British National Audit Office DEI White Men Need Not Apply Sign via GrokAIBritish national-conservative parties Restore Britain and Reform UK have accused the British state of embracing open anti-white discrimination after it emerged that a taxpayer-funded National Audit Office internship banned middle-class white men from applying.The case, according to a GB News report, has become a fresh flashpoint in the revolt against DEI ideology, with detractors stating that the British state now lectures the public about equality while openly and brazenly excluding young Britons on the basis of race, sex, and class.The six-week National Audit Office “diversity work experience programme” is open only to women, applicants from lower socio-economic backgrounds, and those with black heritage. That means a white male student from a middle-class family is automatically shut out.For Restore Britain and Reform UK, the message is obvious and ugly: some young Britons are now being told they are the wrong race, wrong sex, or wrong background for taxpayer-funded opportunity.The Newcastle-based internship pays a pro-rated annual salary of £25,089 ($33,600). The London placement pays the equivalent of £27,000 ($36,300).The NAO is not a private activist group. It is the UK’s public spending watchdog, charged with scrutinizing Whitehall departments and public bodies such as the NHS and the BBC.For the 2025-26 financial year, the NAO requested a budget of £111 million ($149.5 million). That means ordinary taxpayers are funding an institution that excludes some of their own children from applying for its paid career scheme.Zia Yusuf, Reform UK’s home affairs spokesman, called the policy what many on the right believe it plainly is. “A Government department barring white men from applying for an internship is blatant discrimination,” he told The Telegraph.“Jobs and opportunities should be awarded on merit, not handed out or withheld on the basis of race or sex,” Yusuf said. “Young people deserve a fair chance to succeed regardless of their background.”Yusuf described the programme as “anti-white, anti-merit ideology masquerading as diversity and inclusion.” He said Reform UK would scrap such discriminatory schemes and restore equal treatment.Restore Britain leader Rupert Lowe has previously attacked similar exclusionary schemes, including a Bank of England internship that barred white candidates. At the time, Lowe wrote to Governor Andrew Bailey asking: “What message does this send to a bright, hard-working student who happens to be white?”That question now hangs over the NAO. What message does Britain’s public sector send to a hard-working young man who studies, follows the rules, pays his way, and then discovers he is disqualified before his application is even read?The NAO internship is aimed at penultimate-year undergraduates from any degree discipline. It offers experience in financial audit, value-for-money work, real audit projects, research, fieldwork, shadowing, networking, and training on government, assurance, and Parliament.The advert tells students: “If you are interested in developing your skills in a professional, supportive environment and gaining insight into a career in public sector accounting, we encourage you to apply.”But the invitation comes with a catch. If an applicant is male, white, and middle-class, the door is closed.This is the central fraud of modern DEI. It speaks in soft language about support, fairness, and access, while operating a hard system of exclusion.Claire Coutinho, the shadow minister for women and equalities, said opportunities should not be blocked by identity. “Nobody should be blocked from opportunities because of the colour of their skin or the job their parents did,” she said.“We should all be judged by the content of our character and not protected characteristics,” Coutinho added. “Identity politics will only make us more divided as Kemi Badenoch has argued for years.”The NAO defended the scheme, saying it was intended to help groups under-represented in audit. “Our long-running diversity internship schemes offer valuable work experience in the audit sector,” a spokesman said.“The internship opens doors to people who are under-represented in the sector including anyone from less affluent backgrounds,” the spokesman added.Under the Equality Act 2010, public bodies and employers may use “positive action” to address disadvantage or under-representation if the measures are proportionate. But opponents argue that bureaucratic legality does not make discrimination morally acceptable.For many voters, the question is simpler than any legal memo. Why should a taxpayer-funded body ever tell a British student he cannot apply because he is white and male?The NAO row follows similar controversies across Britain’s public sector. Last year, MI5, MI6, and GCHQ—Britain’s various intelligence agencies—reportedly reopened paid summer internships from which white participants were barred.Those intelligence internships were open only to young people from black, Asian, mixed-heritage, or ethnic-minority backgrounds who also came from socially or economically disadvantaged backgrounds.Security expert Professor Anthony Glees called the exclusion of white British students from intelligence internships “downright offensive.” He also warned that opening up intelligence services through such schemes could raise national security concerns.“This is completely bonkers,” Glees told GB News. “When I first saw this story, I thought it was a joke. I thought it was made up.”Other public bodies have run similar identity-based schemes. Transport for London operates an 11-month paid placement for candidates who are BAME (Black, Asian, and Minority Ethnic), disabled, or from disadvantaged backgrounds.The House of Commons, House of Lords, and Senedd Commission have partnered with the Windsor Fellowship to run internships for BAME applicants. Four BAME students are set to be taken on at the Senedd and trained “at the heart of Welsh politics.”These examples, to the pro-merit right, are not mere accidents. They reveal a public-sector machine increasingly committed to sorting citizens into favored and disfavored racial and identity categories.The anger, unsurprisingly, is especially strong among middle-class families who believed Britain still rewarded effort, exams, discipline, and ambition. Their children are now learning that merit can be overridden by identity before the competition even begins.That frustration is becoming political fuel for Reform UK, Restore Britain, and a wider right-wing populist, anti-globalist revolt against DEI and virulent anti-white racism. They argue that ordinary taxpayers are paying for a state that increasingly treats them as suspects, obstacles, or historical problems.The divide is no longer just left versus right, but between those who believe public institutions should treat citizens equally and those who believe opportunity should be rationed according to race, sex, and group identity.Restore Britain argues the NAO internship is a perfect example of the DEI state in miniature: taxpayer-funded, bureaucratic, discriminatory, and wrapped in the language of compassion.Their demand is straightforward. End race-and-sex-based gatekeeping, restore merit, and open taxpayer-funded opportunities to every qualified young Briton.A public spending watchdog should not need to be reminded that public money belongs to the public. Nor should it be allowed to exclude the sons of taxpayers because they fall on the wrong side of an ideological checklist.The case offers an ominous warning about the country’s direction. If Britain does not restore equal treatment soon, identity politics will cease to be a mere campus fashion or corporate fad; it will become—if it hasn’t already—the operating system of the British state..The post Britain’s Anti-Merit, Anti-White Crisis: Middle-Class White Men Banned From Taxpayer-Funded Watchdog Internship appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.