Reform UK figures plan a magazine think tank to build policies and attract us

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Reform UK Senior Poem has created a plan for a think tank aimed at attracting Magur donors from America and specializing in Nigel Farage’s party crafting policy.

The group is independently funded but will be American costume styles that openly support political parties such as the Center for Renewing America and the American First Policy Institute that supports Donald Trump.

A recent presentation called the organization “Resolute 1850” proposed by the Financial Times is a clear reference to the British Royal Navy ship, whose timber was used to make the desks of the US president in an oval office. A person near the party said the name could be changed.

It says the initial funding comes from the UK’s “Maga, Technology and Religious Conservative US donors.”

The document suggests that the organization can be established by the end of the year, but the first annual “Davos Style Event” could take place in 2026.

HMS Resolute and Intrepid©Lakeview Images/Alamydonald Trump Sitting at Resolute Desk in an Oval Office ©Yurigripas/EPA/Shutterstock

This move comes as the party is trying to specialize in voting performance that goes beyond the level of the Conservatives and labor force.

The party hopes to make significant profits in local elections across the UK in May, but the senior figure acknowledges that policy provision and ground operations will need to be reduced if it works well in the next general election expected in 2029.

The document shows that the group’s role is to “support reforms with policy development, briefings and rebuttals” aimed at “change views on important issues and provide technocratic capabilities,” and ultimately “expanding to the heart of a sympathetic ecosystem at events like the annual Davos.”

“Trump’s victory in America shows where Western civilization is heading.” Farage on Thursday said.

He predicted that the UK’s net zero policy would be “next Brexit” in the next general election, and warned that the UK is “industrialized through moronic policies.” Farage said there was a “really big” happening in the UK’s “fragmentation of our politics” (“fragmentation of our politics”). He said the fragmentation meant that his daughter was a “green lover on the left.”

He also sought to downplay the importance of the recent rift that was opened after reforms stopped MP Rupert Low from the party and reported him to the police for alleged bullying.

Farage said a very few people in the world outside of Westminster knew who Lowe was, adding, “I’m sure he’s the towering figure of Doncaster.”

The think tank presentation noted that the party’s “position requires more research, stress testing and revision,” and that “the party requires an opinion on how many leadership instincts are coordinated with voter statistical attitudes.”

The policy “will be both data-driven and stress-testing, ensuring that it withstands aggressive scrutiny.” This document highlights several policy areas that organizations can focus on, such as “rolling back the Quangocracy and Dei (Diversity, Equity and Inclusion) agenda” and “Healthcare reform.”

It assumes that the first problem-based campaign that think tanks can run in 2026 is to “oppose house building.”

The document also suggests that Reformon and British racehorse trainer Andrew Reed can sit on the board, and that the organization should be established as a private company limited by guarantees rather than a charity.

Andrew Reed, Reform Donor and Racehorse Trainer ©GB News

Figures from one senior party confirmed that there was a plan to create a think tank and that they were involved in that plan.

A spokesperson for Reform UK said, “Reform UK has nothing to do with think tanks. We develop policies internally with well-known experts in each field.”

During extensive discussion on Thursday, Farage criticized conservative leader Kemi Badenoch for “working for a few hours in the afternoon.”

He called Tory “a suffocating, boring old asshole,” adding, “I have never met a group of people who are more stuffed, rog-ridden, unstrung, than at least half of the Conservative MPs.”

He also argued that there is an agreement between reform and Tories ahead of the next general election, saying, “There is no agreement. We are not Conservatives. We are not Tories.

Farage, Right and Reform Party Treasurer Nick Candy left to the left during a visit to Mar-a-Lago in December © Stuart Mitchell/Reform UK/PA Wire

Asked about his intense relationship with Elon Musk, Farage accused the tech billionaire of “bullying” him and attempting to change his views on far-right agitators and convicted criminal Tommy Robinson.

He also suggested that “mega donations” from Musk were unlikely to approach, adding that “it was always very exaggerated anyway.”

“It will always be difficult for Elon to give us money anyway. It means there’s a Tesla problem,” he added. “Can you imagine Tesla has made a donation to us? How difficult is that politically?”

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