Pubgoers’s Union Jack dress distress over refused Wetherspoons entry | UK | News

Peace was restored after the civil unrest in the town of North Nottinghamshire. However, after entering a Spoons Pub because of his Union Jack dress, a protester Tanya, who won a bad reputation, says he will never return to his favorite locality.
Speaking with Nottinghamshire Live, the reform supporter shed light on why he supported the resulting right -wing party and appeared in national newspapers.
Tanya and others claimed that they were not political due to their nature and that they had little interest in certain policies or potential effects after their implementation. Most protesters reported that Lee Anderson, a leading figure under the leadership of the political party, took place in the heart of the election zone, expressed his reform support.
54-year-old Tanya Ostolski from Sutton-in-Ashfield, spoke clearly about the demonstration with Nottinghamshire Live and explained the reasons for attending, Reports Nottinghamshire Live.
He said: “The veterans are on the street, immigrants are put in five -star hotels. They create a strain on NHS. Do not have an appointments.
“I fight every day with spine and I can’t make an appointment and I don’t feel safe anymore. Until recently, I have never felt in my life. There are very few (illegal immigrants) here and this is just scary.
“If they work and come legally, then I respect them, the protest was not about them. Where are the women and children fleeing the war? When there are men of a certain age, I say that a man who escaped from war will bring his wife and children and that a man going to war will come to his own.
“We can’t look at ourselves, let’s look at more people coming. I’m not racist in any way. I want to clarify it.”
The demonstrators insisted that they focused on an objective – transformation, even if it means supporting a party that refused to explain how he wanted to finance his great policies.
The Institute of Financial Research has shown that reform is trying to reduce taxes at a price of £ 90 billion, trying to increase public expenditures £ 50 billion.
When the referrals of Channel 4 about the financing mechanism were pressed, Nigel could not provide definite answers to Farage. Tanya, the local local of Sutton-in-Ashfield, felt that the exclusion of his favorite Wetherspoon Pub because of his clothes and others were connected to the reasons why he went to the streets to protest on Friday.
He said: “Not very pleasant. I wasn’t aggressive. I questioned why I wasn’t allowed. They said they wouldn’t be able to see the protest. When there was a little aggression. I tried to calm down.
“All my friends are going there. I can’t go in and socialize with my friends anymore. I’m very sorry about it. I felt like a criminal.
“I did not think that none of this would happen.
“I didn’t want any of these to be. Especially when the country’s situation is taken into consideration, I have to stand up for what I believe.
“I am passionate about my country. I’m proud of my country. I’m not satisfied with all these illegal immigrants and I mean illegal immigrants, I have no problem with women and children who come here and work with women and children. The quarter Polish, my grandfather came here after the Second World War.
“Many people say, ‘Well, you’re not English because of your surname. But I was born in this country. My grandfather fought and won the right to be in the country. I am not entirely English. I am 100% great Lee Anderson supporter.




