British
Politician Was Killed in ‘Targeted Attack,’ Police Say
Counterterrorism
police said that they were continuing to interview a 28-year-old man accused of
killing Ann Widdecombe, a prominent member of the right-wing Reform U.K. party.
Stephen
Castle
By
Stephen Castle
Reporting
from London
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/14/world/europe/ann-widdecombe-targeted-attack.html
Published
July 14, 2026
Updated
July 15, 2026, 12:38 a.m. ET
The
British counterterrorism police on Tuesday said that Ann Widdecombe, a
right-wing politician who was killed last week, had been the victim of a
“targeted attack.”
Ms.
Widdecombe, 78, was found dead at her home in Haytor, in Devon, southwestern
England, on Thursday, having sustained serious injuries.
A
28-year-old British man from Rotherham, a town in northern England around 270
miles away from the crime scene, was arrested on suspicion of murder on
Saturday. On Monday, the police said that they were also holding him “on
suspicion of commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism.”
In a
briefing to the news media on Tuesday, Assistant Commissioner Laurence Taylor,
head of British counterterrorism policing, said that the 28-year-old man could
be held for a total of seven days before being released or charged.
“It is
clear that this was a targeted attack,” the assistant commissioner said, noting
that officers were “working to understand the extent of any planning or
preparation and the motivation that sits behind that attack,” without giving
further details.
Ms.
Widdecombe served as a minister in the Conservative government of Prime
Minister John Major in the 1990s. More recently, she had become a prominent
member of Reform U.K., the populist right-wing party led by Nigel Farage, a
pro-Brexit campaigner.
Some
Reform officials have criticized the police’s handling of the investigation.
The Devon and Cornwall police force initially said they had no information to
suggest the attack had been politically motivated, even after it emerged that
the arrested man appeared to have driven a long distance to Ms. Widdecombe’s
home.
On
Tuesday, Alison Hernandez, the elected police commissioner for Devon and
Cornwall, whose role is to hold the force to account, acknowledged the
criticism but defended officers’ actions.
“It is
not unusual that in a fast-paced investigation, more information comes to light
that changes the nature or the character of what the police are dealing with,”
she said in a statement.
Assistant
Commissioner Taylor said that “extensive searches” had taken place at the
address in Rotherham where the 28-year-old suspect had been arrested and that
“digital forensic examinations” were also in progress.
However,
he noted that the attack had not been declared a terrorist incident at this
stage.
Describing
the case as complex, he said that one line of investigation was whether other
politicians linked to the Reform party had been targeted.
Ms.
Widdecombe’s killing has increased concerns about the safety of British
politicians in an era when many suffer online abuse and threats. During the
past decade, two British lawmakers have been murdered: Jo Cox, of the Labour
Party, in 2016, and David Amess, a Conservative, in 2021. Ms. Cox was killed by
a white supremacist, and Mr. Amess by an Islamic State sympathizer.
Ms.
Widdecombe was no longer a member of Parliament but she spoke regularly to the
media on behalf of Reform, including in the days before her killing. Asked
whether her TV appearances might have been linked to the attack, Assistant
Commissioner Taylor said that was one of the lines of investigation.
On
Monday, the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, offered Mr. Farage a meeting with
the head of an independent committee within the Home Office that manages
security for prominent people in public life. In a statement on social media,
Mr. Farage thanked Ms. Mahmood and said he would accept the meeting and would
“discuss the security of all Reform politicians.”
Stephen
Castle is a London correspondent of The Times, writing widely about Britain,
its politics and the country’s relationship with Europe.

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