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‘Why the change of heart?’ Katherine Forster grills Nadhim Zahawi after ex-Tory accused Nigel Farage of ‘racist remark’ in 2015

GB News political correspondent Katherine Forster has grilled Reform’s newest recruit Nadhim Zahawi over a tweet he sent in 2015 that accused Nigel Farage of making “offensive and racist” comments.

Katherine asked Mr Zahawi about his post just minutes after the former Chancellor revealed he had defected from the Tories to Reform UK at a dramatic press conference today.

Mr Zahawi defended himself while sitting alongside Mr Farage, saying that if he believed the Reform UK leader had issues with people of his background, he would not have joined the party.

Katherine asked: “Nadhim Zahawi, a few years ago you tweeted: ‘I’m not British born, Mr Nigel Farage. I am as British as you are. Your comments are offensive and racist. I would be frightened to live in a country run by you.’ Why the change of heart?”

The former Conservative Chancellor responded: “Katherine, good on you for digging out a tweet from 11 years ago.

“All I would say to you is, if I thought this man sitting next to me had an issue with people of my color or my background who have come to this country, who have integrated, assimilated, proud of this country, worked hard for this country, paid millions of pounds in taxes in this country, invested in this country , I wouldn’t be sitting next to him. I think he wouldn’t be sitting next to me either.”

Mr Farage agreed and said that is “quite right”.

Mr Zahawi, who briefly served as Chancellor under Boris Johnson, was unveiled as Reform UK’s newest recruit shortly before midday.

Mr Zahawi

The former Stratford-upon-Avon MP becomes the latest in a growing wave of more than 20 former Tory MPs to switch allegiance to Reform UK.

Speaking at the event, Mr Zahawi said: “I’m here today to tell you and the British people, that our country needs Reform.

“Britain needs Nigel Farage as Prime Minister. This may come as a surprise to my former party and some in Westminster, but it shouldn’t.

“And it certainly won’t to the tens of millions of hard-working, patriotic, decent people across the United Kingdom from the Highlands of Scotland to Cornwall, from rural Wales to the heart of London.

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Katherine Forster

“We can all see that our beautiful, ancient, and proud nation has reached a dark and dangerous chapter in its story.”

Mr Zahawi also described Britain as “sick.”

The former Chancellor, who said he could have stayed out of politics and focused on business, explained that he felt a duty to support Reform UK, having experienced what it is like to be a popular politician.

He told reporters: “We can all see that our beautiful, ancient, kind, magical island story has reached a dark and dangerous chapter.”

Mr Zahawi blamed this on “failures on mass migration, failure to strengthen our Armed Forces, failure to protect special forces from insane government lawyers, and bad, virtue-signalling legislation.”

“These experiences have provided me with painful lessons that I hope will benefit this great new team,” he added.

The Reform UK leader also addressed Mr Zahawi’s past tax controversies, which had led to his Cabinet sacking.

“There’s nobody with a complex business empire who hasn’t had to negotiate with HMRC at some point,” Mr Farage said.


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Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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