Lee Anderson says he is not ruling out defecting
to Reform UK
Tory suspended over comments about Sadiq Khan would be
populist party’s first MP if he joined
Ben Quinn
Political correspondent
@BenQuinn75
Tue 27 Feb
2024 09.00 GMT
Lee
Anderson has said he is not ruling out defecting to Reform UK, in a move that
would give the rightwing populist party its first MP.
Anderson, a
former Conservative party deputy chair, who has been suspended from sitting as
a Tory MP because of his comments about the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said
he had “been on a political journey” when pressed about whether he would join
Reform.
“You’ll say
Lee Anderson rules out/doesn’t rule out joining the Reform party, so I’m making
no comment on my future,” he said in his latest interview with his employer GB
News.
When asked
if he would be a Conservative candidate at the next election, Anderson said:
“That’s not up to me,” but that he would still be standing.
Anderson,
who was a deputy Tory chair until last month, was suspended from the party whip
on Saturday after he refused to apologise for saying Islamists had “got control
of” Khan. Anderson claimed on GB News that the London mayor had “given our
capital city away to his mates”. He now sits as the independent MP for Ashfield
in Derbyshire.
Anderson
might not be welcomed by all Reform UK senior figures. The party’s deputy
leader, Ben Habib, said on Tuesday that any Tory MP wishing to join would need
to explain themselves and the party would need to be sure they were
“ideologically sound”.
Anderson’s
latest comments came as the home secretary, James Cleverly, called for him to
apologise, but like other ministers and Rishi Sunak himself, continued to avoid
describing Anderson’s comments as racist or Islamophobic.
On a visit
to San Francisco, Cleverly said: “I think Lee should apologise. What he said
wasn’t accurate, it wasn’t fair, but the chief whip and the prime minister have
made the party position absolutely clear on this.”
Such an
apology is unlikely to come, if other comments by Anderson to GB News are
anything to go by. He insisted his comments “weren’t racist at all” and added
that he would not apologise to Khan “while I have a breath in my body”.
Anderson
had some support from the Conservative MP and fellow GB News presenter Jacob
Rees-Mogg, who said Anderson’s comments about Khan had been “infelicitous” but
he should not have been suspended.
A former
special adviser to No 10 on civil society and communities said Anderson’s
comments would “stoke more division in our country during what is a very
sensitive period”.
Samuel
Kasumu, who was an adviser to Boris Johnson when he was prime minister, added
on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that the prime minister had Muslim colleagues
who had expressed their concerns in private and public, and he quoted Martin
Luther King: “In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies.”
If Sunak
had been hoping that the controversy would begin to die down three nights on
from from the initial remarks, he is likely to be aghast at the emergence of a
potential defection to Reform, which has been causing the Conservatives
headaches in byelections and threatens to eat into Tory votes at the general
election.
Reform UK’s
leader, Richard Tice, has not ruled out opening the door to Anderson after his
suspension, and said on Twitter on Tuesday that he would not have removed the
whip from Anderson.
“Lee
Anderson may have been clumsy in his precise choice of words, but his
sentiments are supported by millions of British citizens, including myself,” he
said in a statement.

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