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600,000 migrants

The Lone Voice Against Immigration? Nigel Farage Unveils Radical £10bn Plan

Reform UK leader vows mass deportations, detention camps, and a legal showdown with Europe in bid to ‘save Britain from invasion'?

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Nigel Farage
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Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, one of Britain’s most outspoken right-wing politicians and long-time critic of mass Muslim immigration, has unveiled a sweeping plan to tackle what he calls the “existential threat” of unchecked migration to the United Kingdom.

At a press conference on Tuesday, Farage declared that if his party comes to power, it will deport up to 600,000 migrants within five years, describing the plan as “the only way to stop the endless migrant boats crossing the Channel.”

“Operation Restore Justice”

The plan, dubbed Operation Restore Justice, includes building remote detention facilities, converting abandoned Royal Air Force bases, and signing return agreements with countries such as Afghanistan and Eritrea. Migrants would face immediate detention upon arrival, with flights of deportees scheduled at a rate of five per day.

Farage also proposed allowing migrants to voluntarily leave with a £2,500 cash incentive. “We are under invasion,” he declared. “If we deport every single one who comes illegally, the boats will stop within days.”

According to Farage, Britain currently hosts over 650,000 undocumented adults who can be removed “quickly and efficiently.”

Legislative Shake-Up

At the heart of the proposal is a sweeping new law: the Illegal Immigration (Mass Deportation) Act, which would make it a legal obligation for the Home Secretary to expel all illegal migrants permanently, stripping them of any right to return.

The plan also calls for the UK to withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights and replace the Human Rights Act with domestic legislation applying only to citizens and legal residents. International refugee conventions, such as the 1951 UN Refugee Convention, would also be effectively discarded.

Reform UK estimates the program would cost £10 billion over five years but insists it would save taxpayers money currently spent on hotels for asylum seekers. Some deportees may even be relocated to British Overseas Territories like Ascension Island as a fallback option.

Political Firestorm in Westminster

The announcement triggered immediate backlash across the political spectrum.

The Numbers Behind the Debate

Government figures show 28,288 migrants crossed the Channel in small boats so far this year — a 46% increase compared to the same period last year. At the same time, Britain received 111,000 asylum applications.

Farage insists only a “radical break” will stop the surge. Critics argue his proposals would breach international law, devastate Britain’s international reputation, and risk chaos in the courts.


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