Rees-Mogg was described by
Camilla Long in a profile in
The Sunday Times as "David Cameron's worst nightmare" during the
2010 general election campaign. At that election, Rees-Mogg became the new Member of Parliament for the new
North East Somerset constituency, winning a majority of 4,914 votes. His sister, journalist
Annunziata Rees-Mogg, stood simultaneously in neighbouring
Somerton and Frome, but failed by 1,817 votes to win her seat. In
The Guardian,
Ian Jack had claimed that the selection of two such highly privileged candidates had damaged the Conservative Party's message of social inclusion. He later voted against the government whip on the
Fixed-term Parliaments Bill, the October 2011 European Union Referendum Motion and the
House of Lords Reform Bill 2012. In the
House of Commons, Rees-Mogg gained a reputation for his humorous speeches and ability to
filibuster. He helped filibuster the
Daylight Saving Bill 2010–12 and the Sustainable Livestock Bill 2010–12, thus preventing their passage through Parliament. In his long speech on the Sustainable Livestock Bill, he recited poetry, spoke of the superior quality of Somerset eggs, and mentioned the
Empress of Blandings, a fictional pig who won silver at the
Shropshire County Show three years in a row, before moving on to talk about the sewerage system and the
Battle of Agincourt. He also jokingly attempted to amend the Daylight Saving Bill to give the county of Somerset its own
time zone, fifteen minutes behind London. In a December 2011 debate on London Local Authorities Bill, he said that council officials with the power to issue on-the-spot fines should be made to wear
bowler hats. In February 2012, he used the word "
floccinaucinihilipilification"—meaning "the habit of considering as worthless"—during a parliamentary debate; it was noted as the longest word then uttered on the floor of the House of Commons. In May 2013, he addressed the annual dinner held by the
Traditional Britain Group, a far-right group that calls for non-white Britons to be deported. Rees-Mogg had been informed as to the nature of the group by
anti-fascist group
Searchlight prior to his attendance. After the dinner, he informed the press that although he had been informed of the group's views, he had "never been a member or supporter" of them. In January 2014, he dismissed the sum of £250,000 spent on MPs' portraits as trivial by saying "I'm all for saving money, saving money right, left and centre, but this is chicken feed". In December 2014, Rees-Mogg was reported to the
Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority for speaking in debates on tobacco, mining, and oil and gas without first verbally declaring he was a founding partner and director of Somerset Capital, which manages multimillion-pound investments in these sectors. The
Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards,
Kathryn Hudson, decided that no wrongdoing had been committed and thus no investigation would take place. According to
The Daily Telegraph, Rees-Mogg's extra-parliamentary work took up 476 hours, or 9 hours per week, in 2014.
May government (2016–2019) After David Cameron resigned due to the United Kingdom's vote to leave the European Union, the
Conservatives had a leadership election in which Rees-Mogg initially supported
Boris Johnson. After Johnson chose not to run, Rees-Mogg endorsed
Michael Gove and after Gove was eliminated he backed
Andrea Leadsom. Leadsom then withdrew, which meant that
Theresa May became Conservative leader and Prime Minister. Rees-Mogg supported the then-
Republican Party nominee
Donald Trump during
2016 U.S. presidential election. In October 2016, when the
Donald Trump Access Hollywood tape surfaced, he distanced himself from Trump's Twitter messages, saying that Twitter was "fundamentally trivial". In May 2018 he wrote an article for
The Times titled 'Trump Will Be Our Greatest Ally After Brexit', saying that he "appealed to voters left behind by the metropolitan elite and he exudes confidence about his own nation and a determination not to be a manager of decline, which also inspires the Brexiteers". In November 2017, Rees-Mogg met Trump's former
White House Chief Strategist and
Breitbart News' executive chairman
Steve Bannon to discuss how right-wing movements can succeed in the United Kingdom and the United States. Rees-Mogg later defended the meeting when asked about it in an interview, stating, "I've talked to any number of people whose political views I do not share or fully endorse. ... Inevitably politicians meet other politicians. Mr Bannon was the chief of staff to President Trump and is a senior figure in the Republican Party." In 2017, he supported the
confidence and supply agreement made between the Conservative Party and the
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). He later addressed a DUP fundraising event, drawing criticism from the
Northern Ireland Conservatives. Rees-Mogg was widely regarded as a potential candidate for the leadership of his party, something he was reportedly considering during 2017. On 13 August 2017, however, Rees-Mogg said that such speculation was "part of media's silly season". Two Conservative MPs,
Heidi Allen and
Anna Soubry, announced that they would leave the party if he became leader; another,
Justine Greening, suggested she could do the same. However, other Conservative MPs, such as
Jesse Norman and
Daniel Kawczynski have expressed support for a prospective Rees-Mogg leadership bid. Former UKIP leader
Nigel Farage also backed a potential Rees-Mogg candidacy. Following the
2017 general election, calls were made for
Theresa May to step down as Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party after failing to win an overall majority in the House of Commons. This led news outlets to begin speculating on May's possible successor with Boris Johnson touted as the bookmakers' favourite and Rees-Mogg being given 50/1 odds. By 8 July 2017, the campaign had attracted over 13,000 signatures and raised £2,000 in donations with leadership odds being cut to 16/1, making him second favourite behind
David Davis. On 14 August, co-founder of
Ready for Rees-Mogg Sam Frost announced the petition had gathered 22,000 registered supporters, 700 volunteers and £7,000 in donations, despite Rees-Mogg having said a day earlier that such speculation was "part of media's silly season" and that "no-body serious" believed he was a candidate. On 5 September 2017, a poll conducted by
ConservativeHome put Rees-Mogg as the favourite for next leader, with 23% of the votes based on 1,309 people surveyed. Rees-Mogg was elected chair of the European Research Group, a Eurosceptic pressure group within the Conservative Party, in January 2018. A report in
The Independent suggested that this position provided him with the immediate support of around 50 Conservative MPs, a sufficient number to trigger a leadership contest. Since then, Rees-Mogg directly criticised the leadership of May and chancellor
Philip Hammond, fuelling more rumours that he was planning to stand for the leadership but reiterated he had no intention of doing so. In February, a speech that Rees-Mogg was giving at the
University of the West of England was disrupted when left wing protesters accused him of being a racist and a bigot; violence broke out between the protesters and Mogg's supporters. A supporter of "hard Brexit" (although he prefers the term "clean Brexit"), Rees-Mogg was highly critical of the government's handling of the
Brexit negotiations, in particular Theresa May's "
Chequers deal", calling it "staying in the EU without a vote": He supported a "Canada-plus" deal as a compromise; this would allow for tariff-free trade, without the UK remaining in the single market or the customs union. Rees-Mogg defended Johnson against accusations of Islamophobia and criticised the party for initiating disciplinary action against Johnson – in order, Rees-Mogg said, to weaken Johnson politically – calling it a "low-grade abuse of power" On 15 November 2018, Rees-Mogg implied that he might submit a letter of no confidence in Theresa May over her draft Brexit proposal. Later that day, he submitted such a letter to Sir
Graham Brady, the chairman of the
1922 Committee of backbench Conservative MPs and told reporters "What Theresa May says and does no longer match" but added, "this is nothing to do with personal ambition". Following May's announcement that she would call off the House of Commons vote on her Brexit deal due to widespread dislike of the deal, Rees-Mogg made a statement saying: "What has two years of Theresa May doing Brexit amounted to? An undeliverable deal Parliament would roundly reject, if the prime minister has the gumption to allow it to go before the House of Commons. This is not governing, it risks putting Jeremy Corbyn into government by failing to deliver Brexit. We cannot continue like this. The prime minister must either govern or quit." In November 2018, Rees-Mogg suggested the party elect
Boris Johnson as its new leader. Rees-Mogg was described as the leading figure within the unsuccessful effort for a vote of no confidence in Theresa May as party leader by the parliamentary Conservative Party on 12 December. Despite losing the vote, Rees-Mogg continued his calls for May to resign as leader the following day, stating that the Prime Minister had "clearly lost the support of the back benches of the Conservative Party". Rees-Mogg received criticism for his role in this effort from a fellow Conservative MP
Tobias Ellwood, who called his actions "destructive", "divisive" and "selfish". On 18 December, Rees-Mogg said: "Under Tory party rules the prime minister won, that is a mandate for the next year. I therefore fully support her, I lost the vote last week." He later voted against the Labour Party's motion of no confidence on 16 January 2019, having stated earlier that day on
Politics Live that he would support the Prime Minister. Rees-Mogg said on 22 February 2019 that he opposed
Home Secretary Sajid Javid's decision to revoke the UK citizenship of
Shamima Begum, one of the
Bethnal Green trio, as she was eligible for
Bangladeshi citizenship. On his Friday night show on
LBC, he stated that he thought that "there is a fundamental equality in British citizens and if you can't take [his] passport away, then you shouldn't be able to take it away from anybody else" and argued that "Why on earth should Bangladeshis pick up a problem that's essentially our problem. We're trying to put our litter in our neighbour's garden."
Johnson government (2019–2022) Rees-Mogg endorsed
Boris Johnson to become leader of the Conservative Party following the resignation of
Theresa May. Following Johnson's election as leader on 23 July 2019 and appointment as Prime Minister the next day, Rees-Mogg was appointed
Leader of the House of Commons, replacing
Mel Stride. He also became
Lord President of the Council and attended cabinet meetings in the Johnson government. This was the first time that Rees-Mogg either served in a government role or the
Cabinet of the United Kingdom. On 3 September, Rees-Mogg became subject of criticism by fellow MPs after a picture of him reclining on the bench of House of Commons during a debate about the Brexit was published in the media. Rees-Mogg was accused of being contemptuous. Also in September 2019 he apologised after comparing neurologist David Nicholl, who was involved in the government's
Operation Yellowhammer report, to discredited anti-vaxxer
Andrew Wakefield. Rees-Mogg has supported
vaccination against coronavirus and has called
anti-vaxxers "nutters". During the
2019 general election, Rees-Mogg was criticised after an interview with
LBC's
Nick Ferrari during which he said it would have been "common sense" for residents to flee the
Grenfell Tower fire, ignoring
fire brigade advice to stay put. Several hours later, Rees-Mogg said he "profoundly apologised" for his comments. Rees-Mogg subsequently made fewer media appearances throughout the rest of the election campaign (in which the Conservatives ultimately won), fuelling speculation in the media that he was under orders from
Downing Street to keep a low profile as a result of the Ferrari interview, which was supposedly perceived as damaging to the party. Later in the campaign, in an interview with Boris Johnson, Ferrari asked Johnson: "Where is Moggy? [...] I don't see him anywhere." Johnson responded that Rees-Mogg was campaigning actively around the country. In 2020 Rees-Mogg accused
UNICEF of a political stunt after it announced for the first time in its 70-year history it would be providing food parcels to children in deprived areas of London prior to Christmas. Rees-Mogg said that UNICEF were "playing politics when it is meant to be looking after people in the poorest, the most deprived countries in the world, where people are starving, where there are famines and where there are civil wars." Rees-Mogg was branded "
Scrooge" by Labour MP
Neil Coyle, whose constituency
Bermondsey and Old Southwark is one of the affected areas. In his comments, Rees-Mogg stated the charity was "faffing around in England" and "UNICEF should be ashamed of itself". In January 2021 Rees-Mogg broke government
coronavirus guidance by travelling from his residence in the Tier 3 area of West Harptree to a church in the Tier 4 area of Glastonbury to attend a
Latin Mass. The government's guidance was that people could worship in Tier 4 but were not permitted to travel between tiers. A spokesman for Rees-Mogg said that he "regularly attends the only old rite mass available in the Clifton diocese which meets his religious obligations." In October 2021 Rees-Mogg dismissed criticisms that Conservative MPs in the House of Commons should wear
face masks. He said they knew each other and this meant they were acting in line with government COVID guidance. Rees-Mogg has been criticised for calling
Welsh a "foreign language". During a 2021 Commons debate, where
Plaid Cymru Westminster leader
Liz Saville Roberts wished people "Happy St Patrick's Day" in Welsh and
Irish, Rees-Mogg replied that "modest quotation in foreign languages is permissible" but not full speeches. Saville Roberts later pointed out that Welsh is not a foreign language and, historically, had been spoken for centuries before English in Britain. In October 2021 Rees-Mogg said that the main cause of labour shortages in the UK was the effects of disruptions due to the COVID-19 pandemic rather than Brexit. He said: "The lorry driver shortage is nothing to do with European labour movements. 89% of lorry drivers are UK born and bred in 2021, exactly the same level as in 2016." In January 2022 Rees-Mogg suggested that the forthcoming COVID Inquiry must look at whether COVID regulations had been proportionate or too onerous. In February 2022 he was appointed
Minister of State for Brexit Opportunities and Government Efficiency. In April 2022 he called for civil servants to return to working in their offices instead of working from home. He expressed concerns about low attendance rate and inefficiency. He was criticised by
Dave Penman, general secretary of the
FDA trade union for civil servants, for leaving notes at the empty desks of civil servants reading "I look forward to seeing you in the office very soon." Penman said the note was "crass and insulting, and undermined civil service leadership." In July 2022, following the
July 2022 United Kingdom government crisis, Rees-Mogg considered entering the
race to be the next leader of the Conservative Party and thus Prime Minister, as a "pro-Boris" candidate. He later supported
Liz Truss in the election.
Truss government (2022) Rees-Mogg was appointed
Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy on 6 September 2022 by Prime Minister
Liz Truss. Environmental groups expressed concern at his appointment due to his views on
climate change and oversight over the UK's
net zero targets. In October 2022, during the
Conservative Party Conference, Rees-Mogg said that he would be "delighted" to allow
fracking in his back garden.
Return to the backbenches and post-parliamentary career On 25 October 2022, Rees-Mogg resigned from the frontbench upon the appointment of
Rishi Sunak as prime minister and returned to the backbenches. Whilst a backbencher, on 23 June 2023 Rees-Mogg was one of a number of MPs named in a Special Report by the Privileges Committee. This report was on the co-ordinated campaign of interference (by Rees-Mogg and others) into the Committee investigation into former Prime Minister
Boris Johnson intentionally misleading Parliament. An April 2023 poll, for the
Country Land & Business Association, of 1,017 adults living in the 100 most rural constituencies in England, another of August 2023 conducted by
The Times, and one for the
Trades Union Congress (TUC), of 10,000 adults conducted in September 2023, all suggested that Rees-Mogg was at risk of losing his seat at the
2024 general election. in February 2025 In April 2024, Rees-Mogg was chased by protestors after giving a speech at
Cardiff University. The protesters, some of whom carried
Palestinian flags, shouted abuse at Rees-Mogg as he left, prompting university security to escort him off the premises. Although many politicians described the incident as "unacceptable" and an example of there being a culture of intimidation in British politics, Rees-Mogg himself defended the protest, describing it as "legitimate and peaceful...as both the protesters and I were able to give our views without fear or intimidation". In the
2024 UK general election, Rees-Mogg contested the new constituency of
North East Somerset and Hanham, losing to
Dan Norris of the Labour Party. Norris won with a 10.4% majority. == Political ideology ==