Nigel Farage has likened masked Muslim protesters marching through Tower Hamlets to a âforeign invading armyâ, branding the scenes âone of the most terrifying things Iâve ever seen in my lifeâ. The Reform UK leaderâs combative remarks came after hundreds from the Bangladeshi community took to the streets of East London on Saturday, following a ban on a UK Independence Party (UKIP) demonstration in the borough.
Gathering outside Whitechapel Station, the crowd waved Palestinian and Bangladeshi flags, with many donning balaclavas â on sale for ÂŁ5 each to shield identities. Balaclava-clad men chanted âWe will honour all our martyrs. Allahu akbarâ and âZionist scum off our streetsâ, vowing to âdefend their communityâ amid heightened tensions. The protest was staged in response to the UKIP ban, imposed over fears of public disorder.
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Speaking at a Westminster press conference yesterday, Farage, the MP for Clacton, decried the display as raw intimidation.
He said: âThis was intimidation to the point of basically urging the mass wipe out of huge numbers of Jewish people. Itâs one of the most terrifying things Iâve ever seen in my whole life. Maybe one day the deluded left will wake up to realise theyâve been with very strange bedfellows.â
The Clacton MP continued: âIt was like a foreign invading army marching through our streets. And I defy anyone in this room to tell me thatâs wrong.â
He further insisted âproper racismâ was unfolding in Tower Hamlets, while pointing out that left-winger demonstrators had also been rebuffed by the large groups of men.
The comments, delivered amid a bruising day for Reform UK, came as Mr Farage fielded fire over a racism row engulfing his party. Earlier, he dismissed accusations against MP Sarah Pochin, who sparked outrage by claiming that TV adverts were âfullâ of black and Asian people, driving her âmadâ.
âThe Zionist system, shut it down!â âAllahu akbar! Takbir!â
Extremist flags aloft.
Oh yes, lucky Tower Hamlets is being treated to a proper âanti-racistâ protest today. pic.twitter.com/Kzr2h5yokK
â habibi (@habibi_uk)Â October 25, 2025
Ms Pochin, elected Reform MP for Runcorn and Helsby in a by-election this year, made the remarks on TalkTV last week, agreeing with a viewer that such ads âdoesnât reflect our societyâ and left the âaverage white personâ unrepresented.
She later apologised, claiming her words were âphrased poorlyâ and aimed at the advertising industryâs âDEI madnessâ â diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives she deemed excessive.
Mr Farage told reporters: âI am unhappy with what she has done. I understand the basic point, but the way she put it, the way she worded it, was wrong and was ugly, and if I thought that the intention behind it was racist, I would have taken a lot more action than I have to date.â
He resisted calls to suspend Ms Pochin, insisting her intent was not racist, though he acknowledged the phrasingâs flaws. The stance drew swift condemnation from across the political spectrum.

Reform UK MP Sarah Pochin (Image: PA)
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer labelled Ms Pochinâs outburst âshocking racismâ and âthe sort of thing that will tear our country apartâ.
Speaking to broadcasters, he added: âIt tells you everything about Reform. Nigel Farage has got some questions to answer, because either he doesnât consider it racist, which in my view is shocking in itself, or he does think itâs racist and heâs shown absolutely no leadership.â
âIâm the Prime Minister of the whole of our country, our reasonable, tolerant, diverse country, and I want to serve the whole country. He canât even call out racism.â
Labour chairwoman Anna Turley wrote to Mr Farage before his comments, blasting his âdeafeningâ silence. âSaying that seeing black and Asian people in TV adverts âdrives me madâ is racist,â she urged. âYou have the power to withdraw the Reform UK whip from Sarah Pochin. You should do it today.â
The Liberal Democrats escalated, tabling a censure motion in Parliament to rebuke Ms Pochin. Home affairs spokesman Max Wilkinson said: âIf racism has no place in his party, as he continues to protest, then Nigel Farage should prove it by withdrawing the whip immediately. Failure to do this will show total contempt for the vast majority of decent British people.â
Even Conservatives piled in. Shadow home secretary Chris Philp told LBC: âThe way Ms Pochin had made her comments was racist, and itâs right she apologised. She should absolutely not have said that. It was completely wrong.â
Ms Pochin, in a follow-up statement, doubled down on her critique of âDEI madâ agencies producing âunrepresentativeâ ads. She said: âMy comments were phrased poorly and I apologise for any offence caused, which was not my intention.
âThe point I was trying to make is that the British advertising agency world have gone DEI mad⊠I will endeavour to ensure my language is more accurate going forward.â


