Zia Yusuf
announces return to Reform UK two days after quitting as chair
Former party
chair says he will lead a ‘Doge team’ inspired by Elon Musk and Donald Trump
Eleni Courea
Political correspondent
Sat 7 Jun
2025 18.46 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/jun/07/zia-yusuf-return-reform-uk
Zia Yusuf
has said he will return to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, just two days after
quitting the party.
Yusuf was
the rightwing party’s chair but resigned on Thursday after suggesting it was
“dumb” of the party’s newest MP to ask the prime minister if he would ban the
burqa.
Less than 48
hours later, Yusuf said his decision to quit was a “mistake” that had resulted
from “exhaustion” after working long hours and facing reams of racist abuse on
social media.
Farage and
Yusuf announced on Saturday that Yusuf would return to the fold and would take
on several jobs, though his formal title has not been announced.
One of his
roles will be to lead what the party is calling its “Doge team” – based on the
“department of government efficiency” set up in the US by Donald Trump and Elon
Musk.
Yusuf will
also act as a spokesperson for Reform and have a say in its policymaking and
fundraising efforts.
In an
interview with the Sunday Times, Yusuf said his intervention over the burqa had
been an “error”. Yusuf tweeted on Thursday that Sarah Pochin, the Reform MP for
Runcorn and Helsby, had been “dumb” to ask Keir Starmer at prime minister’s
questions whether he would ban it.
Hours later
he announced he was quitting, saying he did not believe working to get a Reform
government elected was a good use of his time.
“When I
pushed that tweet out it was a coming together of a bit of exhaustion and a
feeling that all I got in return for it was abuse,” he said on Saturday. “I was
doing so many things, in the foreground and in the background.”
“What has
happened since then is that I’ve been inundated with messages from Reform
members and supporters who were saying they were devastated and heartbroken and
asking me to really reconsider my decision.
“I left my
business interests behind, I’ve volunteered full-time, because I love my
country and I believe the best way to save it and turn it into a great one is
for Nigel to be prime minister.
“It made me
realise that in that moment I was turning my back on that – and I didn’t want
to do that.”
Yusuf, who
is a practising Muslim, insisted he did not have “any strong views about the
burqa itself” and said that “if there were a vote and I was in parliament, I
would probably vote to ban it actually”.
He described
the fallout over Pochin’s comments as “an internal miscommunication issue” and
said he had found out about her remarks for the first time on X. “I don’t mind
saying that it frustrated me,” he said.
He added
that he did not think the issue of burqas “is one of the most important [to]
British people when they go about their day-to-day lives”.
Earlier on
Saturday, Farage said: “When Zia says anything you cannot believe the absolute
tirade of personal racist abuse that he gets … I just think he snapped.” The
Reform leader told Times Radio the abuse came “from the very hard extreme
right” and blamed “Indian bots”.
Yusuf was
brought in by Farage to be Reform’s chair last year, months after he donated
£200,000 to the party.
He is widely
credited within Reform for having professionalised the party, hiring new
people, setting up more branches and making it run in a more corporate way.
However, he
also rubbed some of the Reform old guard up the wrong way with his management
style and by overseeing the departures of several long-serving former members
of staff.
Some of
Reform’s members have turned against Yusuf over his role in the departure of
one of the party’s most rightwing MPs, Rupert Lowe, after the pair clashed
earlier this year.
The Sunday
Times reported that Yusuf’s former role of chair will now be split into two.
There will be a front-facing chair tasked with touring the country and speaking
to the media, and a deputy in charge of organisational matters.
Ellie
Reeves, the Labour party chair, said: “Reform’s revolving door shows that the
party is all about one person – Nigel Farage. Zia Yusuf’s humiliating hokey
cokey is laughable but there is nothing funny about Farage’s £80bn in unfunded
commitments.”
A
spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats said: “It looks like Reform are playing
musical chairman.”

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