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Reform's mission to 'remoralise' young people, says party chairman

Reform UK chairman Zia Yusuf says his party's mission is to "remoralise" young people.

Speaking off the back of his party's massive gains in the local elections, Mr Yusuf said young people were being taught to "hate their country" and that Reform's mission was to change their morals. "There has been an industrial-scale demoralisation, particularly of young people in this country, who are basically being taught quite deliberately that they should hate their country; they should be deeply ashamed of their country's history; that the United Kingdom had a brutal empire," he told The Times.

???? Click here to listen to Electoral Dysfunction on your podcast app ???? "Look, of course, you know, the British Empire was not perfect, but I actually think overall the British Empire did much more good for the world than it did bad." He said the party's mission was to "remoralise" the youth and that within a couple of months of gaining power, Reform would erect statues of great British figures and end "all this woke nonsense". He continued: "How many young people know who Isambard Kingdom Brunel is? Look at the character assassination that has occurred on the legacy of Sir Winston Churchill.

"The fact that they have to cover up his statue because they don't want to provoke protesters. I mean that's the sort of utterly indefensible so-called leadership that we've had and young people feel that in their bones." Read more:Tory leader apologises to councillors as Reform makes big gains'I get it': Starmer responds after losing Runcorn by-election to Reform UK He said he believes Reform leader Nigel Farage's message is "resonating" with young people and added: "I think that a lot of young people we speak to feel very smothered by a finger-wagging sort of teaching class.

"They feel very restricted, they feel a huge lack of opportunity … You're going to hear from us over the next couple of years more and more of a policy platform for young people, for Gen Z and for millennials." Mr Farage has been more focused on what his party's trajectory is doing to the Conservatives, saying in his column for The Telegraph that Kemi Badenoch's party had been "hollowed out" and is experiencing a "strange death" due to the rising popularity of Reform. He said the UK had reached a "new political age.

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