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“Do I want to be an MP? Do I want to spend every Friday for the next five years in Clacton?” Thus spoke Nigel Farage in an interview with The Times in February 2024, about which the reporter wrote: “His expression suggests not.”
Alas, just months later Farage joined Reform UK as leader and decided he did want to be a MP after all – even if he still wasn’t planning on spending much time in the constituency, Clacton-on-Sea, which elected him on 4 July 2024.
One year on from his election, Farage’s report card has come in. And it’s not looking good for the Reform UK leader…
In the past year, Farage has spoken fewer times in parliament than any other leader of a British political party with a seat in Westminster.
Farage has spoken just 45 times. That compares, for instance, to 226 for Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, 97 for Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey, and 152 and 86 respectively for Green Party co-leaders Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay.
Farage’s record of turning up to vote in parliament has been slightly better than his record of turning up to speak in debates. But only slightly.
He has mustered the energy to vote in parliament on 91 occasions. That’s fewer than Ed Davey (111), Carla Denyer (205), Adrian Ramsay (178) – even Kemi Badenoch (92) managed to best him by one vote.
Rather missing in action, Farage didn’t show up to key votes on, for instance, planning reform, renters’ rights, and the winter fuel allowance.
Farage has had a variety of reasons for letting down his constituents and missing out on important parliamentary work. But none of them have passed the smell test…
Farage has been on a number of foreign jollies since being elected to parliament, many paid for by his wealthy friends:
Farage also decided to book himself a holiday while parliament was sitting:
The Reform leader has also been raking in money from numerous second jobs:
Since becoming a MP, Farage seems to have had trouble getting on with some of his colleagues.
147 days after the election: On 28 November 2024, Reform’s ex deputy leader Ben Habib quit the party, citing “fundamental differences” with Farage. The Reform leader seemed rather pleased about this, pronouncing: “The Sun has got his hat on, hip hip hip hooray.”
246 days after the election: On 7 March, Great Yarmouth’s MP Rupert Lowe was suspended by Farage’s party over bullying allegations – two days after Lowe termed Reform “a protest party led by the Messiah” in an interview with the Daily Mail. Farage was furious with Lowe because of the interview, calling him “disgusting” and “contemptible” in leaked messages.
336 days after the election: On 5 July, after terming new MP Sarah Pochin’s parliamentary question about a burqa ban “dumb”, then Reform chair Zia Yusuf resigned, saying that working to get the party elected is not “a good use of my time”. While Yusuf returned to the party – in a downgraded role – just two days later, his replacement as chair, David Bull, raised eyebrows for previously calling Farage an “idiot”.
Farage hasn’t been as diligent a constituency MP in his first year as he ought to have been.
In September, Farage announced that he wouldn’t be holding face-to-face surgeries in his Clacton-on-Sea constituency, as MPs are expected to do. Farage explained that the House of Commons Speaker’s Office had advised him not to hold in-person surgeries due to security concerns.
By early October, however, Farage had backtracked on these comments, after the Press Association reported that the Speaker’s Office hadn’t actually advised Farage against holding in-person surgeries after all.
In November, around four months, after he was elected, Farage announced that he had finally “bought a house in Clacton,” in an interview on Sky News. As it turned out, the house was in fact bought by his girlfriend Laure Ferrari.
“Members must fulfil conscientiously the requirements of the House in respect of the registration of interests in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests,” stipulates the House of Commons’ code of conduct.
But Farage’s entry in the register contains a couple of interesting omissions, suggesting he perhaps hasn’t been as transparent as he should have been…
Commercial fishing boat:
Property:
So, where’s your boat and where are your houses, Nigel?
Farage’s record of adopting and cheerleading policies his and his party’s donors might like is, however, much better.
Speaking at JCB’s global headquarters in Rocester, Staffordshire, in April, Farage trumpeted the company’s “new, innovative Pothole Pro machine”, adding: “We’re going to be asking a lot of questions, when we get elected in county councils, as to why these machines have not been used already.” This will have been music to the ears of JCB who, coincidentally, gave Farage and a member of his team a return helicopter flight last October, valued at more than £8,400.
More recently, on 23 June, Farage and Zia Yusuf announced a “Britannia Card”, whereby foreign millionaires could pay £250,000 to move to the UK and avoid paying tax on their overseas wealth, a policy tax expert Dan Neidle says will cost the UK £34 bn over five years. While this might not be good news for the public purse, it will likely have been welcomed by some generous Reform donors, currently residing in tax havens, such as Roger Nagioff, who handed the party £100,000 last December and lives in Monaco.
We’re lifting the lid on the people and money behind Reform UK, and this is just the start. Reform Watch is a new newsletter from HOPE not hate, sent straight to supporters who want to know the truth about the party. Sign up now to get the next edition.
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