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Received yesterday β€” 15 December 2025

Welcome to the twilight zone where Nigel Farage can be accused of racism yet still lead the polls | Nesrine Malik

15 December 2025 at 01:00

After weeks of allegations of schoolboy racism, the Reform leader is doubling down. And our political establishment is allowing it

Just as I was starting to write this column, an email alert popped up on my screen. β€œPunters back Nigel for prime minister after Keir Starmer,” it read, placing the Reform leader second in the odds market after Wes Streeting. What a weird, dissonant duality this is. Nigel Farage is in his fourth week of revelations about alleged racist behaviour at school, and yet, here we are. This is one of those twilight-zone moments in British politics, where it seems something is going to β€œcut through” any minute now. For a moment it seems as if it absolutely will. And then, there’s a loss of momentum and a return to the status quo. In my mind it manifests like a battle of physical forces, acting on one another. Journalistic investigations, testimonies, whistleblowers, all as a sort of storm that blows on a political actor who may be knocked off his feet, but still manages to cling on by his fingernails, until the gale blows over.

Up scrambles Farage, a few pieces and more than a few polling points knocked off him, but still in place. This is, so far, what he is managing to survive – the testimonies of some 28 of Farage’s contemporaries at Dulwich college who have told the Guardian that they experienced or witnessed racist or antisemitic behaviour when he was a teenager. Jewish students were taunted; β€œgas them,” Farage said, β€œHitler was right”. A black student, much younger than the then 17-year-old Farage, was told: β€œThat’s the way back to Africa.” The allegations amount, in my reading, to a sort of obsessive campaign against minority students, pursued with the kind of bewildering commitment that anyone who has ever been bullied will feel in their bones.

Nesrine Malik is a Guardian columnist

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Β© Photograph: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

Β© Photograph: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

Β© Photograph: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

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