Analysis
Mail on
Sunday attacks Restore as split right creates headache for UK papers
Michael
Savage
Media
editor
Some
titles that once backed the Tories now ‘flirting with Farage’ as they try to
gauge where readers stand
Tue 16
Jun 2026 07.00 BST
It was a
Mail on Sunday headline with all the ferocity usually reserved for general
elections, directed squarely at a political opponent. But in this case, the
traditionally Conservative-supporting title was not targeting Labour.
The party
in its crosshairs was Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain, the vehemently rightwing
outfit that regards Nigel Farage’s Reform UK as too weak on deporting migrants.
“Restore
Activists at ‘White Supremacy Summit’,” declared the front page. It claimed
supporters canvassing for Lowe’s party before this week’s Makerfield byelection
had attended an event that hosted calls for “a white-only Europe”.
Unusually,
the Mail on Sunday’s vehemently anti-Restore editorial was displayed
prominently on its app through much of the weekend. “Anyone who really cares
about Britain won’t vote Restore,” it stated, asking voters to back Reform.
Restore
Britain described the story about the summit as “totally irrelevant” and a “hit
piece”.
The next
day, however, the Daily Mail followed up with another blow. “Restore is the
‘new home for neo-Nazis’”, it said, citing Lowe’s claim over the weekend that
if the far-right activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, known as Tommy Robinson,
wanted to join Restore, it was “up to him”.
A Reform
source supplied the killer quote used for the headline.
Lowe
himself saw the attacks as a sign of success. “Two Daily Mail front pages in a
row abusing Restore Britain in the most spectacular fashion,” he said. “We’ve
got the buggers on the run.”
However,
the prominence and strength of the stories have also caught the eye of senior
figures in Westminster and the media, who view it as a sign of how the
rightwing press is reacting to the fracturing of the British right.
Reform
figures believe that the emergence of Restore, and its even more stark approach
to deporting “millions and millions” of people from the UK, could help push the
Mail and other titles towards it as the acceptable option for its readers.
The
immediate driver of the Mail’s endorsement was this week’s pivotal Makerfield
byelection, in which Andy Burnham is attempting to return to parliament and
challenge Keir Starmer for the Labour leadership.
While
Burnham is the favourite, Reform is his challenger and there is a realistic
possibility that Restore’s splitting of the rightwing vote could be the
difference.
The
approach to Restore by the right-leaning media has not been consistent,
however. Over the same weekend as the Mail on Sunday’s attack, the Telegraph
ran a full-page feature interview with Lowe, in which he railed against “woke
creeps” who criticise his party.
While
there has been a widespread perception that the Telegraph’s politics have
drifted further to the right since the Brexit vote, its imminent new owner –
the German media company Axel Springer – will be significant in defining its
political direction.
In fact,
the politics of the Politico owner have also caused intrigue, after its titles
ran opinion pieces first by Elon Musk and, more recently, by Viktor Orbán weeks
before Hungary’s elections.
It
remains unclear how the company, overseen by Mathias Döpfner, wants to position
the Telegraph within Britain’s rapidly fracturing politics.
While
political endorsements are not on the minds of editors this far out from a
general election, senior figures among Britain’s right-leaning titles readily
point out how messy the political scene has become. “The whole landscape – from
hard left to hard right – looks chaotic,” said one.
Current
coverage remains a far cry from the once united pro-Conservative approach,
however.
“What
you’ve got is decades of essentially right-of-centre UK press and proprietors
backing the Conservative party, but now that rightwing consensus is being
fractured,” said Steven Barnett, professor of communications at the University
of Westminster.
“The
Conservative party must be thinking to itself now: where is our support going
to come from? If the Mail is going to be at least flirting with Farage – and I
think they have been doing some flirting – that on its own means come the next
election, they’re not going to be as full-throated in their support for the
Conservative party.
“I think
they’re still feeling their own way in a new political environment, where the
papers themselves are not quite sure where their readership stands.”
Lowe
himself suspects that the established rightwing media outlets are now rallying
behind Farage. As a result, he has been accusing Farage of a charge the Reform
leader is not used to facing: that of being part of the political
establishment.
“If you
look at the mainstream media, it is now pushing Nigel,” he told the Spectator
magazine earlier this year.
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