Former UKIP leader Nigel Farage’s quip about being the leader of the rival Conservative Party within three years has sent the UK establishment into a frenzy. The man dubbed “Mr. Brexit” recently joked: “I’d be very surprised if I were not Conservative leader by ‘26. Very surprised.” He further added: “They think I’m joking, I’m serious.”
Later on, he clarified the comments were made “in jest,” though that hasn’t quelled the nerves of a political class trapped between the centre-left “Tories” and the further-left Labour Party.
The first hurdle Farage would face would be his re-admittance as a Conservative Party member. The populist firebrand left the Tory party in 1992 to join the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP), which he led until after the Brexit vote in 2016.
Despite Prime Minister Rishi Sunak hinting that Farage could be readmitted, the establishment appears less open to the prospect. Greg Hands, chairman of the Conservative Party, has dismissed the idea of Farage’s leadership on multiple occasions: “First of all there is no vacancy, and secondly I would be extremely surprised if Nigel Farage were ever to be Conservative leader,” Hands said in response to Farage’s ‘joke’. “There are no plans to allow him into the party and he has not applied.”
Earlier this month at the Conservative Party conference in Manchester, Hands said he wasn’t open to welcoming Farage back into the fold, stating: “No, I don’t think I would because I think he’s repeatedly for the last 30 years or more advocated voting for other political parties. I think he said he doesn’t want to see the Conservative Party succeed so I don’t think I would.”