Welcome to a special edition of Balance of Power with the best from this week’s UK Labour Party conference in Liverpool. Each weekday we bring you the latest in global politics. sign up here. It’s highly unusual for such a new party to be the political conversation at the annual conference of Keir Starmer’s Labour. But these are not normal times, and the 125-year-old ruling party is fighting to maintain its identity as the true representative of the working people. In his efforts to vanquish Nigel Farage, the prime minister painted Reform UK as a party that’s unpatriotic and whose immigration policies are racist. Here’s a fun pub quiz factoid that should give the Labour leader pause: Donald Trump ran as an independent for Reform USA in 2000 and was dismissed as a joke. A quarter of a century on, who’s laughing now? Farage laughing at his own party conference last month. Photographer: Darren Staples/Bloomberg Trump and Farage both came of political age in 2016 under a populist wave. One became American president, the other helped achieve Brexit, but still struggled to get taken seriously. That has changed as Farage adopted Reform as his latest political incarnation. Opinion polls now show him as the most likely candidate to be the next prime minister. His party’s name is not the only thing Farage has borrowed from the Trumpian playbook — Reform has slowly but surely Americanized British politics. Just as Trump was once ridiculed, so Farage was derided as an also-ran who perennially tried and failed to win a seat in the House of Commons. Until he did in 2024. Now, Reform has superseded the mainstream-right Conservatives, which are fading fast. Vice-President JD Vance didn’t bother to meet Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch this summer, but made time for Farage. The Reform chief has forced Starmer’s party to adopt anti-immigration policies that even a decade ago were unthinkable. The waving of Union Jacks and invocations of patriotism constitute unusual territory for Labour, a party which traditionally closed its conference with a rendition of The Red Flag. That is, until Farage pushed them there. Now he’s framing local elections in May 2026 as midterms, a key test of the incumbent party. He is also introducing Antifa — anti-fascist — into the parlance. It’s a loosely defined, far-left movement that Trump has designated a terrorist group in the US. He’s refused to dispute Trump’s anti-science warnings about Tylenol — paracetamol to Brits — use by pregnant women. Starmer may be in “a fight for the soul” of the UK, as he told conference. But it’s the insurgent choosing the terms of the battle ahead. — Ellen Milligan |