Westminster is totally disconnected from reality! 😱 UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves was just brutally ambushed in public by furious taxpayers demanding the immediate removal of Keir Starmer’s government.
UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves has become the latest high-profile government figure to face intense public heckling, reflecting a palpable surge in anti-Labour sentiment across the country. In a video circulating online, members of the public intercepted the Chancellor, shouting demands for the government’s removal and mocking Labour’s stance on national identity. Reeves responded by defending British patriotism while admonishing the hecklers for a lack of “good manners,” a move that has further polarized independent political commentators and highlighted a deepening divide between the political establishment and populist movements in mid-2026.

The Public Heckling Incident
The confrontation occurred as Chancellor Rachel Reeves was walking through a public space, where she was immediately met by a group of highly vocal protestors. The raw footage captures a barrage of heckles targeting both the Chancellor and Prime Minister Keir Starmer, alongside expressions of support for Reform UK leader Nigel Farage.
Protestors shouted phrases criticizing the government’s performance and its perceived stance on English national symbols:
“Come on lady, get Labour out! Take Keir Starmer out! Nigel Farage—go on Nigel!” “You’ve got English flags on here, you’re going to get arrested! You’re ruining the country… Look, England flags! You are useless, the Labour Party is useless!” .
The reference to being “arrested” for displaying the English flag directly mirrors ongoing anxieties among right-of-center populist groups regarding public policing, free speech, and the government’s labeling of patriotic assemblies as “far-right.”
Reeves Defends “British Manners”
Faced with immediate, close-quarter shouting, Chancellor Reeves sought to maintain composure, turning the confrontation into a debate over civic behavior and national values. Defending her own patriotism, Reeves responded directly to the crowd:
“I love our country, and one of the things about our country is good manners… [that is] not very British,” Reeves stated, attempting to dismiss the aggressive nature of the protest .
By invoking the traditional concept of British politeness, the Chancellor attempted to delegitimize the protestors’ behavior as unpatriotic, framing their confrontational style as contrary to the core values of the nation she represents.









