As part of their fundraising efforts, Reform UK are selling black shirts for £350. This is something which people are finding very, very interesting, and for multiple reasons:
Nigel Farage is selling these for £350 to his gullible supporters. It comes with lunch with him.
The working class is getting finessed by people blaming all their problems on immigrants. pic.twitter.com/qOuh1Cb9SQ
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) November 29, 2025
Reform—350 tonne
The tweet above is partially incorrect, in that you don’t get lunch with Farage for £350; you get a golden ticket which puts you in with a chance of dining with king fag stain. It’s not made clear what you’ll be eating at this lunch, but we know what you’ll be smelling — stale tobacco and bullshit.
I’d pay more than that to not have lunch with Nigel Farage.
People were manipulated and conned by his UKIP antics during Brexit. I hope people don’t fall for this Reform nonsense of his.
— Ryan Colaço (Ryan C
) (@Ryan_Colaco) November 29, 2025
People are also highlighting the price:
£350 quid. This is such a grift and not a working class party they pretend to be https://t.co/y4Sw1ktCVX pic.twitter.com/i0YKIab5H5
— Curtis Daly (@CurtisDaly_) November 28, 2025
To be fair to Reform, £350 is peanuts compared to the money they’re raking in from wealthy donors, as we reported on 5 September:
Reform is overwhelmingly funded by wealthy donors, and recently received £500,000 from property billionaire Nick Candy. Fossil fuel interests, which made up over 90% of Reform UK donations between 2019 and 2024, have also been linked to Farage’s support for fracking.
You can also buy a cheaper shirt in Reform turquoise. Interestingly, while you can get the cheaper option in all sizes, the more expensive option only comes in medium, large, and XL. This suggests one of two things:
- They have internal data which shows they have no support from wealthy short people.
- They’re worried little Tommy Robinson will buy one.
Well, this is a surprise! Elon is a remarkable individual but on this I am afraid I disagree.
My view remains that Tommy Robinson is not right for Reform and I never sell out my principles. https://t.co/V7iccN6usS
— Nigel Farage MP (@Nigel_Farage) January 5, 2025
People are also saying it’s a choice for Reform to sell black shirts given the history of the British ‘Blackshirts’:
Very honest of Reform release a BLACK SHIRT as an ancestral homage to their overall message … And here’s me thinking modern football shirt design didn’t pay enough attention to history … https://t.co/aW3Cwi6mh7 pic.twitter.com/dQHCLxjSHB
— Chris Chats Shirt (@ChatShirt) November 30, 2025
Oswald Mosley’s Blackshirts were a fascist street movement. As we’ve reported elsewhere, it’s actually illegal in Britain for people to wear political uniforms, and that law was introduced in response to the Blackshirts. The Reform shirts undoubtedly wouldn’t count as a uniform because they’re not mandatory, but it certainly puts them one step closer towards Mosley.
Another wrinkle in all this is that some are accusing Reform of breaking gambling and GDPR regulations:
Reform UK are selling Black Shirts on their website — for £349. I think this is illegal.
TL;DR — they are breaking Small Society Lottery, Gambling Commission and GDPR regulations.
Aside from the ludicrous price tag and on-the-nose fascist connotations, they force you to partake… pic.twitter.com/yGbkKdVNe1
— Don McGowan (@donmcgowan) November 29, 2025
McGowan is advising that readers contact their local MP to ask that they look into this matter.
Raising funds
To be fair to Reform, giving away commemorative clothing as part of a fundraising campaign isn’t the worst thing. Hats off to them, then, for generating accusations of fascism and criminality from such a normal idea.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
This post was originally published on Canary.
) (@Ryan_Colaco)