Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has resigned his seat as a Member of Parliament with the intent of fighting a by-election (special election) to defend the constituency and his name after months of smears by the establishment media.
The National Pulse understands the Reform UK leader wants the matters of his public accounts/declarations of financial gifts settled with a public plebiscite, rather than allowing faceless bureaucrats to weaponization the parliamentary ethics against him and his family.
Farage said on Tuesday afternoon UK time: “I have done nothing wrong. I have not broken the law in any way at all. I have not misused public money,” adding, “Enough is enough… today I will resign… thereby forcing a by-election. The people of Clacton should be the judges of my actions… it’s a chance to stick two fingers up at the entire establishment.”
During the lengthy statement, Farage laid out how he has been ruthlessly targeted by left-wing protesters, and delved into details on how the press has even published photos of his non-political daughter’s home address.
“I will not tolerate the intimidation of my family,” he blasted, adding: “I’ve never been angrier in my life.”
The recent, confected controversies surround gifts to Farage made by friends such as Christopher Harborne and George Cottrell, which Farage maintains he did not need to declare as political donations. Establishment actors from the media as well as the Labour and Conservative parties have claimed for months that these gifts are impermissible, and have weaponized the ethics and justice systems against Farage in a manner similar to the persecution of President Donald J. Trump.
Farage is the Member of Parliament for Clacton-on-Sea, a seat formerly held by Tory-turned-UKIP MP Douglas Carswell, before it was flipped back into a Conservative seat, only to be taken by Farage in 2025. Farage’s current majority is a large 8,400 votes (of 46,000).
In taking this bold step, Farage is tossing the question back to his own electorate – a stance many Members of Parliament have refused or been afraid to do.
WATCH:
A statement on my future. https://t.co/5dZPY9Fm8i
— Nigel Farage MP (@Nigel_Farage) July 7, 2026