Nigel Farage wants to be protected — and persecuted
Drilling into what the Reform leader has said and done since the shocking death of Ann Widdecombe
It feels like every week we ask the same question at The Lead: just how low will Nigel Farage go?
When counter-terrorism police took over the investigation into Ann Widdecombe’s death yesterday, Reform UK declared vindication. Just days earlier, the Farage had been criticised for describing her death as a “premeditated murder” while police were still investigating and urging people not to speculate.
Now, after new evidence prompted counter-terrorism officers to take control of the case, Reform figures like Richard Tice are insisting critics “must now apologise”.
Whether Farage ultimately turns out to have been right about this particular case is beside the point. He has a habit of intervening before the facts have been established. During the 2024 Southport riots and the 2026 Belfast riots, he used his platform to amplify grievances while authorities were desperately trying to establish the facts and keep the public calm. For a politician whose success depends on dominating the conversation, being correct is much less important than being first.
The UK’s criminal justice system is far from perfect. But the rule of law and the institutions designed to uphold it remain vital cornerstones of our democracy. Police investigate before reaching conclusions, courts hear evidence before delivering verdicts and journalists verify before publishing. These processes can be frustratingly slow, but they are slow for a reason: to ensure everyone is treated fairly.
Politics increasingly operates by different rules. Modern populism is built on speed. Move fast and — hopefully — break things. On social media, the first explanation often becomes the dominant one, even better if taps into people’s pre-existing concerns. Every hour of uncertainty becomes an opportunity to fill the vacuum. For politicians who rely on grievance, moments of public confusion become opportunities for publicity.
Farage is fully aware of conventions around commenting on live criminal investigations, as well as the importance of protecting investigations from political pressure and preserving the fairness of future trials. But deference to institutions is increasingly far beyond Farage’s agenda.
This is how it will work. If subsequent events move towards Farage’s position (as Reform now argues they have in the Widdecombe case) supporters will say he was right all along. If they do not, questions quickly follow about what authorities are failing to disclose and why official accounts keep changing. Either way, trust in institutions is weakened. No matter if his careless rhetoric compromises the criminal investigation into the killing of an elderly woman. What seems to be more important for Farage is that he put himself in the narrative.
Farage’s speech last week showed this in full force. He attacked the media, his parliamentary colleagues and the government, suggesting they were intentionally endangering and slandering him. In justifying the huge personal donations he had received and not declared, he argued they were necessary because of the exceptional security costs associated with being one of Britain’s most recognisable politicians.
There is no doubt that the risks facing politicians like Farage are real. The murders of Jo Cox and Sir David Amess permanently changed the conversation about MPs’ safety, while Farage himself has faced intimidation, abuse and physical attacks over many years. Every elected representative deserves appropriate protection and any attack on a serving or former politician should be regarded as an attack on democracy.
Last year, Farage reportedly declined the taxpayer-funded security package offered to him, including a trained driver, vehicle and close protection officers, because he considered it “inadequate”. The package was broadly comparable to the protection provided to senior Cabinet ministers and Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch.
Farage is entitled to believe the protection offered does not match the threat he faces. But if the argument is that the state is failing to protect politicians like him, what would count as sufficient protection? Rejecting the security that is available — while continuing to present yourself as uniquely exposed — raises questions about what’s more important: being protected, or being persecuted?
Perhaps that is because this debate is not really just about security. It feeds a much larger political story: that Reform exists under a level of threat that the establishment not only refuses to acknowledge but directly contributes to. This sense of permanent siege helps populist movements, because every controversy can be written off as some powerful force attempting to silence the party.
The Widdecombe investigation will eventually establish what happened and it may or may not vindicate some of Farage’s instincts. But by the time the facts are established, the first version of events has already circulated on social media.
And this is where Farage’s two arguments meet. The claim that Reform is being unfairly targeted rests on a wider belief that the institutions around it are compromised or acting in bad faith. And that belief is strengthened every time those same institutions are portrayed as incapable of telling the truth or protecting people.
And that's the real damage, and how Reform corrodes society. Not necessarily that people believe Reform's version of events, but that they stop believing a true version exists at all. ■
About the author: Zoë Grünewald is Westminster Editor at The Lead and a freelance political journalist and broadcaster.
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The Lead has been keeping a close eye on Reform UK and its leader who is looking increasingly desperate following his Clacton by-elections stunt: from his ‘lottery-equivalent’ donation from Harborne to the self-proclaimed anti-establishment leader’s silence on Epstein. More recently, we dug into his inflammatory (and false) claims about two-tier policing and, for our recent 10 years of Brexit series, Zoë charted the trajectory that got us here.






What I would like to know is whether the taxpayer funded security that he was provided with and has been offered also includes those times when he is making money being a TV 'personality', hustling for corrupto-billionaires and shilling for gold traders.
Wait until you find out who allegedly was behind all this!