As thousands of canvassers descend on Makerfield, the establishment media are STILL crashing out about Restore Britain.
A new poll of 1,119 Makerfield residents puts Restore on 13 percent, Reform on 24 percent, and Labour on 35 percent.
Farage has his head in his hands when asked questions about Rupert Lowe.
Reform MPs and spokesmen admit Restore have "‘made us up our game because we had someone to the right of us", and that "voters are looking for seriousness and authenticity, and they actually see in Rupert what they don’t see in Nigel".
While Reform supporters accuse Rupert of working for the Tories, Jacob Rees-Mogg says "Restore are a wasted vote" because they will block a Conservative coalition with Reform.
Michael Gove thinks Restore and Rupert Lowe "are jokes" — which, coming from him, is an endorsement.
The Economist thinks we're "bastards" for wanting to give violent foreign criminals like Vickrum Digwa the death penalty.
Over at the Guardian, Owen Jones is afraid that Restore will destroy the "guardrails" imposed by the post-War consensus — "a sort of ideological ring-fencing" to stop you from having a country. Andy Beckett agrees: "Restore is changing the atmosphere of politics."
And Melanie Phillips claims Restore "don’t even understand what British identity and core western precepts actually are... What Restore want, therefore, is not historic Britain but an ethno-state based on blood and soil racism."
She thinks it's unreasonable to recognise the British people are indigenous ethnic groups, who have an exclusive claim to these Isles, and that our politics should prioritise our interests minority grievances or liberal values.
She says "Judaism itself is not just an ethnicity but also comprises a religion and a people. There is no other people, religion or ethnicity like it. It is unique." But I'm just not willing to support nationalism for thee and not for me, I'm afraid. And I don't care what names I get called.