New survey data from the United Kingdom has revealed that Nigel Farage’s instinct that his Reform Party should not embrace anti-grooming gangs activist and political prisoner Tommy Robinson is correct. Only 12 percent of those polled believe Farage’s approach is the “wrong decision,” vindicating those who stood by the Reform UK party leader during billionaire Elon Musk’s recent X intervention on the matter.
Sixty-five percent of Conservative Party supporters, 57 percent of Labour Party supporters, 65 percent of Liberal Democrats, 57 percent of Reform supporters, and 50 percent of Green Party supporters believe Farage made the “right decision,” indicating the Brexit leader still has his finger on the pulse of the nation.
Robinson’s support is most substantial among Reform supporters, but even there, it stands at only 21 percent. It is lowest among supporters of the Conservatives—a source of many defections for Reform in recent months—at just eight percent.
Robinson’s electoral pulling power was last tested in 2019, when Farage’s successor as UK Independence Party (UKIP) leader, Gerard Batten, ran him as a candidate in elections to the European Parliament. Robinson received only 2.2 percent of the vote in his region, with UKIP reduced to zero seats. Meanwhile, Farage’s new Brexit Party—now Reform—won the election, with a greater share of seats and votes cast than any other party by a considerable margin.
Just 12% of Brits think Nigel Farage made the “wrong decision” by saying Tommy Robinson will not be allowed to join Reform pic.twitter.com/Xusqrl7Yg3
— Matt Goodwin (@GoodwinMJ) January 13, 2025