Policy
To fully appreciate Restore Britain's policies, please always refer to the Restore Britain Website.
Energy Policy Paper (20 May 2026)

Rupert Lowe MP’s Restore Britain paper condemns Net Zero policies as ideological self-harm driving Britain’s high energy prices and industrial decline. It calls for repealing the Climate Change Act 2008, ending all renewables subsidies and the Climate Change Levy, and making EPCs voluntary.
Core strategy: maximise cheap, reliable energy through new North Sea oil & gas licences, tax reform, nuclear expansion (especially British SMRs), life extensions, and lifting the fracking ban. Renewables would compete unsubsidised. Planning and regulatory barriers would be slashed to enable rapid delivery. Success would be measured by physical metrics like kWh per capita per cost, restoring energy abundance and national prosperity.
The Restore Britain Document is here
Abolish Inheritance Tax (17 Mar 2026)

Inheritance tax (IHT) is a punitive “tax on death” that violates natural intergenerational bonds and treats children as strangers rather than heirs. It undermines the motivation to build for posterity, as seen in attacks on family farms and businesses, threatening food production, rural communities, and forcing asset sales to outsiders.
Public opposition is strong, with 54% wanting it scrapped. Fiscally, IHT raises just £9 billion (0.7% of revenue), easily replaced by slashing wasteful spending on DEI, activist NGOs, and politicised bureaucracy.
Abolishing IHT would protect productive families, restore civilisational continuity, and prioritise hard-working Britons over the parasitic state.
The Restore Britain Document is here
Retaking the English Castle (25 Feb 2026)
Restore Britain’s policy paper Retaking the English Castle condemns Britain’s slide into “anarcho-tyranny,” where the state fails to protect the law-abiding but punishes self-defence.
It urges revival of the English tradition that “an Englishman’s home is his castle.”
Five proposals:
- Legalise pepper spray for law-abiding adults.
- Enact the Stanley Amendment to shield homeowners from civil suits by burglars.
- Repeal Scotland’s Hate Crime and Public Order Act (2021) to protect private speech.
- Preserve jury trials in all criminal cases, especially self-defence.
- Require Attorney General consent before prosecuting alleged excessive force in self-defence.
These low-cost reforms aim to restore ordered freedom and prioritse the civilised majority.
The Restore Britain Document is here
Restoring the British Pub
Restore Britain’s paper Restoring the British Pub warns that Britain is losing a pub a day due to crippling taxes, high business rates, 20% VAT, steep alcohol duties, rising National Insurance, and energy costs.
The sector, worth £93bn and employing 3.5 million, faces mass closures, threatening community life, and heritage.
Key proposals:
- Cut business rates multiplier and reinstate reliefs.
- Reduce VAT to 12.5% on hospitality with community incentives.
- Freeze/reform alcohol duties and expand small producer relief.
- Extend EIS tax relief to save failing pubs.
- Raise NI threshold, annualise payments, and boost apprenticeships.
- Targeted reforms to save the great British pub.
The Restore Britain Document is here
Mass Deportations
Restore Britain’s policy paper Mass Deportations: Legitimacy, Legality, and Logistics sets out a comprehensive plan to remove all ~1.8–2 million illegal immigrants from Britain within one Parliament.
Part 1 (Legal): Repeal key immigration and Equality Acts, disapply the UN Refugee Convention, withdraw from the ECHR/HRA (with limited NI carve-outs for peace), and pass a Great Clarification Act empowering Parliament to override obstructive court rulings.
Part 2 (Logistics): Create a “hostile environment” via e-visas, expanded Right to Work/Rent checks, banking/healthcare restrictions, and sanctions to drive voluntary returns; scale up detention, enforcement, and forced removals (target 150k+/year) with diplomatic pressure and third-country deals.
Fiscal savings would offset costs.