Changes
/* Recent politics */
===Recent politics===
[[File:Photo 2025-09-27 08-53-51.jpg|right|300px|thumb|September 24, 2025.]]
The British identity crisis is like watching a retired lion try to adopt a vegan diet. They traded imperial confidence for an HR department’s sensitivity training. The land of Churchill is now governed by a sprawling “nanny state” “[[nanny state]]” [[bureaucracy ]] that is more terrified of offending someone on [[X ]] than it is of actual decline. The British police, once the envy of the world, now seem to spend more resources investigating “non-crime [[hate ]] incidents” and painting their patrol cars in rainbow colors than solving burglaries. It is a nation desperately clinging to the aesthetics of tradition—the Royals, the pomp, the tea—while its institutions have been hollowed out by a [[progressive ]] rot that makes a [[California ]] university campus look [[conservative]]. They want the swagger of the 19th century but are paralyzed by the emotional fragility of the 21st.<ref>https://x.com/Arrogance_0024/status/1998505132904911225</ref>
[[Reform UK]] opposes [[Ukraine aid]] and gas ordered to remove [[Ukrainian]] flags from municipalities where it won in recent elections. The YouGov poll shows that it would currently lead all British parties, winning 311 seats in parliament. To form a majority, it would need just 15 more seats. The overwhelming majority of new votes that [[Nigel Farage]]'s party received previously went to the [[UK Labour Party]] (which currently governs the country). Reform UK currently has 27% of the vote, while the Labour Party, which came second in the poll, has 21%.