noreen mcglen 🇬🇧🇬🇧Reform UK.

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noreen mcglen 🇬🇧🇬🇧Reform UK. banner
noreen mcglen 🇬🇧🇬🇧Reform UK.

noreen mcglen 🇬🇧🇬🇧Reform UK.

@nmcglen

Beigetreten Şubat 2013
841 Folgt832 Follower
noreen mcglen 🇬🇧🇬🇧Reform UK.
Good morning to all my new followers. Reform family 👍💙👋. I had the pleasure of meeting Matt and Gawain up here in County Durham the other night!
noreen mcglen 🇬🇧🇬🇧Reform UK. tweet medianoreen mcglen 🇬🇧🇬🇧Reform UK. tweet media
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Sandy Tregent
Sandy Tregent@SandyofSuffolk·
£12,000 per annum to a British pensioner whose paid NI and tax for 45 years? Or £50,000 per annum to a family of Somalians who've never paid tax or NI. And never will? But 'refugees' welcome, eh? 🙄😡
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AshleY
AshleY@Aku_700·
Christians show up outside school after headteacher decided to cancel Easter to celebrate ‘refugee week’ instead Christians are fighting back.
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Penny
Penny@phughes76340646·
@nmcglen People like us can take it We are old school 💪🏻🇬🇧
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Gawain Towler
Gawain Towler@GHWTowler·
Happy Easter from Eddington
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noreen mcglen 🇬🇧🇬🇧Reform UK.
Happy Easter everyone. Please bear with me. Only allowed to follow back a few at a time. I’ll get there! 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿✝️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
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BritMatters 🇬🇧
BritMatters 🇬🇧@britmatters·
The Man Who Paid In & The Man Who Paid Nothing. Meet Frank, the man who paid in. Frank turned 80 last winter. He grafted 52 years as a builder in Manchester, his hands and back are broken from laying bricks in pouring rain. Every week he paid his National Insurance. Never claimed benefits. Never broke the law. He raised two kids on a council estate, paid his taxes and did his bit for the country he loves. Now he shuffles to the post office in the same coat he’s worn since 2018. His old Nokia phone barely holds the charge. His State Pension is £241.30 a week, just over £12,500 a year, but after gaps, Frank gets less. He counts every penny. Some weeks it’s heating or eating. Last winter around 2,500 people in England died from cold associated causes. Frank keeps the thermostat at 15 degrees and wears jumpers indoors. "I’m not living," he tells his neighbour. "I’m just existing." His wife, Margaret, has been in a care home for two years, dementia stealing her away. Frank struggles to keep their old car on the road for weekly visits. One more breakdown and those trips could end. Every pension day is the same. Frank walks past the bookies where young fighting age men fresh off small boats shout, laugh and slap down stacks of cash twice as thick as his weekly pension. He keeps his head down, clutching his wallet, praying nobody follows him home. His street no longer feels like his street. Fewer familiar faces. Foreign languages. The corner shop is now a Turkish barbers. He feels all alone in the city he once helped build. Meet Ahmed, the man who paid nothing. Ahmed arrived on a dinghy last summer, one of 41,472 Channel crossings in 2025, mostly young men from Somalia, Eritrea, Afghanistan and Sudan. He tossed his documents into the sea, then claimed asylum the moment the dinghy touched the beach. No passport. No papers. No contributions. The Home Office puts him in a hotel. Heating on full. Three meals a day. Security on the door.Ahmed strolls the streets in new clothes and the latest iPhone, using free bus shuttles twice a day, drinking and laughing with friends outside the same bookies Frank avoids. He broke immigration rules entering the country uninvited. Once granted asylum, the door opens to UK benefits and housing. Frank paid in all his life and obeyed every rule. He built the Britain that now houses Ahmed. Ahmed has paid nothing and doesn't obey the rules, he receives shelter, warmth, food, free transport and pocket money while Frank rations food, huddles under blankets to keep warm and constantly worries about money. Tonight as Ahmed relaxes in a warm hotel room with new Nike trainers by the bed, wondering what’s for dinner. Frank sits in his cold home wondering why a lifetime of hard work brings only deprivation. This story is repeating in towns and cities across the country. This isn’t fairness. This is a betrayal. #UKNews #UKPolitics #StopTheBoats
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London4REFORM 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
➡️ The Reform youth are storming the streets! Canvassing Sunderland is on fire 🔥 young voters fired up and ready for a massive turquoise tsunami that wipes out Labour! 🩵 The kids have had enough.💪
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Matt Goodwin
Matt Goodwin@GoodwinMJ·
The White British will be a minority by the year 2063 Among the under-40s as early as 2050 Westminster doesn’t want to have this conservation I do youtu.be/USeKuj4-VUY?si…
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London4REFORM 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
🚨 BREAKING: Reform UK has just hit 25% in Cardiff and SE Wales, pushing Labour into second place! The biggest surge in Welsh politics is happening right now. 🩵 Retweet so people in Wales see that change is coming very soon. 🗳️ Ordinary people are done waiting. 💥 #ReformUK #CardiffVotes
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Ben Leo
Ben Leo@benleo444·
Yeah I suddenly walked into a TV presenting job with the click of a finger… I worked in Sainsbury’s, for EDF Energy, the water board, call centres, all from age 17, just to get money. I didn’t care what job I did, I just needed to support myself. I said yes to everything, trusting that I’d one day get there and everything would work itself out. I didn’t turn down jobs because it wasn’t my field or what I wanted or dreamed of right that minute or think I was above anything or anyone. I had no money. I never went to uni. I saved hard for a £5,000 journalism course, I then worked like a dog at local newspapers (still on minimum wage) and at a bookmaker at the same time doing 20 hour days for years just to keep grinding. I spent more hard years commuting to London and back, doing graveyard shifts at papers then waiting at Blackfriars station at 3 in the morning to get home to Sussex and start my other job at 9am. It nearly killed me. For years. 16 years it took me to get here. And you know what? I loved it all. I loved the journey, I loved the dark moments asking myself if it was all worth it. I loved the wins. I loved the hard lessons. And I love what I’m doing now. Yes I have the best job in the world (for me) and I’m incredibly grateful. And I’m still grinding. I’ve just done 14 days straight, travelling to Texas, Florida, then DC. Doing a three hour show every night. But I recognise how fortunate I am. I always have, even when I was stacking shelves. I didn’t just turn up at a studio and start presenting. Most importantly I never played the victim.
Nick Williams@WickyNilliams

@benleo444 @HasAhmed_ Bro you are a TV presenter. Wtf do you know about actual work lol

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