Restore Britain's founding platform commits to reducing taxes and limiting the size of government, with a significantly smaller state as the framing principle. The party positions itself as a single issue vanguard on immigration and constitutional reform rather than a broad spectrum fiscal programme; no headline rate cuts or numerical fiscal package has yet been published.
Restore Britain proposes refocusing the NHS to serve British citizens as its first and only priority, with eligibility for non emergency care tied more tightly to immigration status. The party would maintain recruitment of high skilled migrants for medical roles. No commitment on funding model, workforce numbers or charging structure has been published.
Restore Britain's central commitment is the mass deportation of every illegal migrant in the United Kingdom, estimated by the party at between 1.8 and 2 million people, through a hostile environment encouraging self deportation combined with between 150,000 and 200,000 forced removals per year. The party advocates net negative immigration, expanded electronic visa verification, biometric checks in banking, and stricter Right to Work and Right to Rent compliance. Asylum seekers would be housed in deliberately austere tent camps. A 133 page mass deportation policy document was published alongside the party's launch.
Restore Britain proposes a shift away from what it calls worthless university degrees toward funded apprenticeships and practical life skills training for young people. The party is critical of the post 1997 expansion of higher education and would link further funding to industry skills demand. No detailed schools or curriculum policy has been published.
Restore Britain pledges to abandon the 2050 net zero target in favour of a British first energy strategy focused on domestic oil, gas and nuclear production. The party characterises the existing net zero framework as economically destructive and a driver of deindustrialisation. No transition support package for affected workers or communities has been published.
Restore Britain's published housing position is infrastructure led housing delivered alongside the domestic production focus of its energy strategy. The party has not published an annual numerical target or a social housing commitment, and frames housing supply as principally an immigration question rather than a planning or finance question.
Restore Britain proposes drastically curtailing the welfare state. Claimants capable of work would be required to perform community service such as cleaning graffiti or picking up litter to receive benefits. The party frames welfare reform as inseparable from immigration enforcement, with PIP and sickness top ups restricted to UK citizens only.
Restore Britain's law and order programme commits to no nonsense policing including widespread return of stop and search, mandatory life sentences for knife crime, expanded legal scope of reasonable force in home defence, and legalising the carriage of pepper spray for women. The party also pledges a referendum on reinstating the death penalty.
Restore Britain pledges to scrap all foreign aid spending targets and end the United Kingdom's contributions to international development. No detailed defence spending commitment has been published. The party's foreign policy is framed primarily through withdrawal from international human rights treaties rather than alliance management or NATO commitment.
Restore Britain commits to withdrawing from the European Convention on Human Rights and the 1951 Refugee Convention, and to repealing the Human Rights Act 1998. As an alternative legal architecture the party proposes a Great Clarification Act that would allow Parliament to override specific Strasbourg judgments by majority vote in cases deemed to involve the national interest.
Restore Britain pledges to defund the BBC by ending the licence fee and moving it to a subscription model, to ban the burqa and niqab in public, to abolish kosher and halal slaughter, and to restore Christian principles as a constitutional framing. The party emphasises Anglocentric cultural restoration over devolution settlement reform; no published position on House of Lords reform or Welsh and Scottish devolved competences.