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Robert Jenrick set off a political firestorm within the British Right on Thursday by joining the Reform Party shortly after being revealed as a Tory defector.
In a day filled with drama at Westminster, the former Conservative leadership hopeful emerged as the most prominent figure to align with Nigel Farage’s rising party.
During an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail on Thursday evening, Jenrick criticized his former Conservative colleagues, comparing their prospects for the upcoming election to those of the Greens. He called on all center-right voters to unite behind Nigel Farage.
A key insider from Reform disclosed that Jenrick is slated to assume the role of shadow chancellor, tasked with bolstering the party’s economic policies.
Jenrick, who previously served as Immigration Minister, had been secretly negotiating with Farage since September.
However, his plans were inadvertently exposed when a Conservative insider discovered a printed draft of his defection speech, indicating his imminent departure, and shared it with Kemi Badenoch.
The Conservative leader launched an extraordinary pre-emptive strike on her former rival.
In a video released just after 11am, Mrs Badenoch said she had sacked him and booted him out of the party after being presented with ‘clear irrefutable evidence that he was plotting in secret to defect in a way designed to be as damaging as possible’.
Robert Jenrick threw a hand grenade into the politics of the British Right on Thursday as he defected to Nigel Farage’s Reform
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said she sacked Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick due to ‘irrefutable evidence that he was plotting in secret to defect’ from the party
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Is Robert Jenrick a bold truth-teller or just betraying his party for personal ambition?
In a warning designed to head off further defections, she added: ‘The British public are tired of political psychodrama and so am I. They saw too much of it in the last government, they’re seeing too much of it in this Government. I will not repeat those mistakes.’
Her intervention briefly plunged Mr Jenrick’s future into doubt before his defection was confirmed at a joint press conference with Mr Farage five hours later at which he launched a stinging all-out attack on the party he joined at 16.
Mr Jenrick said he would not fight a by-election in his Newark seat, claiming that his constituents were already aware of his views.
Mr Farage, meanwhile, thanked Mrs Badenoch for driving Mr Jenrick into his arms, saying the defection had only been ’60:40′ to happen at that point.
However, senior Tories believe he was only days away from quitting, despite having sat round the cabinet table just 24 hours earlier.
Mr Jenrick’s former colleagues rounded on him on Thursday night. One shadow cabinet minister described him as a ‘snake’ while another said he had ‘lost his mind’.
‘Jenrick became consumed with personal ambition, both in the last leadership election and then later when it looked like Kemi’s position might have been under threat,’ the source said.
‘When it became clear that in fact Kemi wasn’t going anywhere, Jenrick’s ambition was frustrated and now he’s done this stupid thing.’
The former Immigration Minister had been in secret talks with Mr Farage since September
In an impassioned defence of his choice, Mr Jenrick said: ‘If we don’t get the next government right Britain will likely slip beyond the point of repair’
His departure dismayed those warning that Labour can only be ousted at the next election if the Conservatives and Reform reach an accommodation to ‘unite the right’.
Mr Jenrick on Thursday told the Mail there is ‘not going to be a pact’, while Mr Farage insisted that the right could now only be united behind him.
Former Tory cabinet minister Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg urged the two parties to stop fighting and form a common front against Labour.
‘I think it remains absolutely essential in a first-past-the-post system that you have to unite your wing of politics. It is of the highest importance,’ he said.
‘I think it is the duty of the right to unite in the national interest because this Labour government is so incompetent. If they were doing a good job then the right could squabble.’
Amid rumours of further defections, Sir Jacob encouraged those on the right of the Tory party to stay, as those on the left ‘won’t do a deal’ with Reform.
Mr Farage and Mr Jenrick have repeatedly traded blows in the past. The Reform leader branded his Tory rival a ‘fraud’ after he toughened his stance on immigration.
As recently as March last year, Mr Jenrick said the Reform leader ‘can’t even run a five-a-side team, so he’s not going to be able to run a country’.
Speaking at the time, he said that although he had ‘sympathy’ with some of Reform’s views ‘they are not a serious party’.
Mr Jenrick admitted the two men had not always seen eye-to-eye.
But he said he was now convinced that only Mr Farage could beat Labour and turn the country around.
He told the Mail his former party had ‘betrayed every principle it ever had’, adding: ‘if you want to get rid of Keir Starmer, if you want to get rid of this failing Labor government and to turn the country around, you have to rally behind Nigel Farage and Reform.
Mr Jenrick is now one of six Reform MPs in the House of Commons, alongside Mr Farage, Richard Tice, Lee Anderson, Sarah Pochin and Danny Kruger
Mr Farage previously insisted he ‘always’ thought Mr Jenrick was a ‘fraud’
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Is this strong leadership from Badenoch or a sign of Tory chaos?
‘The next election is going to be a choice between the country slipping further into decline or the country beginning its journey to future success and prosperity, and there will only be a choice between Starmer – or whichever failed Labour politician replaces him – and Nigel Farage.’
Mr Farage said the two men were now ‘on the same page on almost everything’.
The Reform leader denied cutting a deal with Mr Jenrick, saying: ‘I have not offered him a rank, position, title or money.’
But a senior Reform source said Mr Jenrick was set to be named as the party’s shadow chancellor in the coming weeks. The move could cause friction with the party’s deputy leader Richard Tice who had coveted the role.
Mr Farage warned other budding defectors to move fast, saying he would not take further applications after the local elections in May when he predicted the Conservatives would ‘cease to be a national party’.
He dismissed claims that Reform was becoming another version of the Tory party, saying he was turning down some would-be Conservative defectors – and revealing that he would unveil a prominent Labour supporter next week.
Keir Starmer celebrated the chaos on the Right, saying: ‘We’re seeing a flood of Tory politicians, ex-politicians, going across to Reform because they know that the Tory Party is a sinking ship.’