chunk, if not half, of the problem solved. The immigrants that are hostile to us will go and, using the economy as a palatable ‘excuse’ we will be able to get rid of millions of people. Everyone that it is possible to deport short of declaring ‘right, we are deporting you because you aren’t European’, is being deported. Once those people have been deported, what do you think happens then? We just carry on as normal? No! The situation will be so polarised and so many migrants will have left on their own accord due to the new circumstances that we will ultimately be operating in an entirely new political arena with far more opportunities. Why nationalists would support this is obvious.
The problem up until recently has been getting such a radical message to be palatable to the public. The hardest job of all is building an initial support base to the point where friends can look to their other friends who are voting for the nationalist party and feel it is socially acceptable. The BNP was close but never quite got there. The National Front had their moment in the 70s but couldn’t keep it up. Both had huge optical issues and were ripped apart by infighting. The more recent nationalist parties haven’t even gotten close. We have been offered something both radical and palatable. Rupert holds that perception together nicely to the point that the richest man in the world, Elon Musk, as well as local big-shots like Duncan Bannatyne are cheering Rupert on or wanting to get involved.
There is also the matter of ‘wasting a vote’ which has been used against Restore. This was the exact same line of argument used against Reform by the Tories at the last general election, and, ultimately, this is what has kept any radical change from happening thus far. Already, within the first month, Restore is polling at 7-10%. This is an absolutely golden opportunity and most people in our sphere have understood the assignment.
We have been offered a genuine, radical solution. The public is willing to get behind it. After all, Reform are only getting any votes at all because people were voting for whoever would palatably deport the most foreigners with a chance of winning. Restore have found the perfect, acceptable line. Clearly a large chunk of the public is already willing to take their vote over to Restore and that’s just at launch. The task now is to keep up the consistency, keep expanding the party infrastructure and improve Restore’s polling. The higher that number gets, the more people will be willing to chance their vote on Restore. Every little defection to Restore, every treasonous comment and every Boriswave Tory addition will slowly but surely chip away at Reform’s support and shift things further in Restore’s favour. One day, and it may not even be that far away, the scales will tip. Do not expect Nigel Farage to fight and die for Reform. If the support dwindles he will simply retire and that party is finished. Restore have a hard task, but, it is one they are capable of with the amazing team they are building. People just need to believe, that is literally it. Every single digit in the polls matters. Little by little it will come, and, then, all at once. We just have to keep pushing relentlessly. Reform have no real means of defending themselves except ‘vote for us, don’t split the vote!’ They cannot keep that up for three years once the two parties get closer together in the polls.
Exciting times, and we all need to do our part. We cannot sit around wondering ‘what if’ regarding vote splitting. Only one party allows us to get involved and every single one of us needs to give it our all. We have three entire years. If we do our best and truly act as apostles for Restore, then there is no reason at all why Restore could not attain victory in 2029. To many this will sound ridiculous now, they will read this and laugh, but, little by little, if we do our jobs, the odds will tip in our favour. Ignore the noise, keep pushing.
For England.
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