Nigel Farage vs teachers union after teachers were told to educate pupils not to vote for Reform
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has pledged the party will ‘go to war against the teachers’ unions’ after the country’s largest education union branded it ‘far-Right and racist’.
The National Education Union is to demand at next month’s annual conference that pupils are taught the dangers of voting for Reform.
Teachers are set to debate a motion accusing ‘far-Right and racist organisations, including Reform’ of scapegoating refugees, asylum seekers, Muslims and Jews.
The motion, seen by The Mail on Sunday, claims four million votes were secured by Reform at the 2024 election on an ‘anti-immigrant platform’.
It calls for teachers to ‘educate and challenge’ pupils who are drawn to ‘racist beliefs and far-Right activity’ and for anti-racist resources to be developed for use in schools.
Reform has always rejected suggestions it is ‘far-Right’. Last year, the BBC was forced to apologise for calling it far-Right in a news report.
Meanwhile, the party’s popularity among the young has soared. An exclusive Mail on Sunday poll last month found that 30 per cent of 16- and 17- year-olds would vote Reform if the voting age was lowered.
Last night, Mr Farage said: ‘This is happening up and down the country. Reform is subject to endless propaganda at the hands of teachers. When we are in a position to do so, we will go to war against the teachers’ unions.’

The National Education Union, led by Daniel Kebede (pictured), is to demand at next month’s annual conference that pupils are taught the dangers of voting for Reform

Reform MP Lee Anderson (pictured) has said the NEU is 'indoctrinating our youth, silencing free speech and spreading hateful rhetoric'
In the motion, to be debated at the Harrogate event, union activists also criticise the Government for seeking advice from ‘members of racist governments, such as Georgia Meloni’ of Italy.
The NEU’s leader Daniel Kebede has called the UK ‘a brutally racist state’ and dubbed the education system ‘institutionally racist’. He even called the national curriculum ‘a Little England, white saviour narrative’.
Concerns were also raised last night that the NEU was disregarding the legal duty on teachers to maintain political impartiality in their teaching.
‘It is deeply disturbing that members of our largest teachers’ union should want to bring politics into the classroom by linking immigration concerns with racism,’ said Professor Alan Smithers, director of the centre for education and employment research at Buckingham University.
‘It is indoctrination rather than education at a time when the current Government stated intention is to lower the voting age to 16.’
Reform MP Lee Anderson said: ‘The NEU has revealed its true colours.
‘By indoctrinating our youth, silencing free speech and spreading hateful rhetoric, they have abandoned their legal duty of political neutrality.’
Professor Alan Smithers, director of the centre for education and employment research at Buckingham University (pictured) has branded the move 'deeply disturbing'
Labour is accused of bowing to union pressure in its controversial Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill, which had its third reading last week, and its new curriculum review.
The proposed reforms, described as a ‘wrecking ball’ by opposition MPs, will curtail academy freedoms.
Fears have also been raised that education union ‘wokeness’ is influencing the Government’s Curriculum and Assessment Review, which published its interim report last week.
Led by Professor Becky Francis, the review said that it was governed by ‘a social justice lens'.
Last year, the NEU caused outrage by debating a motion calling Israel the ‘main driver’ of violence in Gaza.
A spokesman for the NEU said: ‘It is vital we take on racist behaviour and language, in schools and in wider society. The NEU makes no apologies for holding that view.’
Surprising support for Reform increases in school mock elections
Support for Reform UK among the UK’s schoolchildren taking part in mock elections ahead of last year’s General Election took many by surprise.
One in five of a record 70,000 taking part in the Hansard Society and Association for Citizen Teaching’s mock elections for schools voted for the party.
In some areas like the West Midlands, Reform UK won the vote - with over a quarter voting for the party while a similar number voted for them in the East Midlands and the East of England.
In all areas, apart from London and Scotland, they comprehensively beat the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.
Some schools were said to be ‘embarrassed’ when they held a mock election to great fanfare only to find that pupils comprehensively voted Reform into first place.
One pupil at an independent school in Bath said: ‘Everyone was involved in a whole school mock general election and the school put social media pictures up of everyone taking part and voting but then the results were never officially announced.
‘It was common knowledge that Reform had won and it wasn’t the result the school were expecting so they just went quiet on it all.’
At Passmores Academy in Harlow, Essex, which featured in the 2011 television series Educating Essex, Reform UK also put in a strong performance, coming second in the school’s mock election but co-principal Vic Goddard said ‘voting patterns show that the vast majority of votes for Reform (approximately 80 per cent) were cast by boys’.
At the time, he told Schools Week it was natural for young people ‘to align themselves with the ‘outsider’ as an expression of rebellion, adding:
‘Nigel Farage has carefully curated his image as the bad boy of British politics and a vote for his party as a way of pushing back against authority.’
And he warned ‘the growth of the populist right in politics does present a challenge for schools, especially for the many with very diverse intakes’.
Around the country, at state and independent schools, it was a similar picture.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14526947/Nigel-Farage-teachers-union-racist-Reform.html