Nigel Farage faces timebomb that could blow up in Reform UK’s face | Politics | News

Mark on the calendar in November! That’s when the reform UK’s deys – as remarkable as it is – can begin to change constantly. That month, Tora MPs will finally vote for the leadership of the fiery conservative leader Kemi Badenoch. To be fair to Badenoch, he faces a ungrateful and almost impossible task that leads a party that has failed for more than 14 years.
Nevertheless, although I say that the optics of booting it will be terrible for the conservatives, one cannot escape the feeling that someone else warms the seat for Robert Jenrick. With Jenrick’s transformation into Damascus Hawk – U -turn is not guaranteed to the Tory Leveta. But seriously, can he do worse? For reform leader Nigel Farage, then the question can see the presidency of his party in the surveys?
Prima Facie is up and upstairs for reform. Rupert Lowe and James McMürdock went and still walking for increasing purposes. Yougov’s latest questionnaire reform is 7 points ahead (rising from 4), more common reform is 6 points (less than 7, but still a commander leader).
This week, the reform welcomed a former TORY deputy in Adam Holloway and said, “Reform leadership and voters grasped the scale of our national danger and supported a serious party in addressing it.” Farage should make sure that the reform has become a dumping floor for the conservative party for Waifs and Stings, but another Tora Jumping Ship will come to sensory reform and adds Tories of the past.
However, the risk of reform creates more pressure on Badenoch, which pushes everything that is inevitable in November. If Badenoch is one of the largest assets of Farage, his removal will not be on the Christmas list of the chief of reform. Nevertheless, come at the end of the year, it may have gone.
Labour’s failures were also a gift to Farage, Jeremy Corbyn’s return party maybe if the labour helps to divide the game further, the cherry on the cake. However, workers’ deputies are undoubtedly wise. Then can there be a leadership and a leadership for labor? Currently, reform is taking advantage of a non -popular PM, apparently a disappointment for backbenchers and voters.
Reform, a Prime Minister Wes Streeting, Gay Working Class Hero, a man who grows up in a council and goes to Cambridge, but would it be very lucky to get rid of cancer? Sir Keir’s “son of a vehicle manufacturer”, Streeting has a story to tell, and Jenrick has the chance to reverse his thorral reserves.
As an election has almost definitely arrived from four years, the reform needs to be protected against the summit too early and cannot be listened to in their laurels. There is no guarantee that Badenoch or Sir Keir will be deputies until 2029.
Reform’s star is inevitably rising, but the record of the local government will be examined beyond the belief between now and the next election. But first note that Badenoch will face the first real test in November.




