‘He just loves winding them up’: Could Nigel
Farage actually lead the Tories?
Britain’s Tories are sounding friendly with Brexiteer
Nigel Farage. POLITICO maps an unlikely but not impossible climb to the top.
BY ANDREW
MCDONALD
OCTOBER 5,
2023 4:02 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/nigel-farage-lead-conservatory-party-conference-uk-politics/
LONDON —
They’re loving Nigel instead.
Tory
activists weren’t singing quite that as they belted out Robbie Williams’
“Angels” in the presence of Britain’s foremost Brexiteer Nigel Farage at the
Conservatives’ conference this week. But they weren’t far off it.
Farage, who
left the Tories in the ’90s to lead Britain’s Euroskeptic diehards from various
splinter parties including UKIP, was a prominent fixture at the Conservatives’
conference in Manchester this week where he gained entrance as an anchor for GB
News.
Farage was
mobbed and given a hero’s welcome by activists eager to congratulate the
architect of Brexit, raising a question: Could he lead those activists as
leader one day?
1. Become a Tory member
The
prospect of Farage returning to the Tories is being taken seriously by those
present at conference.
One
diplomat present in Manchester, speaking on condition of anonymity, told
POLITICO the headline he would be reporting back to base was that Farage was
welcomed in. “That tells you where the Conservatives are going better than any
of the policies they’ve announced,” this person said.
It’s a
prospect some of those at the top of the Conservative Party appear comfortable
with too.
“Look the
Tory Party is a broad church. I welcome lots of people who want to subscribe to
our ideals, to our values,” Prime Minister Rishi Sunak told one of Farage’s
colleagues at GB News when asked about a return — not quite closing the door.
Security
Minister Tom Tugendhat — not known as a Tory right-winger — also declined to
shut down the idea of a return, while Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg sounded
keen.
Not all are
on board, however. Tory Chairman Greg Hands said he wouldn’t welcome someone
who has repeatedly “advocated for other political parties.”
2. Be picked as a candidate
If he did
make it back into the party, Hands’ control of CCHQ — Tory central office — as
chairman might make the next bit trickier for Farage.
The former
UKIP boss would then have to make his way through the party’s internal
candidate vetting system, which includes due diligence checks and
demonstrations of “sound political conviction and integrity.” Party bosses
could pull the shutters down at this stage.
If he makes
it on to the approved list of Conservative Party candidates, his popularity
with elements of the membership may help him convince local members to give him
a shot as their man.
Farage
twice contested the South Thanet constituency while leading UKIP and could
fancy another pop at the new East Thanet constituency formed in its place.
Either way, he would be likely to seek a seat somewhere in Britain’s south
east. And the Conservatives are reportedly struggling to find new candidates,
which might make things easier.
3. Actually get elected
The
conference-going Tory activists who mobbed Farage are, of course, not
particularly representative of the wider British public.
Farage
remains relatively unpopular with Brits in general — and his seven previous
failed attempts to win election as an MP don’t augur well.
His
divisiveness and bombastic style — as well as brushes with conspiracy theorists
— have helped him become one of Britain’s most well-known political figures but
it’s yet to help him into the House of Commons.
4. Throw his hat into the ring if Rishi Sunak loses
the election
Some steps
are easier than others.
Sunak
currently trails Keir Starmer’s opposition Labour Party by an average of 16
points, according to POLITICO’s poll of polls aggregator.
If he fails
to turn this around, loses and then resigns as prime minister, Farage — at this
point an elected Conservative MP, remember — would have no shortage of
supporters encouraging him to stand in the leadership election that would
follow.
Could he
resist that pressure?
5. Win over Tory MPs
The Tory
Party that was reshaped by ex-PM Boris Johnson holds no shortage of true
believers in Brexit who sit on the firm right of politics, like Farage.
The next
election may pare back their numbers significantly, but there are already
plenty of Conservative MPs who fancy their chances of becoming leader if Sunak
clears the stage — leaving a crowded field of contenders in any post-election
leadership race.
Candidates
of the right often triumph in Tory leadership elections | Carl Court/Getty
Images
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Secretary Suella Braverman and Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch are among those
who could compete with Farage for the votes of right-wing Tory MPs in such a
contest.
Under Tory
rules, only the top two candidates among the ballot of MPs actually makes it
into a vote of the party’s membership – so wooing Tory colleagues he’s spent
years berating would be top of the list for Farage if he’s serious.
6. Get the backing of the members
If Farage
somehow did make it on to the membership ballot, he might begin to truly
believe.
Candidates
of the right often triumph in Tory leadership elections when members actually
get the chance to vote. Historic examples include Iain Duncan Smith beating
long-serving ex-Cabinet minister Ken Clarke, Boris Johnson beating the more
centrist Jeremy Hunt — and Liz Truss trouncing Sunak before her own
administration came crashing down around her.
While
Conservative members are a little-polled group, what data there is suggests
affinity for Farage among the party’s 170,000-strong grassroots faithful. A
YouGov poll from 2019 suggested 46 percent of members would want him to win any
contest — even while he was leading the rival right-wing Brexit Party.
Should
Farage make it this far and then win a membership ballot, he would become Tory
leader. And only Labour’s Keir Starmer would stand in his way of Downing
Street.
But just one problem … does he want to?
“Would I
want to join a party that’s put the tax rate up to the highest in over 70
years, that has allowed net migration to run at over half a million a year,
that has not used Brexit to deregulate to help small businesses? No, no and
no,” Farage told — obviously — GB News.
But
speaking to the BBC this week, he didn’t rule out taking a punt after the next
election. “Never say never,” Farage said when asked about rejoining the Tories.
Gawain
Towler, a former aide still close to Farage, said his old boss is enjoying the
attention but is “not going to join a party on the off chance he can turn it
into a real conservative party.” He said the Tory membership loves him, but the
“machine” of the party will always hate him — and want to control him.
“It’s not
going to happen and he knows it’s not going to happen. He just loves winding
them up,” Towler said.
“He turns
up and the Tories start freaking out,” he added. “[Farage] just has to fart in
a room and they lose their senses.”
Emilio Casalicchio contributed reporting.

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