Anas Sarwar, the leader of Scottish Labour, has issued a defiant challenge to Nigel Farage, leader of Reform UK, saying he is ready to confront him “anytime, any place” amid a fierce dispute sparked by a controversial Reform UK advertisement.
The row ignited after Mr Farage played the online advert during a press conference in London on Tuesday, accusing Mr Sarwar of having “introduced sectarianism into Scottish politics.” The accusation swiftly drew a sharp response from the Scottish Labour leader, who labelled the Reform UK figurehead a “poisonous man who doesn’t understand Scotland.”
In a statement that highlighted the growing tensions, Mr Sarwar insisted he was prepared to debate Mr Farage directly and predicted that “the people of Scotland will utterly reject him.” His remarks came amid speculation that Mr Farage could make a visit to Scotland in the lead-up to next Thursday’s by-election in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse.
While Reform UK has yet to secure an electoral victory in Scotland, opinion polls ahead of the June 5 by-election suggest the party is gaining ground north of the border. One recent survey even hinted that Reform could come second in next year’s Holyrood election, ahead of both Labour and the Conservatives, a prospect that has unsettled many in Scottish politics.
Speaking to BBC Radio Scotland’s Good Morning Scotland, Mr Sarwar criticised his rival’s apparent unfamiliarity with Scotland’s political landscape, saying: “This man has no idea where Hamilton is. I’ve been in Hamilton most days, I know other political parties have been in Hamilton a lot. What I suggest to Nigel Farage is he should ask his chauffeur to put Hamilton into Google Maps.”
The Scottish Labour leader went on to say: “Come up here. I’ll challenge him anytime, any place, in Hamilton, any town hall, and he can challenge me on my views, I’ll challenge him on his views, and you can see that the people of Scotland will utterly reject him, because he can’t win there and he can’t win in Scotland.”
Sarwar accused Farage of pretending to be a “great champion of working people” while lacking any real connection to Scottish communities. “While I was working in Scotland’s NHS in one of the most deprived communities in the country, he was on the Brussels gravy train,” he added. “While I’m campaigning to defend our NHS and save our NHS, this man wants to privatise our NHS. He’s got no interest in Scotland. He probably couldn’t even tell you where Hamilton was on the map.”
The controversy centres on a Reform UK advert that Labour and the SNP have demanded be removed from Facebook for being “racist.” The advert suggested that Mr Sarwar, born in Glasgow to Pakistani Muslim parents, would “prioritise” Pakistani people—an assertion that clips of Mr Sarwar speaking do not support.
In defending the advert, Mr Farage told reporters: “All we’ve done is to put out the exact words spoken by him without any comment. We’ve said nothing, just that we will represent the people of that constituency. The fact that they, having chosen to go down the sectarian route, choose to throw accusations back at us says to me that we are winning.”
However, Mr Sarwar rejected this, accusing Farage of deliberately fostering division. “There is no doubt that Nigel Farage wants us to talk about him, and there’s no doubt he wants to play up on this divisive rhetoric in order to get attention, because the man craves the oxygen of attention rather than actually wanting to change our country, and that’s the big difference,” he said.
“I want to change Scotland, he wants to divide it. This is a man who has got no place in Scottish politics. The people of Scotland, by a vast majority, will utterly reject his politics.”
With the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election just days away, the battle lines are drawn between Scottish Labour and Reform UK, with Mr Sarwar’s challenge to Mr Farage underscoring the high stakes and heightened tensions as both parties seek to court voters in a politically volatile environment. The coming days will be closely watched, as the outcome could signal wider shifts in Scotland’s political landscape.