Nigel Farage‘s right-wing populist party, Reform UK, is set to become a significant player in British politics, securing its first-ever parliamentary seat and eroding the Conservative vote share in the results. Farage himself clinched Reform UK‘s second victory of the evening in Clacton, overturning a substantial Tory majority of more than 25,000.
Lee Anderson, a former Conservative who joined Reform in March, emerged victorious in Ashfield, East Midlands, garnering 34% of the vote and relegating the Conservatives to fourth place with a mere 8.2%.Anderson had previously been elected as a Conservative in the same seat in 2019 with a 39% vote share.
Preliminary outcomes in constituencies comfortably won by Labour revealed Reform’s robust performance, often pushing Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Conservatives into third place. Reform secured 29% and 27% of the vote in the first two counts, prompting Farage to express his astonishment, staying, “That is way more than any possible prediction or projection, it’s almost unbelievable.”
Reform, originally established as the Brexit Party in 2018 and rebranded in 2022, had not previously secured any seats in an election. Farage is contesting in Clacton, an Essex town that recorded one of the highest votes in favor of leaving the European Union in the 2016 Brexit referendum.
The party aims to revolutionize British politics, much like Marine Le Pen’s National Rally is doing in France, by adopting a stringent stance on immigration and demanding the return of illegal migrants arriving in small boats from France.
Although challenging to implement, this focus has exposed a vulnerability for the Conservatives, who have failed to fulfill Sunak’s promise to “stop the boats.” The Conservative plan to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda also failed to materialize before the election was called.
Based on the exit poll, Reform UK was projected to secure 13 out of the 650 seats in the House of Commons. Although this represents a small fraction of the total seats, Farage aspires to utilize this as a stepping stone to challenge the Conservatives and establish his party as the primary right-of-centre alternative to Labour.



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