Tory defectors: who has already joined Reform UK and who may follow?

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With Robert Jenrick’s defection, the number of current or former parliamentarians to have joined Reform from the Conservatives has risen to 18.Some of the best known are likely to be prominent voices for Nigel Farage’s party in the run-up to the next election.There are others within the Conservative party thought to have considered their position in recent months.But Farage has claimed that the value of such additions to his ranks is dropping – and said he would accept no further defectors from the Tories after the May elections, arguing that by then his party’s strength would be so clear that they would have little to add.Here are some of the most prominent figures on both sides of that divide.

Reform MP for AshfieldThe former Labour councillor and Conservative MP became the first ever Reform MP when he defected in 2024.Anderson left the Tories shortly after having the whip removed for refusing to apologise for saying Islamists had “got control” of Sadiq Khan, the Muslim mayor of London.The combative member for Ashfield became known by his detractors as “30p Lee” after he blamed food poverty on a lack of cooking skills and insisted meals could be cooked for about 30p a day.His working-class Nottinghamshire background and blunt speaking style provide a contrast with Farage.Former culture secretary Nadine Dorries defected to Reform in September, saying the Conservative party was “dead”.

A close ally of Boris Johnson, she served as culture secretary until 2022 before resigning a year later when she was blocked from getting a peerage.After months of secret talks conducted at a Mayfair club, Dorries – a former contestant on the ITV reality show I’m a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! – said the Conservatives had left her and that her values were now more aligned with Reform.She was critical of the Tories’ treatment of her, writing in her memoir about what she saw as a conspiracy by a faction including Michael Gove and Dominic Cummings to control the party.Reform MP for East WiltshireThe softly spoken Kruger was seen as an unexpected choice for Reform, not least because he was previously a prominent advocate of compassionate conservatism, having written David Cameron’s 2006 “hug a hoodie” speech.As a former Telegraph leader writer and fellow of the rightwing thinktank the Legatum Institute, Kruger was seen as giving Farage’s party some intellectual heft it previously lacked.

He has been put in charge of making sure the party’s policies are costed and that it is ready for government,Former Conservative chancellorZahawi’s defection earlier this week was arguably the riskiest the party has accepted so far,The former Tory MP gives the party ministerial experience, having previously been chancellor, education secretary and Tory chair – though none for longer than 10 months,But he also brings with him baggage, having been sacked as Tory chair in 2023 over his tax affairs,Some have argued Zahawi’s move risks depicting Reform as the Conservatives 2.

0.Former business secretaryThe high-profile Brexit campaigner has long been talked about as a possible defector to Reform.Even before the Brexit referendum, he proposed a pact between the UK Independence party, which Farage led at the time, and the Conservatives.Rees-Mogg lost his seat at the 2024 election, since when he has maintained a high profile with a reality television show and a regular slot as a host on GB News.He has continued to call for Reform and the Conservatives to unite, saying on Thursday: “I don’t see that my going to Reform or leaving the Tory party would advance that in any way.

”Former Northern Ireland secretaryLewis ran Zahawi’s leadership campaign in 2022 and has been seen as an obvious potential next defector.An ally of Boris Johnson, he served as the former prime minister’s Northern Ireland secretary from 2020 to 2022 and helped draw up plans for a no-deal Brexit.Possibly the biggest hurdle to Lewis joining Reform is the fact he campaigned to stay in the EU in 2016, and then voted for Theresa May’s proposed deal.Former home secretarySuella Braverman earned a reputation as one of the most aggressively rightwing home secretaries in recent history, calling the idea of sending asylum seekers to Rwanda her “dream” and accusing protesters in London of being “Guardian-reading, tofu-eating wokerati”.Braverman’s cabinet career ended after she wrote an article for the Times accusing the Metropolitan police of being biased.

Since then her husband, Rael, has joined Reform and then left it again after the party criticised her over the 2022 Ministry of Defence Afghan data leak.Conservative MP for Weald of KentA former adviser to Braverman and to Boris Johnson, Lam has made a name for herself as one of the most stridently anti-immigration MPs since entering parliament in 2024.Last year Lam was criticised for telling the Sunday Times that she believed a large number of legal migrants should “go home” in order to create a “culturally coherent group of people”.She is seen as a rising star within the Conservative party but she is also a close ally of Jenrick, having supported his leadership bid in 2024.Conservative MP for West SuffolkA former adviser to May in the Home Office and Downing Street, Timothy sits on the anti-immigration right of the Conservative party.

He has previously argued: “We must accept that not every migrant is the same, and not every culture is equal.”Timothy is another ally of Jenrick, but his chances of defection plummeted on Thursday afternoon when he accepted the shadow justice portfolio that Jenrick had just vacated.
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Treachery and stupidity to the fore as Robert Jenrick defects to Reform | John Crace

One is too many and 1,000 never enough. Addiction is a tricky business. What starts as fun inevitably, insidiously, tears away the soul. And there are signs that Nigel Farage’s press conference habit is getting out of control. He started off at one a week

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Robert Jenrick: from remainer to rightwinger with ruthless reputation

For a long time, Robert Jenrick’s transformation from a David Cameron-supporting remainer to an anti-immigration rightwinger did not convince many of his political peers – least of all Nigel Farage.Only last year, the Reform UK leader was describing him as a “fraud” and saying he was sceptical that Jenrick was genuine, dubbing him “Robert the Generic, Robert the Remainer and Robert the I Don’t Stand Particularly for Anything at all”.“There are people in politics who are there through conviction and there are people in politics who are there because they want to reach rank, position and all that comes with that,” he said at the time.“I’m really still not sure about Jenrick, to be honest with you, I’m really not sure.”Now, the verdicts of some of Jenrick’s Tory colleagues on his political behaviour are similarly damning and centre on his unbridled ambitions

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Tory defectors: who has already joined Reform UK and who may follow?

With Robert Jenrick’s defection, the number of current or former parliamentarians to have joined Reform from the Conservatives has risen to 18. Some of the best known are likely to be prominent voices for Nigel Farage’s party in the run-up to the next election.There are others within the Conservative party thought to have considered their position in recent months. But Farage has claimed that the value of such additions to his ranks is dropping – and said he would accept no further defectors from the Tories after the May elections, arguing that by then his party’s strength would be so clear that they would have little to add.Here are some of the most prominent figures on both sides of that divide

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‘The mask has slipped’: What have Jenrick and Farage said about each other in the past?

Like other Conservative recruits to Reform UK, Robert Jenrick’s defection has come with no shortage of lacerating past comments about Nigel Farage and his other new colleagues.When Nadhim Zahawi defected to Reform on Monday, Conservative headquarters were quick to unload the former chancellor’s previous comments about Farage on to social media.In the case of Jenrick, below is just some of the ammunition they have been drawing on once again.Today I took forward a bill to stop the two-tier sentencing rules that come into force in just 18 days. While Nigel Farage swanned off to Cheltenham to forget his troubles

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More than 20 England council elections likely to be delayed until 2027

More than a third of local authorities in England have asked to postpone their elections in May, saying they are unable to deliver them effectively during an overhaul of local government, according to administrators.The requested postponements have sparked unrest and fierce criticism in some councils, with police being called to a council meeting in Redditch this week after insults were traded and members of the public decried a delay as “arrogant”.Sixty-three council areas could opt to postpone elections until 2027, after some were already delayed until May 2026, as two-tier authorities are being combined into single unitary councils.According to data compiled by the Association of Electoral Administrators, 27 of the 63 eligible local authorities – more than a third – have sought a postponement to either district or county council votes this year.Others were yet to make a decision on whether to ask for a delay before the request deadline at midnight on Thursday

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Multimillionaire leader of Reform in Scotland refuses to reveal net worth

The multimillionaire financier who has been made leader of Reform UK in Scotland has refused to say how wealthy he is, claiming that is a private matter.Malcolm Offord, formerly a Conservative party life peer, was announced by Reform’s leader, Nigel Farage, as the party’s first Scottish leader, 10 weeks before a Scottish parliament election in which Reform is expected to win up to 18 seats.Offord is a yachting enthusiast who wins races at Cowes, collects classic cars and recently bought a mansion on the banks of Loch Lomond for £1.6m without a mortgage. He previously endorsed suggestions the public could be charged to use the NHS