Nigel
Farage’s support for Trump is putting off potential voters
A focus
group this week found there is concern about the Reform UK leader’s
relationship with the U.S. president.
With
concerns about Nigel Farage's relationship with U.S. President Donald Trump
riding high, potential voters say they suspect the Reform UK leader may be
Trump's "whipping boy," and "stooge." |
January
23, 2026 4:00 am CET
By
Bethany Dawson
STEVENAGE,
England — Nigel Farage has a Donald Trump problem. Even voters keen on his
poll-topping party are unsure about the company he keeps.
Among a
key constituency of women considering switching from the ruling Labour Party to
Reform UK, concern about Farage’s relationship with Donald Trump is rife,
according to a new focus group and polling shared with POLITICO.
In the
midst of Trump’s tariff saber-rattling this week, POLITICO listened to the
group of women living in the commuter-belt town of Stevenage — 30 miles north
of London. To protect those taking part in the study, all names used below are
pseudonymous.
“Stevenage
woman” became pollsters’ shorthand for mothers based in towns and suburbs at
the last election, who were seen as crucial to Labour’s 2024 general election
victory.
Farage
might “just be a stooge” for Trump, Lauren, a mental health support worker,
said. “He might just be [Trump’s] whipping boy. That kind of concerns me,” the
54-year-old added.
Jane, a
51-year-old stay-at-home mum of three, said: “There’s no one who will actually
stand up to him. Trump would say, ‘do this, do that,’ and Nigel would be like
‘yep, yep.'”
When
asked to pinpoint the greatest threat to the U.K., Rachel, a 47-year-old
property manager, said: “I think Trump, full stop.”
These
women are not alone in their view.
Wider
polling by More in Common, the think tank which organized the focus group held
on Monday night, found 25 percent of women see Farage’s support for Trump as
the top reason not to vote Reform. That compared to 21 percent of the men
surveyed between Jan. 10 and 13. More in Common’s sample size was 2,036 people.
Friends
can disagree
Farage
has often spoken of his admiration for Trump. The Reform leader famously shared
a snap of himself with the U.S. president-elect in Trump Tower after his shock
first-term election victory in 2016.
That
association has continued. The pair met in the Oval Office last September when
Farage was in Washington.
But the
Reform leader’s support for Trump has its limits. Farage this week described
U.S. tariff threats over the U.K.’s opposition to the annexation of Greenland
as “wrong,” as European leaders lined-up to condemn Trump’s economic aggression
towards his NATO allies.
“Friends
will disagree,” Farage said in an interview with Bloomberg in Davos on Thursday
morning, insisting a close relationship with the U.S. did not mean being
“beholden.”
Despite
their Trump misgivings, the Stevenage women are still minded to vote for
Farage’s Reform UK.
“I quite
liked him on ‘I’m a Celebrity’ and it’s grown from there,” Alice, a 55-year-old
building society manager, said, referencing Farage’s 2023 appearance on the
reality jungle game show.
“God
knows what would happen if he got into power. But could he be any worse [than
the current government]?,” she said, to an emphatic “no” from others in the
room.
Reform is
“gaining a lot of support through default, aren’t they?,” Lauren, the mental
health worker quoted above, said, citing a wider loss of trust in the
mainstream parties.
“I just
feel like anything is better than now and it depresses me,” Megan, a
48-year-old regional manager for a brewer, said. “If I could see a little
shimmer of light for our future for our children, I think I would want to go
down that way,” she said of Reform.
Why not
Starmer?
Despite
attempts to exploit Farage’s perceived vulnerability on foreign policy this
month, there are few signs Starmer is reaping any electoral reward.
Asked how
the British PM is doing, 63-year-old retiree Sandra said “rubbish.”
“Nothing’s
really changed,” she said. “We thought the new government were coming in with
all these promises and that, and actually nothing. … We’re still in a state,
aren’t we?”
The
Stevenage women POLITICO spoke to made it clear they were no longer fans of
Starmer’s Labour, but More in Common Executive Director Luke Tryl says the
Trump factor still remains a risk for Farage.
“This
group of women had no time for Trump and his tactics and wondered what the
president’s erraticism would mean for their safety and security and the future
of their children,” the think tank boss said.
“With
Brits already saying that Nigel Farage’s relationship with Trump is the biggest
barrier to voting Reform, particularly women, and over half of the country
describing Farage as Britain’s Trump, there is a very real risk that the Reform
leader’s association with the U.S. president means that a Farage premiership is
seen as a risk too far,” he added.

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