The Conversation

Nigel Farage’s recent announcement that his party would pursue mass deportation if elected to government came as a shock to many. Even Farage had once described this extreme idea as a “political impossibility” in the UK. But the proposal didn’t fall out of a clear blue sky. It’s an example of what some researchers call “audience capture” tactics.

In this case, radical and far-right social media accounts amplify narratives that suit their agenda and make it look as though they have mass appeal. Politicians that straddle radical politics and the mainstream (such as Farage) then absorb the information and start to see it as a desirable path to follow. Find out how this information flows via this analysis.

Also today, the big problem with proposals to abolish stamp duty. And Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu may have seen out the war in Gaza, but can he survive the peace that follows?

Laura Hood

Senior Politics Editor, Assistant Editor

Alamy/Paul Smyth

Inside the far-right social media ecosystem normalising extremist ideas in UK politics

Ed Harrison, University of Bath; Olivia Brown, University of Bath

A process of normalisation has led Reform to propose mass deportations where once it believed such a policy would never be politically viable.

sirtravelalot/Shutterstock

The real reason abolishing stamp duty won’t help first-time buyers

Nigel Gilbert, University of Surrey; Corinna Elsenbroich, University of Glasgow; Yahya Gamal, University of Glasgow

Compared to a deposit, stamp duty is often a small cost – but axing it would cost the government billions a year.

Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at the White House in September 29. Will Oliver / EPA

Can Netanyahu survive peace?

John Strawson, University of East London

Netanyahu is turning his attention to upcoming elections.

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