Nigel Farage sparked a bitter row days before the crunch Makerfield by-election as he vowed to evict all foreign nationals from social housing if Reform UK was in power.
The party’s leader claimed Britain is currently a “two-tier state against white people”, in his first Substack essay.
Referring to the murder of student Henry Nowak, who was handcuffed by police as he lay dying after his killer, Vickrum Digwa, claimed to have been the victim of a racist attack, Mr Farage claimed the “British state is no longer working for everyone in this country”.
The message appeared to be directed to voters in Makerfield, where Reform’s candidate, Robert Kenyan, is in a tight battle with Labour’s Andy Burnham - who is set to launch a leadership coup against Sir Keir Starmer if he wins.
Polling suggests Rupert Lowe’s Restore could hand Labour victory by splitting the anti-immigrant right-wing vote.
Mr Farage’s essay, titled Britain Is A Two Tier State – Against White People, makes a series of points about how he claims “there is nothing fair about the way white people have been treated by their governments”.
Housing, healthcare, education, policing, the military and the workplace are all listed as being adversely affected by what he describes as “deeply anti-white racism”.
“Across public and economic life, the power of the Government has been brought to bear on tackling ‘inequalities’, in a narrow and specific sense,” Mr Farage wrote.
“Anything which is seen to disadvantage a minority group is cracked down on.
“Anything which benefits a minority and damages the White British is likely to be left alone.”
On the topic of housing, he said that during the last century, “rules which gave priority to local people and ties to the area were stripped away”.
He said that, under a Reform government, foreign nationals in social housing would be given a three-month grace period to relocate to private rented accommodation, or lose their right to remain in the country and be liable for deportation.
Mr Farage wrote that he was launching the Substack so he could set out his views in his own words to avoid them being “twisted and misrepresented,” promising to publish a “long essay” each month.
Reform MP Suella Braverman said she was “very proud” to read Mr Farage’s piece, adding: “I believe that white people are treated more unfairly than non-white people.”
Appearing on Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips on Sky News, she said: “The tragic murder of Henry Nowak has to be a wake-up call that white people were told by the police to be treated differently to non-white people, and saying that is not divisive.”
Ms Braverman, who defected to Reform after leaving the Conservatives and standing down as home secretary, said she was the first Tory minister to give a speech outlining problems in the Equality Act, “daring to challenge the status quo” and this was one of the reasons she left the party.
“We’re saying that the institutions, the laws, and the high-level policies in this country treat white people less fairly than non-white people,” Ms Braverman said.
Also appearing on Sky News, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said Mr Farage “should take his nasty hate and anger and division somewhere else frankly”.
She said: “We've had a lot of this in my town because we've got the by-election next door over the last few weeks.
“I think he should take his nasty hate and anger and division somewhere else frankly.
“I've had enough of it, and I think a lot of us around our way have as well.”
She added: “There are serious challenges that this country faces. People have not felt listened to or heard. Living standards haven't improved for too long.
People want better, they want more, and Andy Burnham is giving voice to that very strongly in the by-election. I hope he wins. I hope he comes back to Westminster to help us get bring the issues that matter to people right up front and centre.”