Around four years ago, I was sat with Richard drinking a coffee
just outside of Milton Keynes, talking through what we wanted our new
party, Reform UK, to be, to do, to offer.
We knew that with the Tories holding a huge majority and with many
of our friends and former colleagues having chosen to return to the
Conservatives under Boris, achieving our ambitions would be a huge
ask.
But, it was abundantly clear to me that Richard was a true Leader,
and a man ready to step up to the moment. He had vision,
determination, optimism and a good dose of humility. He also had my
unwavering support for what he was seeking to do.
When I reflect now on how our party has grown and evolved over the
last four years, I feel an enormous sense of gratitude both to Richard
himself, but also to the very small group of fellow Reformers, who
helped Richard and I to build what we now have.
And within that is our first MP, Lee Anderson. We’re at 16% in the
polls. We have the incredibly capable and talented voices of Ann
Widdecombe, Ben Habib, Rupert Lowe, Alex Phillips and of course, the
irrepressible Dr David Bull, campaigning on behalf of our party. We
have nearly 500 candidates already allocated to stand in the next
General Election, with hundreds more ready and waiting to play their
part.
I can’t ever thank enough the team who have helped us to deliver
this. I know Richard feels the same.
With this in mind, it brings me particular pleasure to share with
you an article written by award winning journalist Isabel Oakeshott,
which features in todays Daily Telegraph.
Please do read it. Enjoy it. And take from it enormous pride in
realising what we have achieved together in the face of unimaginable
opposition.
Against all the odds, Reform UK has turned politics on
its head. And it’s just the start. The party my
partner leads has not allowed a shoe-string budget to limit its
ambition - ISABEL OAKESHOTT
Somewhere in the Midlands is a farmer who fantasised about
giving the UK’s fastest-growing political party £1 million. He turned
up to a meeting in a very fancy tractor which took up half the pub car
park and was quite possibly funded by the EU. But it didn’t take much
sleuthing to conclude that it was only ever going to be a dream, both
for the generous-sounding gentleman and for Reform UK. Very few folk
with that kind of money live in a modest cottage, and a bit of due
diligence quickly revealed that this knight in shining armour was just
a benign attention-seeker.
As it continues to narrow the gap with the Conservatives,
triggering an orgy of special pleading from Tory MPs not to field
candidates in their seats, the political party my partner has led
since 2021 is on a roll. With every migrant boat that crosses the
Channel; with every devastating statistical update on legal migration;
with every failure to drag the economy off the floor; Reform UK
gathers votes. The one thing the party does not have, however, is
cash.
Being on various political party mailing lists, in recent
weeks, I have received fundraising emails from both Labour and the
Conservatives. The way they plead poverty always amuses me, because
compared to Reform UK, they are absolutely loaded.
A glance at the latest figures on the Electoral Commission
website highlights just how much they rake in. In 2023 alone, the Tory
party received some £48 million from supporters, while Labour racked
up £30 million. This is more than enough to meet day-to-day operating
costs and maintain a healthy election fighting fund. Even the Lib Dems
(a party that has all but vanished from the national political scene
under the leadership of Sir Ed Davey) somehow attracted just over
£8 million.
As for Reform UK? Last year, it received £1.3 million, every
penny of which was incredibly gratefully received. The party’s main
assets are a 20-year-old open-top bus, which conked out on the way to
a press launch, and one non-Ulez compliant taxi. The defection of “30p
Lee” Anderson from the Conservatives dramatically improved the bottom
line, not least because it attracted 4,000 new party members.
What this tiny budget means is that, while the Tories and
Labour are mighty (if malfunctioning) machines, Reform UK is an
entrepreneurial, high-growth start up.
There’s no human resources department; no 24-hour press office;
no secretaries or executive PAs; no fancy advertising agency or huge
social media team. It’s just a handful of phenomenally committed
people, working crazy hours, generally for absolutely nothing in
return, because they truly, madly, deeply believe in the cause. As for
my partner Richard Tice, he has personally kept the party afloat for
the best part of three years, with the help of a fantastic chief
executive officer who has a tiny office in Leicestershire and a very
modest support team.
For most of this period, a commitment to giving voters in this
country a credible alternative to Starmer’s socialism and to a Tory
party that has come perilously close to destroying this country, has
been treated with utter disdain by arrogant Tory and Labour MPs, who
seem to think they have a God-given right to take turns to
rule.
Until very recently, members of the sneering Left-leaning
establishment, including the BBC, had barely been able to bring
themselves to mention Reform UK by name. (Earlier this month, the Beeb
showed its true colours by casually describing the party as “far
Right,” an insult to millions of decent voters who despair at the
state of Britain and see no realistic prospect of it getting any
better under either Starmer or anyone representing the Conservative
Party.) Those behind Reform UK just kept going, never letting a
shoestring budget limit their ambition.
But according to the latest polls, Reform UK is now the third
most popular political party in the country. Expectations of its
performance are rising accordingly. The pressure on those responsible
for not disappointing existing and potential supporters is
immense.
The scale of the threat Reform now poses to a Tory party that
likes to boast about being “the most successful election winning force
in history”, means it is under hostile scrutiny as never before. The
political opportunity is extraordinary, but the perils are everywhere:
from the dubious figures with links to rival parties and hard-Left
groups trying to infiltrate the organisation, to decent-seeming people
who sign up as candidates and pass initial vetting procedures, only to
reveal unacceptable views on social media after a few drinks.
All political parties have to contend with such characters
(just look at Labour’s disastrous choice as its candidate in the
recent Rochdale by-election), but weeding them out is tough with
limited infrastructure.
While trying to craft policy; prepare for local and mayoral
elections; fight by-elections, and keep on exposing the abject
failings of this Government, Reform’s tiny team is now also fielding
hundreds of enthusiastic emails every single day. Each and every one
of these messages, generally from voters who are furious and
despairing about the Tory betrayal, deserves an answer.
So while armchair observers question why the party isn’t
devoting more resources to this or that; and critics seize on any
indication of “underperformance,” they’d do well to remember that
Reform UK is a party built on passion – not tainted money from people
trying to buy peerages. It has got where it is today with a whole lot
of conviction and very little cash.
Soon traditional Tory donors may begin to realise that
continuing to throw money at a party that is hurtling towards the
terrible reckoning it deserves is like using bank notes to fuel
bonfires. As Reform inches towards level-pegging with the
Conservatives in the polls, it looks increasingly as if they are
backing the wrong horse.