Brexit Party The incorporation of the Brexit Party in November 2018 was formally announced on 20 January 2019 by the former
UK Independence Party (UKIP) economics spokesperson
Catherine Blaiklock, who served as the Brexit Party's initial leader. On 5 February 2019, it was registered with the
Electoral Commission to run candidates in English, Scottish, Welsh and European Union elections. On the day of the announcement,
Nigel Farage, who had been an independent
member of the European Parliament (MEP) since his departure from UKIP in early December 2018, said that the party was Blaiklock's idea but that she had acted with his full support. The MEPs
Steven Woolfe and
Nathan Gill, also formerly of UKIP, stated that they would also stand for the party. The party's lead aim was for the United Kingdom to leave the EU, and then for Britain to trade internationally on
World Trade Organization terms. In April 2019, Farage said that there was "no difference between the Brexit party and UKIP in terms of policy, [but] in terms of personnel, there's a vast difference", criticising UKIP's connections to the far right. He also said that the party aimed to attract support from "across the board", including former UKIP voters and Conservative and
Labour voters who had supported Brexit. Later in the month he said that the party would not publish a manifesto until after the European elections had taken place, saying that the party would have a policy platform instead of a manifesto. In May 2019, Farage described his admiration for how fellow
Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy members, Italy's
Five Star Movement, had managed to grow from a protest group into the country's largest political party in both houses of the
Italian Parliament. He saw the Brexit Party doing the same kind of thing and "running a company, not a political party, hence our model of registered supporters" and building a base using an online platform. On 11 November 2019, the last day for candidates to register, Farage declared that the Brexit Party would not field candidates in the 317 seats in which there was an incumbent Conservative MP. This was done with the support of most of the Brexit Party candidates, so as not to split the anti-EU vote. On 22 November 2019, the Brexit Party set out its proposals for the
2019 UK general election. They covered a wide range of policy areas including taxation, reforming politics, immigration and the environment.
Transition into Reform UK Before the general election on 8 December 2019, Farage announced that, following Brexit, the party would change its name to the "Reform Party", and campaign for changes in the electoral system and structure of the House of Commons. In July 2020,
Italexit, a Eurosceptic party inspired by the Brexit Party, was founded in Italy. In November 2020, Farage and Tice announced that they had applied to the Electoral Commission to rename the Brexit Party to 'Reform UK'. They said that the party would campaign on a platform that was opposed to further
COVID-19 lockdowns and that it would seek to reform aspects of the
British government, including the
BBC and the
House of Lords. The party also gave its support to the
Great Barrington Declaration. On 4 January 2021, the party's name change to Reform UK was approved by the
Electoral Commission. In 2021, Reform UK gained representation in the
Scottish Parliament when
Michelle Ballantyne, then an
independent and formerly a Conservative
member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP), joined the party and was named Reform UK's leader in Holyrood. She lost her and the party's only seat in Scotland in the
2021 Scottish Parliament election, and resigned as the party's leader in Scotland in February 2022. The former
North West England MEP
David Bull was appointed as deputy leader of the party on 11 March 2021. On 26 March 2021, it was announced that the former Brexit Party MEP
Nathan Gill had become the Leader of Reform UK Wales. In 2021, Reform UK announced its intention to field a full slate of candidates in the
Senedd,
Scottish Parliament and
London Assembly elections with Tice standing for election in the latter. The party failed to win any seats above local level in the 2021 elections in May, and lost their deposit in the
Hartlepool by-election. At the
2021 Senedd election, the party fielded candidates in every constituency and on the regional lists; it picked up 1.6% of the constituency vote (7th place) and 1.1% of the regional list votes (8th place). At the
2021 Scottish Parliament election no constituency candidates were fielded and the party received only 5,793 list votes across the whole country. At the
London Assembly election none of their constituency candidates were elected and the party finished tenth on the London-wide list with 25,009 votes. In October 2022, Reform UK and the
Social Democratic Party (SDP) announced an
electoral pact. Tice declared Reform's intention to stand in 630 constituencies across England, Scotland and Wales with "no ifs, no buts". In December 2022 David White, a Conservative member of
Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council, and Richard Langridge, a Conservative member of
West Oxfordshire District Council, both
defected to Reform UK to stand as
prospective parliamentary candidates for the party. The media gave renewed attention to Reform UK in December 2022 during the
cost-of-living crisis after Farage announced that it would stand a full slate of candidates at the next general election. Tice remained leader of the party. After some opinion polls indicated a modest increase in support for Reform UK,
The Daily Telegraph described the party as a "threat on the Right" to the Conservative government of Prime Minister
Rishi Sunak.
2024 general election On 7 and 8 October 2023, Reform UK held its party conference in London with 1,100 attendees. On 20 October 2023 Tice confirmed that Reform UK would stand in Conservative seats at the
2024 general election, and by January 2024 the party was polling around 10% of the popular vote. It was suggested that Reform UK would play the role of
spoiler party for the Conservatives, since it attracted former Conservative voters.
The Guardian speculated that votes for the party could lead to more than 30 additional seat losses for the Conservative Party. In Northern Ireland, in March 2024, the party formed
an electoral pact with the
Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV), in which the two parties would stand mutually agreed candidates there. In May 2024
Alex Wilson became Reform's first London Assembly member, elected via the London-wide voting system. On 3 June 2024 Farage replaced Tice as leader of the party. It gained five MPs in England in the July
2024 general election, and its Northern Irish affiliate TUV gaining one seat with
Jim Allister. In March 2024,
Simon Danczuk, the former
Labour MP for
Rochdale, joined Reform and stood as their parliamentary candidate in the
2024 Rochdale by-election. Danczuk received 6.3% of the vote and was not elected. The seat was won by
George Galloway. Analysis in March 2024 by
Matthew Goodwin for the
Legatum Institute showed that support for Reform, like UKIP and the Brexit Party before it, was strongest among older voters and those who voted Leave, and relatively even across social classes. By
NRS social grades, 36% of likely Reform voters were in AB, 22% in C1, 23% in C2 and 19% in DE. In May 2024, Farage declared that Reform is becoming a "brand new
Conservative movement", while criticising Labour and Conservative immigration policies as being indistinguishable from each other. near
Birmingham on 30 June 2024 Following the election, on 11 July, the businessman
Zia Yusuf replaced Tice as chairman of the party, with Tice, now an MP, replacing
Ben Habib as deputy leader. The party plans to stand at the
2026 Scottish Parliament election, and expects to win significantly in the
2026 Senedd election in Wales, under the
new more proportional system. In September 2024 Farage said that he would be surrendering all of his shares in Reform UK. This would mean members would have more control over the party, such as being able to vote on a constitution and motions, and could remove Farage as leader if over 50% of members wrote to Yusuf. In October 2024 Farage called for Conservative councillors to join Reform UK and said "a huge number of them genuinely agree with us and what we stand for". In November 2024, it was reported that senior members of the party were divided about supporters of the far-right activist
Tommy Robinson, with two of party's parliamentary candidates expressing sympathy for some of the supporters of Robinson who took part in August's anti-immigration protests, in the face of objections from Tice and Farage. There was also division amongst party MPs for the free vote on the
assisted suicide bill, with Tice,
Lee Anderson and
Rupert Lowe supporting the bill in its second reading, whilst Farage and
James McMurdock opposed it. In November and December 2024, several high-profile Conservatives quit that party and joined Reform. These included the former MP
Andrea Jenkyns, former MP
Lucy Allan,
Tim Montgomerie (founder of
ConservativeHome and adviser to
Boris Johnson), Rael Braverman (husband of the former
Home Secretary Suella Braverman), the actress and singer
Holly Valance and
Nick Candy (the billionaire luxury property developer and former Conservative donor). On 26 December 2024, Reform UK claimed to have overtaken the Conservatives and become the UK's second-largest party, behind Labour, in terms of size. Farage refuted Badenoch's claim, stating that the allegations were "disgraceful" and threatened legal action should Badenoch not apologise.
2025 On 5 January 2025, the American businessman
Elon Musk, owner of Twitter, publicly urged Farage to step down as leader of Reform UK, marking a sudden withdrawal of support. Musk had previously supported Farage and been photographed with him, but later tweeted "The Reform Party needs a new leader. Farage doesn't have what it takes". The withdrawal of support came after Farage disagreed with and distanced himself from comments made by Musk supporting Robinson, who was jailed for
contempt of court. Two days later Farage said that he aimed to "mend fences" with Musk, whom he referred to as a "heroic figure". (CPAC) in the United States, February 2025 On 3 February 2025, Reform topped a national
YouGov poll for the first time. On 20 February 2025, following a September 2024 promise by Farage to hand control of the party to its members and give up his ownership of the party, the party ownership was transferred to Reform 2025 Limited, a
company limited by guarantee with Farage and Yusuf as directors. Reform 2025 Limited is a
nonprofit organisation with no shareholders and, according to
Companies House, "no persons with significant control". Yusuf posted on social media "We are assembling the governing board, in line with the constitution. This was an important step in professionalising the party as we prepare for government." Ben Habib, former deputy leader until being ousted in 2024, welcomed the move. In that same year Lowe was suspended from the party due to allegations of bullying office staff. In May 2025, the party received its fifth MP via
a by-election in
Runcorn and Helsby, with
Sarah Pochin elected with a majority of 6. The
2025 United Kingdom local elections were described as "wins" for Reform. The party placed first, winning the most seats, and took control of 10 local authorities and two mayoralties. In May 2025, analysis by the
Financial Times of data from a More In Common survey showed that the projected Reform vote share had a strong correlation with poor social mobility in a constituency, as measured by the educational and early career achievement of those receiving
free school meals, with no correlation for the Conservatives and
Liberal Democrats, and a weak positive correlation for Labour. Social mobility is lowest in the constituencies with the highest Leave vote in the
2016 EU referendum – 27 of the 30 seats with lowest social mobility voted Leave – and highest in constituencies with the highest foreign-born population. In May 2025, a
far-right influencer, David Clews, and the founder of the far-right organisation
Patriotic Alternative,
Mark Collett (both of whom formerly worked for the fascist
British National Party), both called on their supporters to "infiltrate" Reform UK and move it politically further right and in support of extremist views. Clews claimed that he has sympathisers in Reform UK who are branch chairs and who have been on Reform UK candidate lists. A Reform spokesman said the far-right would never be welcome in the party and a "stringent vetting process" was in place. It came hours after Pochin's call for a national ban on the wearing of
burqas, which led to media speculation that Yusuf's resignation had been as a result of the question and a statement by Reform that it was not official party policy. Yusuf said he had not been informed of Pochin's plans to call for a ban and said it was "dumb" for her to call for a measure which went against Reform policy. Yusuf returned to Reform UK 48 hours in a different capacity after resigning, saying his resignation "was a decision born of exhaustion" and was a "mistake". In a subsequent interview with
The Sunday Times Yusuf stated that his intervention over the burqa question had been an "error" and that if he were an MP he would "probably" vote in favour of banning the burqa along with other face coverings in public. The former deputy leader
David Bull was later announced as Yusuf's successor as chairman. Inspired by Musk's
Department of Government Efficiency in US President
Donald Trump's administration, a unit with the title
Department of Government Efficiency was established by Farage and Yusuf in June 2025 after the party gained control of a number of councils in the 2025 local elections. On 7 June 2025 Yusuf announced he was returning to working with Reform UK, now as the new leader of the unit. In June 2025, Reform also contested the
Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election and recorded their strongest result to date in an election for the Scottish Parliament by finishing in third place (behind
Scottish Labour and the
Scottish National Party) with 26.1% of the vote. The election was described by journalists and the political scientist
Sir John Curtice as a breakthrough for the party in Scotland. At the end of June 2025, two political groups were launched by prominent former Reform UK members, each positioning themselves as an alternative to Reform UK.
Advance UK is a creation of
Ben Habib, former Brexit Party MEP and deputy leader of Reform UK, while
Restore Britain is a creation of Lowe. Both groups were launched on the same day, 30 June. On 5 July 2025 the MP James McMurdock suspended himself from the party as "a precautionary measure" due to a pending investigation into him for previous property tax offences during the COVID-19 pandemic. McMurdock was cleared by the
parliamentary standards commissioner of the allegation but decided not to return to Reform UK and instead remain as an independent MP. The party announced the same month that it would replace its existing vetting process with a looser "common-sense vetting" approach, and has suggested that candidates rejected by the previous vetting process re-apply, with re-applications to be treated as priority cases. is among the former Conservative Party cabinet members to have defected to Reform UK. In July 2025,
Paul Nuttall was appointed as Reform UK's deputy chairman. In August 2025, Mick Barton, the Reform UK leader of
Nottinghamshire County Council took the unprecedented step of banning the local newspaper,
Nottingham Post, from talking to himself or any Reform UK councillors and said that the authority would stop sending press releases to the publication and it would not be invited to council events. Barton accused the paper of "consistently misrepresenting our policies, actions or intentions" and said the ban was "not about silencing journalism", but "about upholding the principle that freedom of speech must be paired with responsibility and honesty". Deputy leader Richard Tice defended the policy when challenged about it being undemocratic to ban media. On 17 September 2025, Mason Humberstone a member of Stevenage Borough Council, became the first Labour Party councillor to defect to Reform UK. , the
MP for
East Wiltshire who defected from the
Conservatives to Reform in September 2025, was the first sitting MP to defect to Reform from another party. On 15 September,
Danny Kruger, the Conservative MP for
East Wiltshire, defected to Reform. In a press conference after his defection was announced, Kruger stated "the Conservatives are over" and that he was "honoured" to have been asked to help prepare Reform for government, adding that he hoped Farage would be the next prime minister. On 26 September, Reform UK announced it had reached 250,000 paid-up members, more than double that of the Conservatives at 123,000 members, and just shy of 60,000 short of Labour, which had the largest number of members at 309,000. On the same day,
Nathan Gill, an ex-Reform politician and former leader of Reform Wales between March and May 2021, who quit the party later that year, pleaded guilty for accepting bribes from pro-Russian journalist and former member of the Ukrainian Parliament pro-Russian '
Opposition Platform — For Life' party
Oleh Voloshyn, at the
Old Bailey in London. Gill pleaded guilty to eight counts of bribery. The charges related to payments of money he accepted from Voloshyn between 2018 and 2019 while serving as a Brexit Party
MEP in the
European Parliament, in exchange for making specific pro-Russian statements directed by Voloshyn in the European parliament and media. Gill was sentenced on 21 November 2025 to ten years and six months in prison. Reform UK condemned Gill's actions and Farage described him as a "bad apple". In September, Tice took part in "Britain's March Against Antisemitism", at which he said, "I don't want a single Jewish person to feel like they have to leave. We need to stand united, united as proud Britons." The following month, a
YouGov poll found that 46% of white British respondents viewed the party and its policies as racist, compared with 36% who regarded the party as "generally not racist". Among respondents from ethnic minority backgrounds, 13% had a favourable opinion while 80% had a negative view. In December 2025,
The Electoral Commission reported that Reform UK had received over £10 million in donations in the third quarter of 2025. These donations included, but were not limited to, a £9 million pound donation by
Christopher Harborne and donations of £250,000 and £240,000 by
Nicholas Candy. In the same month, a report by
The Times said Reform had grown into the largest political party in Britain and overtaken Labour by membership numbers.
2026 On 7 January 2026,
Laila Cunningham was announced as the Reform candidate for the
2028 London mayoral election. On 12 January 2026, former Conservative
Chancellor of the Exchequer Nadhim Zahawi joined Reform UK. Three days later, former
Shadow Secretary of State for Justice and
Shadow Lord Chancellor and
Conservative Party immigration minister
Robert Jenrick joined Reform UK after being expelled from the Conservative Party, bringing the party's representation in the House of Commons to six MPs. On 18 January 2026, Conservative MP for
Romford,
Andrew Rosindell, announced he had switched allegiances to Reform and became the party's seventh Member of Parliament. On 26 January 2026, Conservative MP for
Fareham and Waterlooville and former
Home Secretary Suella Braverman also defected to Reform, becoming the party's eighth MP. On 27 January 2026,
GB News presenter and author Matthew Goodwin was announced as Reform UK's candidate for the
Gorton and Denton by-election. He was described by the Liberal Democrats, who also had a candidate in the election, as being racist for suggesting that some people from ethnic minority backgrounds born in the UK were not necessarily British. Goodwin stated the media reports were misleading, and that he said that second generation immigrants committing terrorist acts such as the
Manchester Arena bombing are not "as British as" their victims. On 4 February 2026,
The National reported that the Reform UK treasurer,
Nick Candy, was named in the
Epstein files. On 10 February 2026, the
Clacton Gazette reported that Farage said there was no wrongdoing because Candy “never had anything to do with Epstein.” On 13 February 2026, former Reform MP
Rupert Lowe announced the creation of his own political party,
Restore Britain, which had existed since 30 June 2025 as a
pressure group. Shortly after, a number of Reform councilors defected to the new party. On 17 February 2026, Nigel Farage announced the creation of his
Reform UK frontbench team. == Representation ==