The National Education Union (NEU) has called on schools to instruct students to be “far-right and racist” with an apparent bid to stop the party's growing popularity among young people.
At its annual conference next month, the UK's largest teachers union will discuss a motion calling for UK teachers to “educate and challenge” that interests “racist beliefs and far-right activities” and to provide schools with what is called anti-racist resources.
Movement, It has been reported By Please email on SundaySpecifically, it operates on an “anti-immigration platform” and singles the reform Britain with Nigel Farage rates, calling scapegoat asylum seekers, Jews, Muslims and refugees “a far-right and racist organization that includes reform.”
The party defending the decline in mass migration and the end of illegal immigration, refused to be called far right, and previously forced the BBC to issue an apology and amendment after public broadcasters labeled them as such.
In response to Neu, Farage said: “This is happening nationwide. Reforms are subject to endless advertising at the hands of teachers. When we are in a position to do so, we will fight the teachers' unions.”
Reform MP Lee Anderson added: “The wildebeest revealed its true colour. By indoctrinating young people, silenced freedom of speech, and spreading hateful rhetoric, they abandoned the legal obligation of political neutrality.”
The push to demonize reform is because the left-wing governing Labour party says it intends to reduce the voting age to 16. Given the surge in reforms among young people, this raised concerns to the left.
a Please email on Sunday A February poll found that 30% of 16 and 17 year olds would vote for reform if given a chance. This was even higher than the national reform vote, which has hovered at around 25% in recent months.
In addition to the Reform Party, the teachers' union motion has accused the government of conservative Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of being “racist.”
Neu leader Daniel Kebede is openly Recognised He was a socialist and previously admitted to radicalising reading Karl Marx while he was in the university in Cardiff.
Kebede, the son of Ethiopian refugees, blamed the country for granting his family asylum as a “cruelly racist state.” Daily Mail.
The National Education Coalition has long been at the forefront of pushing students-awaited theory, such as inviting teachers to take part in “activist training” sessions to make white privilege and colonialism visible in schools.
neu suggests that infants should be taught about the supposed evil of “white privilege” in order to develop “anti-racist views” in the minds of young children.





