Exclusive:
Jack Anderton says UK may ‘regain’ former colonies in future and suggests end
to support for Ukraine
Peter
Walker Senior political correspondent
Sat 16
Aug 2025 17.00 BST
An
adviser used by Nigel Farage and others in Reform UK to boost their social
media popularity has suggested that Britain would be better off had it stayed
neutral in the second world war instead of fighting Nazi Germany.
Jack
Anderton, who ran Farage’s hugely successful TikTok account before helping Luke
Campbell become the Reform mayor of Hull and East Yorkshire, also said the UK
should not support Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression.
In a post
on his personal blog about Britain’s international standing, Anderton said that
in a future world of “meritocracy”, the UK could “regain” former colonies such
as Australia, Canada and South Africa.
He added
that the UK should copy the policy of mass incarceration carried out by El
Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, widely condemned as an abuse of human
rights.
Anderton
has never been employed by Reform but the 23-year-old established Farage on
TikTok, where he now has 1.3m followers, before working closely on Campbell’s
election campaign.
He
remains a central part of Campbell’s circle, and the mayor is known to have
made efforts to get him on to his roster of staff, which have been thwarted
because he cannot have political appointees.
Anderton’s
personal blog, titled Britain Needs Change, includes an entry from last year
about what he called “a self-interested British foreign policy”, arguing that
the only conflict in the last century that was in the UK’s interest was the
Falklands war.
“Trillions
of pounds of British taxes have been spent in foreign lands in the pursuit of
‘democracy’, ‘human rights’ and ‘doing what is right’,” the post said. “More
than a million British lives have been lost since WW1 in wars and battles that
have never once been fought by British men, on this island.”
Fighting
in both the world wars ensured the UK was no longer a great power, he wrote:
“We impoverished ourselves for decades, we didn’t finish paying the loans off
to America until 2006. Our economy stagnated, we lost an empire, and we are
pushed around by America. And Germany, a country we beat, has been richer than
us since the 1970s.
“Alternative
history is interesting; if Britain had not fought in WW1 and WW2, it would not
have had to rely on America for economic support, and it would have had the
independence to act accordingly. Britain could have developed India, Cyprus,
Fiji, Malta, Saint Lucia, Seychelles, the Bahamas, Australia, Canada, South
Africa, Ireland and New Zealand. In the coming meritocracy, perhaps Britain
could regain some of these nations.”
The same
post also argues against providing support for Ukraine after Russia’s invasion:
“We are sending billions of pounds (that we cannot afford) to prop up a country
that we have no allegiance to. Russia is not our enemy, they have not attacked
Britain.”
Anderton
calls for a shake-up of the Foreign Office so that all decisions are made
purely on the basis of whether or not they benefit Britain: “Instead, what we
have are people who should be working for the UN or a charity rather than
working in the British Foreign Office.”
In
another post from 2024, on crime, Anderton enthusiastically endorses the
policies of Nayib Bukele, who has dramatically cut gang violence and wider
crime through mass detentions that have put 2% of El Salvador’s population in
prison.
“Extraordinary
times require extraordinary measures,” he wrote. “I’d even argue the measures
aren’t that extraordinary and should be in place in times of normalcy.
“El
Salvador is perhaps a lesson for those in Britain who wish to take back control
of their country. Power works, and it is all that matters. State power when
used effectively is basically omnipotent. The meritocracy will be established,
criminals and corrupt officials will be jailed, immigration will drop to zero,
houses will be built, and our citizens will once again feel proud of the
country they call home.”
Anderton
was contacted for comment. Campbell’s office referred the matter to Reform UK,
who said Anderton was not employed by either the party or the mayor.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário