Speaking with Jack Posobiec on Human Events Daily on Tuesday, National Pulse editor-in-chief Raheem Kassam said, “The biggest story in the United Kingdom right now, full stop. As we speak, there is a live march taking place outside the police station in Southampton. The developments are now coming in thick and fast because the public pressure is so high, because the comment area are now talking about it.”
“Henry Nowak is by no means the first person that this has happened to," he continued. "They would like to not be talking about it. And what Nigel Farage said in that clip that you just played, that cold rage is being felt up and down the country right now. A lot of the left media are saying that means, you know, Nigel Farage is calling for violence. That’s not what he’s calling for. What he’s calling is for righteous indignation.”
Kassam also slammed the official response surrounding Novak’s death, including the conduct of authorities during the incident. “Not only should Henry still be alive today, but the circumstances surrounding his death, the way the police handled what was going on, the flippancy, the laughter, the joking around as he laid there bleeding out.”
The discussion also turned to political reactions within the UK, including comments attributed to Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch. Kassam touched on what he described as an inconsistency in political messaging around protest movements.
“You know, Kemi Badenoch, who is the leader of the Conservative Party, technically, His Majesty’s loyal opposition, came out today and said, I don’t want to hear about Black Lives Matter. And I don’t want to hear about White Lives Matter,” he said. “But when George Floyd died, Jack, Kemi was one of the first pumping her fist up in the air and saying Black Lives Matter.”
“You know, the bizarreness of it all is, you know, they now try and tell us Henry Novak’s death is not political and it shouldn’t be made political,” Kassam said. “Henry Novak’s death was necessarily political. The cultural proposition that is being made in the United Kingdom right now is necessarily political.”
He argued that the response by police and officials cannot be separated from politics. “The way in which the police responded to him because of the false racism charge levelled at him. The DEI cops were being necessarily political in the way that they dealt with this. So I don’t want to hear anything about that.”
“This is a political event. It is a political death. And it will be dealt with in the hard arena of politics.”




