Tories
criticised over claim Braverman defected to Reform after ‘mental health’ issues
Statement,
since withdrawn, followed ex-minister becoming third Conservative MP to join
Farage’s party in just over a week
Ben
Quinn, Priya Bharadia and Peter Walker
Mon 26
Jan 2026 20.04 GMT
The
Conservatives are facing a backlash after claiming that Suella Braverman
defected to Reform UK after “mental health” issues, as the former home
secretary finally joined Nigel Farage’s party after months of denials.
Braverman,
who was sacked from the cabinet by both Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak, became the
third sitting Conservative MP to defect in little over a week. She immediately
went on the attack against her former party.
At a
press conference after her defection, Braverman said she had felt “politically
homeless” for the last two years and that too many Tory promises to the country
– including on Brexit and immigration – “lie in tatters”.
Her
critics immediately pointed out that as Brexit minister, home secretary and
attorney general under the Tories she had played a major role in the success,
or otherwise, of those policy areas.
But a
bitter row broke out after the Tories issued a statement after her defection
saying that the party had done “all we could to look after Suella’s mental
health” but she was “clearly very unhappy”.
The move
sparked an angry response from across the political spectrum. The party later
issued a corrected statement saying the original lines were “a draft version”,
which had been “sent out in error”.
The
earlier statement also said: “It was only a matter of when, not if, Suella
would defect. She says she feels that she has ‘come home’, which will come as a
surprise to the people who chose not to elect a Reform MP in her constituency
in 2024.
“There
are some people who are MPs because they care about their communities and want
to deliver a better country. There are others who do it for their personal
ambition.”
The
statement mentioning Braverman’s mental health provoked criticism from across
the political spectrum. The former Conservative MP Nigel Evans said it was an
“absolute disgrace”, while Mike Tapp, the immigration minister, described it as
“gutter politics”.
Braverman
herself addressed the statement later, saying that Badenoch had previously
accused her of having a “breakdown”, adding”: “It is a bit pathetic. As I said,
it says more about them than it does me.
“It is,
I’m afraid, just more sorry signs of a bitter and desperate party that seems to
be in free fall.”
Asked by
the Guardian when she had last spoken to Badenoch, Braverman said it had been
during the latter’s leadership campaign. She claimed Badenoch had apologised to
her for making a claim about her having a breakdown and asked her to vote for
her.
Braverman,
who has been an MP since 2015 and served as home secretary under Liz Truss and
Rishi Sunak, was unveiled before a Reform rally attended by veterans in central
London. Appearing before Farage later at Reform HQ, she accused the Tory
leader, Kemi Badenoch, of forcing her out as part of a “witch-hunt against
rightwingers”.
“If the
party you joined no longer reflects the values and principles that it once did,
you should question your allegiance,” she said. “If the party keeps breaking
its promises, you should question your loyalty.”
Farage,
who presented Braverman in front of a rally of veterans, told reporters after
Braverman’s defection that they had been speaking for at least a year. He said
that Braverman’s husband, Rael, who had joined Reform UK some time ago but then
quit after criticisim of his wife from the party, had also played a role in the
defection. Braverman said her husband had “rejoined”.
Farage
said her defection brought much needed experience to Reform UK. There are now
more members of Liz Truss’s cabinet are now in his top team than in Kemi
Badenoch’s.
Amid
speculation that key allies and supporters of Braverman could follow her, David
Frost, the Conservative peer and former Cabinet Office minister, posted a
picture of him campaigning with her in 2024 and wrote: “We’ve always seen
things the same way.”
But
others on the right of the Tory Party spoke out against Braverman’s defection,
which had long been expected. Mark Francois, who was name-checked by her during
her appearance at Reform UK, said he was “deeply disappointed” at the departure
of a fellow self-styled “spartan” who held hardline positions on Brexit.
Farage
indicated he was eager to take more Tories, but drew the line at named
Conservative MPs including Jeremy Hunt and rightwinger Priti Patel.
“Look,
I’m not welcoming people like Priti Patel, who says she did nothing wrong
despite opening the doors to the biggest levels of immigration Britain ever
saw. I’m not welcoming Boris Johnson. I’m not recognising those who were part
of the problem and still refuse to accept it,” he told GB News.
At the
same time, Farage came under pressure in other interviews to explain why a
planned unveiling of a Labour defector last week did not materialise and
claimed the party was in discussions with Labour figures.
Echoing
talking points raised by Robert Jenrick when he defected earlier this month,
Braverman had told the rally earlier in the day that Britain was broken, before
using the press conference with Farage later in the day to list what she saw as
failings in a range of areas such as the treatment of veterans, immigration and
the allowance under a Tory government of children to socially transition in
schools.
Such was
the secrecy surrounding Braverman’s defection that Reform staff at the event
were taken by surprise at the event earlier in the day.
The
Fareham and Waterlooville MP follows Jenrick, who was shadow justice secretary
and defected on 15 January, and Andrew Rosindell, who made the move a few days
later. Her move means Reform now has eight MPs.
The
defection is likely to worry some in Reform, which in a short space of time has
taken on board three former Tories who once had leadership ambitions in their
old party. Braverman was sacked as home secretary by Truss and Sunak, the first
time for sending official documents from a personal email to another Tory MP,
and the second after being accused of fuelling far-right violence with her
rhetoric.
Reform
figures have briefed in the past that neither Braverman nor Truss would be
welcome in the party.
Braverman
told the event she would be setting out her reasons for leaving the Tories
later in the day, as she used her speech to lambast previous Conservative
governments. She revisited her sacking by Sunak, saying she had gone to him
when she was home secretary to express her concerns about the impact of the
European convention on human rights (ECHR) on Britain’s ability to enforce
immigration policies.
“First he
ignored me and then he sacked me,” she said.
Farage is
coming under growing pressure over claims that Reform is turning into another
Conservative party, and he was reluctant to be drawn on whether Truss could be
next to join his party.
Reform’s
press team told the Guardian last week that Truss would never join the party.
Asked again on Monday about closing the door to her entry, Farage replied: “I
didn’t say that. I said it was unlikely.”
Asked
about his previous description about Braverman as “absolutely pathetic” on
immigration, he responded: “She was utterly useless, as they all were. They all
were utterly useless because they were stuck within the ECHR. So she found
herself in this bizarre position.”
Labour
seized on the defection. The party’s chair, Anna Turley, said: “Nigel Farage is
stuffing his party full of the failed Tories responsible for the chaos and
decline that held Britain back for 14 years. Suella Braverman helped botch
Brexit and got sacked as home secretary.”

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