Red meat,
no lettuce: Nigel Farage and Liz Truss attend private lunch after week of Tory
defections
Meal at
Mayfair club took place on day Reform UK’s Robert Jenrick criticised former
PM’s mini-budget
Ben Quinn
and Helena Horton
Sat 24
Jan 2026 08.00 CET
If it was
on the menu, a side helping of lettuce never made it to the table. Over
blood-red steak and chips, Nigel Farage and Liz Truss came together on Monday
for a discreet lunch at a swish Mayfair club, organised by a climate-denying US
thinktank.
Lois
Perry, a former leader of the far-right Ukip party who is now Europe director
of the Heartland Institute, posted photographs, now deleted, on X of Farage
addressing others, including Truss, at the meal.
While
Reform UK appears to be keeping the former prime minster at arm’s length
publicly, despite welcoming other former Tories, the gathering at Mark’s Club
organised by the Heartland Institute raises potentially fresh awkward questions
for the party.
“Liz
Truss would not be welcome in Reform UK,” the party’s press team replied within
seven minutes of being asked by the Guardian if the party would ever allow the
UK’s shortest-serving prime minister into its ranks.
Yet
speculation has persisted about the next moves of Truss, whose mini-budget was
described by Farage as “the best Conservative budget since 1986”.
“She is
very comfortable in that group, a lot whom hang out together, and both she and
Nigel are clearly close to a lot of the same people, including some of Reform’s
biggest backers,” said one of the other 20 or so people who attended.
The
thinktank they were lunching in aid of has made some extreme and incorrect
comments on the climate. In the past, it has compared people who believe in
global heating to the Unabomber, the US terrorist jailed for killing three
people and injuring many others.
Those
present included David Starkey, the historian dropped by his university and
publisher in 2020 over racist remarks, who has become a favoured guest at
Reform’s annual conference, and Mike Graham, the broadcaster sacked from Rupert
Murdoch’s TalkTV after it said he had failed to cooperate with an investigation
into a racist post that appeared on one of his social media accounts.
Others
included Alan Mendoza, a founder and executive director of the right-leaning
Henry Jackson Society thinktank, and Lance Forman, the smoked salmon mogul and
former Brexit party MEP who gave financial backing to Truss’s Tory leadership
campaign.
“It was
basically about climate change,” Forman told the Guardian when asked about the
lunch, which happened to take place on the same day that one of Reform’s newest
recruits, Robert Jenrick, had claimed he told Kemi Badenoch to kick Truss out
of the Conservative party because of her “cackhanded” mini-budget.
A report
in the New Statesman has suggested Truss spent the lunch visibly annoyed about
Jenrick’s attack on her and her record in a piece for the Times and, after
Farage’s departure, she complained to other guests that “dark forces” were
behind the article.
However,
Forman said: “The timing of it was quite funny because of what Robert Jenrick
had said that very morning. I was talking to Liz Truss and we mentioned it –
she was not upset at all. She is very cheerful and robust.
“It was a
ridiculous thing for Jenrick to have said, actually. He said it on the back of
her budget and Nigel Farage was one of those who congratulated her on her
budget.” He said the food on offer was an “unmemorable” set menu featuring a
chocolate mousse for dessert.
Labour
seized on the presence of both Truss and Farage, with a spokesperson claiming
that Farage is “hellbent on reassembling Boris Johnson’s cabinet of failed
Tories who broke our public services and hammered family finances”.
They
added: “On the same day Robert Jenrick said his old boss Liz Truss should be
thrown out of the Tory party because of the damage she did to families, his new
boss Nigel Farage was quaffing champagne and enjoying a lavish lunch with her.”
Hard
copies outlining the views of the Heartland Institute were also passed around
at the lunch, where one diner said Farage gave a short speech that endorsed the
institute’s ideas.
“I think
it’s likely that some of the things they are calling for will end up in a
Reform programme for government,” they added.
Once
owned by the entrepreneur Mark Birley, Mark’s Club was sold in 2007 to Richard
Caring, who also owns The Ivy and Sexy Fish restaurant chains, and is seen by
the rightwing elite as a new money establishment with a less exclusive
membership list than in its storied past.
The club
recently had a migraine-inducing makeover, stuffed with chintzy furnishings,
gigantic oil paintings of dogs and brightly patterned wallpaper. Membership of
Mark’s is £2,750 each year plus a £1,250 joining fee.
The home
of the Tory right is now unanimously understood to be 5 Hertford Street, which
is owned by the late Mark Birley’s son, Robin. Truss may have struggled to
secure a booking at this club; she is understood to have irritated its owners
by wandering the premises in search of members to poach for her own rival club
just one street away, which asks “founding members” for an eye-watering
£500,000.
While a
much more fringe figure, Perry too has increasingly been working to establish
herself as a major player on Britain’s new right. She spent much of this week
in Zurich at a “Davos alternative”, run by the Heartland Institute, where Truss
was billed as a keynote speaker, opining on “a vision for the UK and the
democratic west”.
The lunch
was not the first time Perry has brought Truss and Farage together. Both graced
the launch of the Heartland’s UK chapter at a glitzy party last year, held at
Brooks’s private members club – one of the few remaining London gentlemen’s
clubs that does not admit women.

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