Pressure
on Nigel Farage as Reform UK councillors resign over his leadership
Exclusive:
Departures will add to scrutiny of party leader after Elon Musk said he was
‘not up to the job’
Ben Quinn
Fri 10 Jan
2025 22.44 GMT
A group of
10 councillors representing Reform UK have given notice of their intention to
resign en masse in protest at Nigel Farage’s leadership.
The
resignations will add to pressure on the Reform leader after Elon Musk said he
was “not up to the job”. They are timed to overshadow the party’s south-east
conference this weekend.
The
councillors alleged the party was being run in an “autocratic manner” and
accused Farage of “disloyalty” to long-term members. There are splits within
the party over the jailed far-right activist Tommy Robinson, who is supported
by Musk.
Farage
addressed hundreds of members on Friday night at the party’s south-east
conference, in Esher, Surrey, as Reform seeks to build on general election
momentum in an attempt to win hundreds of seats in local elections this year.
Nevertheless,
the departures of the 10 councillors – who between them hold more than a dozen
local authority positions at different levels – would mark the loss of a
significant chunk of the party’s existing local authority representatives.
All are from
Derbyshire, a target area for Reform, and include Alex Stevenson, who came
second in Amber Valley at the general election with 28% of the vote.
In a
statement seen by the Guardian, they said they could not continue “in good
conscience” under the leadership of Farage, adding: “We believe that the
current party management is either incompetent or malevolent, and we have lost
all confidence in the leadership and its structures.”
They cited a
lack of internal democracy, claiming that a new constitution adopted by the
party at its annual conference was flawed and that there had been no progress
towards a promise by Farage to democratise Reform, which was set up as a
company in which he holds a controlling stake.
The
councillors backed the Farage critic and former joint deputy leader Ben Habib,
whom they said had been “unceremoniously dumped” and was the man who “truly
represents the vision and values that drew us to Reform UK”.
Musk called
for Farage to be replaced as the Reform leader less than three weeks after the
pair held seemingly warm talks at Donald Trump’s Florida home.
The remarks
threw into doubt the speculation that the US billionaire could fund Reform
after he met Farage and Nick Candy, Reform UK’s new treasurer, at Trump’s home
in Mar-a-Lago in December. Musk has since been reposting comments on X by Habib
– including a call by him for Robinson to be released from prison.
On Friday
night, Farage told Sky News he had been “in touch” with Musk and they were
“still friends”.
“Look, he
said lots of supportive things. He said one thing that wasn’t supportive. I
mean, that’s just the way it is,” Farage said. “By the way, you know, I can’t
be pushed or bullied or made to change by anybody.”
Reform UK
has been facing a schism over its approach to Robinson’s supporters after
Richard Tice, the deputy leader of Reform, said last year that the party “want
nothing to do with” Robinson “and all of that lot”. However, in a sign that
Farage may be calibrating his position to please Musk, he told GB News this
week that he did “question” why Robinson was in prison.
Robinson,
whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, was jailed in October for 18 months
after admitting contempt of court by repeating false claims against a Syrian
refugee.
Reform has
about 50 councillors and a steady trickle have been defecting to the party from
the Tories and elsewhere over the past year.
Reform’s
2024 London mayoral candidate, Howard Cox, left the party on Thursday, claiming
he had been told to “keep clear” of Robinson or else he would be expelled.
Farage on
Thursday claimed the resignations were from an “out-of-control branch” and
involved a number of councillors who had failed Reform UK vetting.
“Alex
Stevenson has been suspended from the party and the reason is that he was
putting up candidates for parish council elections which were unvetted, which
is against the rules. We have known this branch was out of control for some
time.”
Farage also
introduced Reform’s latest defectors from the Conservatives on Friday night:
the Norfolk councillor Robin Hunter-Clarke and the Elmbridge borough councillor
Harrison Allman-Varty.
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