Is Brexit king Nigel Farage the answer to Tory
woes?
Conservatives continue to look to the man who led the
UK out of the EU as their poll ratings tank.
FEBRUARY
29, 2024 4:00 AM CET
BY
ANNABELLE DICKSON
https://www.politico.eu/article/nigel-farage-liz-truss-united-kingdom-brexit-reform/
LONDON —
Liz Truss’ latest big idea to save Britain is to rope in Nigel Farage. Not
everyone is convinced.
Speaking in
the United States last week, Britain’s shortest-lived prime minister suggested
Britain’s Mr. Brexit — once a thorn in Tory sides — should be brought into the
fold to “help turn our country around.” Her suggestion came just weeks after he
turned up at the launch of her new Popular Conservatives group.
The
outspoken and controversial Farage is currently honorary president of upstart
rival party Reform, having been a leading figure in the campaign for Britain to
leave the European Union. A surge in support for his former UK Independence
Party (UKIP) in the early 2010s was widely credited as a factor in then-PM
David Cameron’s decision to hold the Brexit referendum in 2016.
The
euroskeptic former MEP quit frontline politics in 2021 claiming he had achieved
what he wanted thanks to the Conservatives’ Brexit deal.
But Farage
has continued to cultivate his public profile, carving out a lucrative
presenting career on Britain’s right-leaning start-up TV channel GB News, where
he often uses his nightly weekday show to criticize Britain’s current political
leaders for not being tough enough on issues including immigration and
taxation. He also had a starring role on the popular reality show “I’m a
Celebrity Get Me Out of Here.”
Now, amid
atrocious poll ratings ahead of this year’s general election, some
Conservatives are actively courting the populist Farage, believing he could win
back Tory voters considering defecting to his Reform UK Party or just staying
home.
It did not
go unnoticed that Farage was hailed like a rock star by delegates at the
Conservatives’ annual conference in Manchester last year when he gained
entrance as an anchor for GB News.
“I’ve
always regarded Nigel as a Tory,” said David Campbell Bannerman, a former MEP
who defected from UKIP to the Conservatives in 2011. He is a “low tax, strong
defense, strong law and order, small state conservative” who would “be a good
fit,” he claims.
Farage
could even become the party’s immigration spokesman after the election,
Campbell Bannerman suggested.
The Reform
president has not ruled out a return to the party he left in 1993, but has made
it clear it would not be under current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s leadership.
Risky business
Ministers,
pollsters and strategists are less convinced of the merits of embracing Farage.
“While
bringing Nigel Farage into the Tory fold would gain the Tories some votes on
the right, he would likely lose votes on the center-right, putting seats in
places like the Blue Wall at risk,” warned Luke Tryl, U.K. director of the
public opinion research consultancy More in Common, referencing more affluent
Conservative seats in the south of England.
“More than
that it is likely that Farage’s dominant personality and tendency towards
saying the inflammatory and extreme would make message discipline impossible,
and risk furthering the sense of Tory division that has proved so toxic with
the electorate in recent years,” he added.
One former
Tory strategist involved in the 2016 Brexit referendum campaign, granted
anonymity because they are not authorized to speak on the record in their new
role, was even more scathing.
“The fact
there are some Tories, even those as deluded as Truss, seriously considering
this, tells you how much there is a vacuum of ideas in the Conservative Party,”
they said.
While some
in the party would welcome his return, the former strategist warned that “for
[Farage] to feel at home with the Conservative Party, it would have to look
like a Conservative Party which a lot of other people don’t feel comfortable
in.”
For other
Conservatives, embracing an old enemy would just be too hard.
Explaining
why he would not support a Farage return, Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden,
a close ally of Sunak, told the BBC: “I, like many hundreds and thousands of
Conservatives up and down the country, have spent many years campaigning
against parties led by Nigel Farage.”
The case for Farage
With an
election looming, and Tories searching for solutions to their current electoral
malaise, the Farage question is unlikely to go away.
Current
Cabinet minister and former GB News presenter Esther McVey told the channel
earlier this month that Farage should have been given a seat in the House of
Lords after Brexit, describing herself as a “fan” who wanted to see him being a
“positive force.”
“If you’re
going to say make or break the Conservative Party, of course I’d want him to
make the Conservative Party,” she added.
Another GB
News presenter, the former Tory Cabinet minister Jacob Rees-Mogg, said Farage
was “essentially a Conservative in most of his views.”
Focus
groups suggest Farage still holds popular appeal.
“He was a
mastermind over Brexit. People voted with Farage and, yeah, if they brought him
back, they would get more votes,” a social worker called Ryan in the Midland
market town of Wellingborough told More in Common researchers studying
potential Reform voters earlier this month.
In January
in Grimsby, a wind turbine technician called Jordan lamented what he described
as the Tories being “very detached” from
“working class people,” adding he thought Farage “gets it a bit more.”
For all the
likely drawbacks, it’s comments like this that keep Farage on the minds of
Britain’s ailing Conservatives.
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