Nigel Farage reveals bombshell plan to scrap 1 law if he becomes PM | Politics | News

Nigel Farage would repeal the Online Safety Act, Reform UK has announced. Reform UK chairman Zia Yusuf branded the legislation โthe greatest assault on freedom of speech in our lifetimesโ.
He said VPN downloads have shot up, pushing kids into more dangerous corners of the internet like the dark web.
Mr Yusuf said the Online Safety Act created a โperverse set of incentivesโ by threatening social media companies with fines and executives with jail if their companies did not comply.
He continued: โWeโve seen a few things. VPN providers are publishing their stats, increases in signups in the UK up thousands of per cent, evidence by the way that 13, 14, 15-year-olds know far more about how the internet works than the dinosaurs that drafted this legislation and voted it through.
โBut it also shows that if you go onto X you will have seen there was a protest in Leeds against illegal immigration and a migrant hotel in the local area that have been actively suppressed. There are many other examples surfacing now.
โAnd this is X, which I would bet will still be the strongest in maintaining free speech.โ
Mr Yusuf noted the creation of an elite police force to monitor anti-migrant sentiment, saying: โThis elite police force has been set up to ‘monitor anti-migrant sentimentโ, so I use the word dystopia advisedly.
โIf you look through history, the way countries slip into this sort of authoritarian regime it is through legislation that cloaks tyranny inside the warm fuzz of safety and security and hope nobody reads the small print. Well, we have read the small print. We at Reform think this is the greatest assault of free speech in our lifetimes and I can announce today that Nigel Farage and a Reform government will repeal the Online Safety Act.โ
New online safety measures came into effect on Friday.
Aroun 6,000 pornography sites had agreed to bring in age checks from Friday, as well as other sites including X, formerly Twitter, to ensure users are 18 or over.
These can be in the form of facial age estimation or credit card checks.
Mr Farage was asked what he would replace the Online Safety Act with, he said: โOf course we want to find a way of protecting young people from not getting hold of harmful or dangerous content.”
He added: โBut if a result of what weโve seen over the weekend is driving people off towards VPNs, potentially towards the dark web, we might find young people accessing even more dangerous content than they were before this legislation came in.
โWould we do our best to find a way of making this work, yes, but frankly our belief is that those that drafted this act genuinely didnโt understand how the tech world works and have produced something with the very best of intentions but the result of which, frankly, does lead us towards a very dystopian place.โ
Asked if Donald Trumpโs tariffs had been good for British business, he replied: โWeโre better off than being in the European Union, I think, is the answer.โ
On Friday, Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said: โThe Act has taken a long time to come into force, so it means the technology companies themselves have seen this coming for a very long time, and had all that time to prepare.
โSo I have very high expectations of the change that children will experience.
โAnd let me just say this to parents and children, you will experience a different internet really, for the first time in from today, moving forward than youโve had in the past.
โAnd that is a big step forward.โ