Counselling has been provided to council employees in Leeds within a ‘safe space’ to help them manage the pressure from a visit by the leader of Reform UK.
And tonight Nigel Farage, who will be in the city next week as part of a local election campaign, urged those involved to be dismissed, labeling them ‘pitiful, weak individuals’.
Employees at the Labour-run Leeds City Council have been provided with a ‘safe area’ where they can express their concerns if they are troubled by Mr Farage’s visit.
John Ebo, the council’s human resources director, stated: ‘You are certainly aware from the news that Nigel Farage and Reform are organizing an event/rally.’
I am aware that these events affect my colleagues, and I would like us to create opportunities for safe discussions among them, such as the Wellbeing network chats.
The email was sent to the council’s Race Equality Staff Network, accompanied by an additional alert: ‘Stay alert if you are in the city center on that day.’
Mr. Farage has pledged to address the ‘institutional left-wing bias’ within the ‘blob’ consisting of the civil service, local governments, and educational institutions.
He said to The Mail on Sunday: “These are pitiful, feeble individuals who fail to grasp the concept of democracy. They all deserve to be fired.”


His comments followed an article in this paper by Robert Jenrick, Reform’s Shadow Chancellor, who claimed that the Labour Government is so fearful of losing votes to the Greens that Zack Polanski’s party is already effectively governing the country.
Mr. Jenrick states: “The Green Party’s success is already alarming Labour MPs, and naturally pushing Sir Keir Starmer further from the reasonable majority in this country.”
Although he has a large number of MPs, many of whom have their parliamentary positions due to the Prime Minister, he is still under pressure from his restless and left-leaning members of the backbench.
Previously, the party depended on support from inner-city areas, but it has now completely stopped pretending to be the voice of the working class.
Today, only 15 percent of working-class voters support a Labour government.
Alarm clock Britain – that quiet majority of individuals who earn their living and cherish this nation – is moving towards Reform.
The diligent, honorable, and loyal individuals I am familiar with, many of whom had family members who consistently supported Labour, are fed up with them.
To fill the significant gap in their conventional backing, the party seeks the support of two groups of voters: Muslims and individuals dependent on the public sector, including teachers, nurses, and government employees.
And it is these two groups that Polanski aims to take from Labour.
Leeds City Council stated that since the emails were exchanged among employees, they “do not reflect official correspondence.”






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