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FACTBOX: Britain's shifting political scene: defections to Nigel Farage's Reform

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK gains momentum as several high-profile Conservatives, including Suella Braverman and Robert Jenrick, defect to the party. The shift is reshaping Britain’s political landscape and positioning Reform as a serious challenger to Labour and the Conservatives ahead of the next election.

Reuters

January 26, 2026

Britain's Reform UK leader Nigel Farage walks at a Veterans for Reform press launch, in London, Britain, January 26, 2026.

Isabel Infantes/Reuters

Nigel Farage's right-wing Reform UK Party is benefiting from a raft of high-profile defections from the centre-right Conservative party, with former interior minister Suella Braverman and Robert Jenrick both switching sides this month.


Led by the veteran Brexit campaigner, the anti-immigration Reform UK party is currently leading opinion polls in Britain, positioning itself as a genuine threat to both Prime Minister Keir Starmer's governing centre-left Labour Party and the Conservatives, who lost a 2024 election after 14 years in power.


Should Reform UK's popularity translate into victory in the next election, likely in 2029, it would upend a political system dominated by Labour and the Conservatives for a century.


Here is a list of some former Conservatives who have joined Reform UK in the last year.


SUELLA BRAVERMAN


Braverman, a current member of parliament who was interior minister (Home Secretary) in 2022-23, announced on Monday that she was joining Reform, accusing her former party of lying to voters on immigration.


A former lawyer, Braverman, 45, has long argued Britain should leave the European Convention on Human Rights, one of Reform UK's key policies.


ROBERT JENRICK


A current member of parliament, Jenrick came second to Kemi Badenoch in the 2024 race to lead the Conservatives. He joined Reform on January 15, hours after she fired him, saying he was plotting to defect.


Before he switched sides, Jenrick, 44, had been the Conservatives' justice spokesperson, using that position to build a personal profile on key issues such as immigration and crime that many saw as a platform for a future challenge to Badenoch's leadership.


The former lawyer held several ministerial positions in governments in the late 2010s and early 2020s, including the role of housing minister from 2019-2021.


NADHIM ZAHAWI


Nadhim Zahawi is a former UK finance minister who joined Reform in January 2026, when he was no longer a sitting member of parliament.


His two-month stint as chancellor came during a chaotic period for the Conservatives, and he is best known publicly for driving British efforts to roll out the COVID-19 vaccine.


Zahawi, 58, co-founded the polling company YouGov. He was born in Iraq and came to Britain as a refugee when he was a child.


DANNY KRUGER


Danny Kruger, a current member of parliament, had been a leading Conservative figure until September 2025 when he defected to Reform UK, becoming the first sitting member to do so.


The 51-year-old is a former aide to prime ministers Boris Johnson and David Cameron and had served as welfare spokesperson for the Conservatives until he quit the party.


"This is my tragic conclusion: the Conservative Party is over, over as a national party, over as the principal opposition," he said at the time of his defection.


NADINE DORRIES


Nadine Dorries, 68, was culture minister for a year in 2021-2022 when Boris Johnson was prime minister. A best-selling author, she stepped down as a member of parliament in 2023.


She defected to Reform UK in September 2025, when she wrote that her decision had been based on the feeling that "a sense of dread" was spreading across British communities.


"I believe that the only politician who has the answers, the knowledge and the will to deliver is Nigel Farage," she said at the time.


JAKE BERRY


Jake Berry lost his parliamentary seat to Labour in 2024. He had served as chair of the Conservative Party for a short period in 2022 and had previously been a junior minister in the governments of Theresa May and Boris Johnson.


The 47-year-old defected to Reform in July 2025.


"I've always believed that change comes with challenging the old order, in shaking up the system when it isn't working," he said at the time.


-Sarah Young/Reuters

Nigel Farage's right-wing Reform UK Party is benefiting from a raft of high-profile defections from the centre-right Conservative party, with former interior minister Suella Braverman and Robert Jenrick both switching sides this month.


Led by the veteran Brexit campaigner, the anti-immigration Reform UK party is currently leading opinion polls in Britain, positioning itself as a genuine threat to both Prime Minister Keir Starmer's governing centre-left Labour Party and the Conservatives, who lost a 2024 election after 14 years in power.


Should Reform UK's popularity translate into victory in the next election, likely in 2029, it would upend a political system dominated by Labour and the Conservatives for a century.


Here is a list of some former Conservatives who have joined Reform UK in the last year.


SUELLA BRAVERMAN


Braverman, a current member of parliament who was interior minister (Home Secretary) in 2022-23, announced on Monday that she was joining Reform, accusing her former party of lying to voters on immigration.


A former lawyer, Braverman, 45, has long argued Britain should leave the European Convention on Human Rights, one of Reform UK's key policies.


ROBERT JENRICK


A current member of parliament, Jenrick came second to Kemi Badenoch in the 2024 race to lead the Conservatives. He joined Reform on January 15, hours after she fired him, saying he was plotting to defect.


Before he switched sides, Jenrick, 44, had been the Conservatives' justice spokesperson, using that position to build a personal profile on key issues such as immigration and crime that many saw as a platform for a future challenge to Badenoch's leadership.


The former lawyer held several ministerial positions in governments in the late 2010s and early 2020s, including the role of housing minister from 2019-2021.


NADHIM ZAHAWI


Nadhim Zahawi is a former UK finance minister who joined Reform in January 2026, when he was no longer a sitting member of parliament.


His two-month stint as chancellor came during a chaotic period for the Conservatives, and he is best known publicly for driving British efforts to roll out the COVID-19 vaccine.


Zahawi, 58, co-founded the polling company YouGov. He was born in Iraq and came to Britain as a refugee when he was a child.


DANNY KRUGER


Danny Kruger, a current member of parliament, had been a leading Conservative figure until September 2025 when he defected to Reform UK, becoming the first sitting member to do so.


The 51-year-old is a former aide to prime ministers Boris Johnson and David Cameron and had served as welfare spokesperson for the Conservatives until he quit the party.


"This is my tragic conclusion: the Conservative Party is over, over as a national party, over as the principal opposition," he said at the time of his defection.


NADINE DORRIES


Nadine Dorries, 68, was culture minister for a year in 2021-2022 when Boris Johnson was prime minister. A best-selling author, she stepped down as a member of parliament in 2023.


She defected to Reform UK in September 2025, when she wrote that her decision had been based on the feeling that "a sense of dread" was spreading across British communities.


"I believe that the only politician who has the answers, the knowledge and the will to deliver is Nigel Farage," she said at the time.


JAKE BERRY


Jake Berry lost his parliamentary seat to Labour in 2024. He had served as chair of the Conservative Party for a short period in 2022 and had previously been a junior minister in the governments of Theresa May and Boris Johnson.


The 47-year-old defected to Reform in July 2025.


"I've always believed that change comes with challenging the old order, in shaking up the system when it isn't working," he said at the time.


-Sarah Young/Reuters

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