The new government running the United Kingdom from the left is acting in ways that feel less like normal leadership and more like a warning. They have already worked to undermine the Magna Carta. They keep arresting citizens for what they say online. Now they are pushing elections even further into the future while planning to cover the country with facial recognition cameras.
Nigel Farage did not bother to pretend. As the Reform leader, he accused the government of stacking “depredations upon depredations” on the British public. The newest example, he said, was another unexplained delay of local elections. The announcement arrived on the very same day the government started rolling out cameras based on China’s facial recognition system.
At a Reform Party press event, Farage called the situation “monstrous” and explained it directly. He told the room:
“Today’s the day we learn that there will be surveillance cameras not just in our big cities, but literally in every single village. The surveillance state is getting very, very close indeed.”
He reminded the country that this news arrived during the same week reports emerged that an 800-year right to a trial by jury may be removed. He also pointed out that the government is trying to force digital ID without ever telling voters about it beforehand. He warned that the system will leave “literally every single one of us in this country open to hackers”.
Farage spoke plainly about the people now in charge. He said they form “frankly, a very authoritarian government”. According to him, they have no real belief in liberty, no real belief in individual freedom, and no real belief in democracy.
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELNone of this is theoretical. Elections were already postponed last year. The areas that vanished from the ballot were places where Reform had strong support. Now, more elections have been kicked down the road. Four new mayoral races have been pushed back until the year 2028.
Farage said millions of pounds had been spent preparing for those contests. Campaigns were already running. His own party had just announced a serious candidate for Mayor of Hampshire and Solent, Falklands War veteran Admiral Chris Parry. Parry is remembered as the first man since World War II to sink an enemy submarine. Hours after that announcement, the government cancelled the election.
Farage said there was an obvious reason. Their internal polls looked overwhelming. He said:
“There is of course one very big reason why [the government thinks] these elections should not go ahead… that Reform would have won all four of these contests and would have won them quite comfortably. The government are basically committing electoral fraud upon the electorate.”
Reform deputy leader Richard Tice was just as direct. He said Labour is “terrified” of losing. He described the cancellation as “a deliberate dictatorial cancelling of democracy in the United Kingdom, and we shouldn’t tolerate it”.
The Guardian reported that opposition parties across the spectrum condemned the move. Even officials inside Labour spoke against their own leadership.
‘I Thought Only Dictators Cancel Elections’: Farage Eviscerates UK Establishment For Denying Vote to Millionshttps://t.co/ToFKzsV053
— Breitbart London (@BreitbartLondon) February 5, 2025
Isn’t it funny how the left staged global protests about “no kings,” yet the leftist government in Britain is now acting like the crown of old, removing any real sense of democracy as it goes?
One of those voices was Jim McMahon. He had been responsible for local government until he was forced out last autumn. He said Labour must “be better than this” and that the government has a “moral and a legal obligation” to avoid cancelling elections.
McMahon warned:
“All involved had a reasonable expectation that these elections would go ahead, and the government knows that trust is hard won but is easily squandered.”
As all of this continued, the government also announced new legislation to expand facial recognition cameras across the nation. At the moment, only a few police forces use the technology. They mainly compare against lists of people already arrested.
The new plan creates something much larger. Cameras would appear in cities, towns, and even tiny villages. They would check against criminal files, passport records, driver’s licences, and immigration databases.
Police would gain the power to upload more footage later. The system could accept video from phones, doorbell devices, and private security cameras.
Policing minister Sarah Jones cheered the idea. The Daily Telegraph quoted her describing the cameras as “the biggest breakthrough for catching criminals since DNA matching”.
Privacy advocates do not share her excitement. Silkie Carlo, director of Big Brother Watch, has warned Britain is turning into an “open prison” where innocent people face “the risk of misidentifications and injustice”.
She said:
“Every search through this harvest of our personal photos puts millions of innocent citizens through a police line-up without our knowledge or consent. Sir Keir Starmer’s Government is committing to historic breaches of Britons’ privacy that you might expect to see in China but not in a democracy.”
This is the current situation in Britain. Elections are being postponed. Cameras are appearing everywhere. Rights that were once treated as sacred are suddenly negotiable. People assumed these things would never happen in the United Kingdom. Yet they are happening, and they are happening at high speed.
#ukelections #surveillancestate #britain




















