Nigel Farage has compared Reform UK’s rise in the polls with Donald Trump’s presidential victory in the US, as the party squared up to the Tories with a rally in Kemi Badenoch’s constituency.
The North West Essex rally, which heard speeches from four of Reform’s five MPs, follows a spat between Conservative Party leader Mrs Badenoch and Mr Farage over party membership figures during the Christmas period.
Mr Farage told Reform members at the rally that the Tories “should be bloody scared of you” as he spoke about the argument with Mrs Badenoch.
The rally comes as polling suggests the party has pulled level with, and possibly overtaken, the Conservatives.
📊 NEW POLL: LABOUR UP AS CONS & LIB DEMS FALL, REFORM STEADY
Lab 26% (+1)Cons 23% (-1)Lib Dems 12% (-1)Reform 24% (=)Greens 7% (=)SNP 3% (+1)Others 5% (=)
👥 1633 surveyed | 🔎 29-30 Jan 2025🗓️ +/- 23 Jan 2025🔗 Data: https://t.co/beXlF4Cena #UKPolitics pic.twitter.com/Ea0nvSF2LP
— Techne UK (@techneUK) January 31, 2025
A Techne UK poll has put Reform in second place with 24%, one point ahead of the Conservatives on 23% and two points behind first-placed Labour on 26%.
On the polling bump, Mr Farage told the audience: “I think also we’re beginning to see a wave that is crossing the Atlantic from the east coast of America, where Donald Trump, standing on a platform many of whose policies were not dissimilar to what we put to the British people in that contract last July, has won this incredible victory and got off to the most amazing start.
“And even those people that don’t like him say, you know what? He gets things done.”
The Reform leader added: “People look at us and say ‘like Trump these people will get things done’, and believe me, we will.
“This is not just going to be an earthquake in British politics. This is going to be the biggest historical political change this country has ever seen.”
In late December, Mrs Badenoch had disputed Reform’s claim that its membership had overtaken that of the Conservatives, accusing Mr Farage of “fakery”.
Reform strongly denied the accusation and said it was considering legal action.
At the rally, Mr Farage dismissed the prospect of a legal battle, and said the “next best thing was to come and visit and meet my fake members in the North West Essex constituency”.
“You don’t look very fake to me. You look very real, and I tell you what, the Opposition should be bloody scared of you,” he added.
Mr Farage also conceded the vetting of candidates for Reform UK had been “probably quite near a catastrophe” in the past, after several were dropped for making sexist remarks and using racial slurs.
Ahead of the rally, Mrs Badenoch dismissed Reform UK as a “protest party”.
She told broadcasters she was “not at all” worried about Reform’s presence in her patch, adding that talking about Labour’s farming policy was “much more important than having a rally about myself”.
Asked about the polling numbers on a visit to a farm in Cheshire, Mrs Badenoch said it was “not a surprise that at the moment protest parties are gaining in the polls”.
Reform supporter Alan Goldsmith, 85, said after the rally that he had voted Conservative “all my life” but he would never do so again because “they’re unbelievable idiots”.
He told the PA news agency: “I’ve been voting Conservative all my life. I was born in this area, but I will never ever vote Conservative again because they’re idiots. Unbelievable idiots, and they still haven’t got it now.
“They still haven’t realised what’s wrong. They’re as thick as two short planks.
“When you look on television and there’s a Labour adviser and a Conservative adviser, they’re all young guys who haven’t really lived. And they’re advising these politicians about life and they’re 23, 25, 27.
“It’s the blind leading the blind.”
When asked about Mrs Badenoch’s “protest party comments”, Mr Goldsmith added: “They’re thick again. They just don’t get it, they haven’t got it.”
Harrison Grose, 22, said he planned to stand for Reform in Bishop’s Stortford West in the local elections.
When asked what the younger generation found appealing about the party, he said: “It’s about striving to achieve in life.
“I don’t buy into this idea of socialism where everyone has to be the same. I think if you want to do well you’ve got to get out of bed in the morning, put a shift in and try and do as well as you can.
“It ultimately comes down to the trust issue. Time and time again voters, the electorate, has been told by the Conservatives ‘We’re going to reduce mass migration. We’re going to do this. We’re going to do that. We’re going to lower taxes’.
“And I think it’s time that some of that gets done.”