Starmer passionate in his condemnation of Farage's approachpublished at 13:37 BST
Henry Zeffman
Chief political correspondent
More now from today's Prime Minister's Questions.
The most important exchange of that PMQs was without question the one between Reform UK leader Nigel Farage and the prime minister.
Starmer was passionate, perhaps as passionate as I have ever seen him in the House of Commons, in his condemnation of Farage’s approach.
As Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, did yesterday, the prime minister seized on the comments by Henry Nowak’s father at the conclusion of the court case on Monday - saying that his son’s death should not be used to stoke division.
On the substance of Farage’s point about police anti-racism guidance, while the government disagrees with Farage’s claim there is two-tier policing in the UK, the policing minister has said that guidance is “wrong” and a source close to Mahmood has said it is worded clumsily.
What we also saw in that exchange was an unusual feature of our increasingly multi-party political system.
Farage and Reform UK are a huge force in our politics, but in parliamentary terms they are a minuscule faction.
That added to the drama of the moment, with Farage facing intense jeers and heckles, including from a committed group of Liberal Democrat MPs sitting immediately behind him.


















