
Reform UK is on the march - and the most popular party on TikTok. There's just one problem
Following a barnstorming performance in this year's local elections, they are now the most successful political party on TikTok, engaging younger audiences.
But most of their 400,000 followers are men.
I was at the local elections launch for Reform in March, looking around for any young women to interview who had come to support the party at its most ambitious rally yet, and I was struggling.
A woman wearing a "let's save Britain" hat walked by, and I asked her to help me.
"Now you say it, there are more men here," she said. But she wasn't worried, adding: "We'll get the women in."
And that probably best sums up Reform's strategy.
When Nigel Farage threw his hat into the ring to become an MP for Reform, midway through the general election campaign, they weren't really thinking about the diversity of their base.
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As a result, they attracted a very specific politician. Fewer than 20% of general election candidates for Reform were women, and the five men elected were all white with a median age of 60.
Polling shows that best, too.
According to YouGov's survey from June 2025, a year on from the election, young women are one of Reform UK's weakest groups, with just 7% supporting Farage's party - half the rate of men in the same age group. The highest support comes from older men, with a considerable amount of over-65s backing Reform - almost 40%.
But the party hoped to change all that at the local elections.
Time to go pro
It was the closing act of Reform's September conference and Farage had his most serious rallying cry: it was time for the party to "professionalise".
In an interview with me last year, Farage admitted "no vetting" had occurred for one of his new MPs, James McMurdock.
Only a couple of months after he arrived in parliament, it was revealed he had been jailed after being convicted of assaulting his then girlfriend in 2006 while drunk outside a nightclub.
McMurdock told me earlier this year: "I would like to do my best to do as little harm to everyone else and at the same time accept that I was a bad person for a moment back then. I'm doing my best to manage the fact that something really regrettable did happen."
He has since suspended himself from the party over allegations about his business affairs. He has denied any wrongdoing.
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Later, two women who worked for another of Reform's original MPs, Rupert Lowe, gave "credible" evidence of bullying or harassment by him and his team, according to a report from a KC hired by the party.
Lowe denies all wrongdoing and says the claims were retaliation after he criticised Farage in an interview with the Daily Mail, describing his then leader's style as "messianic".
The Crown Prosecution Service later said it would not charge Lowe after an investigation. He now sits as an independent MP.
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A breakthrough night
But these issues created an image problem and scuppered plans for getting women to join the party.
So, in the run-up to the local elections, big changes were made.
The first big opportunity presented itself when a by-election was called in Runcorn and Helsby.
The party put up Sarah Pochin as a candidate, and she won a nail-biting race by just six votes. Reform effectively doubled their vote share there compared to the general election - jumping to 38% - and brought its first female MP into parliament.
And in the Lincolnshire mayoral race - where Andrea Jenkyns was up for the role - they won with 42% of the vote.
The council results that night were positive, too, with Reform taking control of 10 local authorities. They brought new recruits into the party - some of whom had never been involved in active politics.
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'The same vibes as Trump'
Catherine Becker is one of them and says motherhood, family, and community is at the heart of Reform's offering. It's attracted her to what she calls Reform's "common sense" policies.
As Reform's parliamentary candidate for Hampstead and Highgate in last year's general election, and now a councillor, she also taps into Reform's strategy of hyper-localism - trying to get candidates to talk about local issues of crime, family, and law and order in the community above everything else.
Jess Gill was your quintessential Labour voter: "I'm northern, I'm working class, I'm a woman, based on the current stereotype that would have been the party for me."
But when Sir Keir Starmer knelt for Black Lives Matter, she said that was the end of her love affair with the party, and she switched.
"Women are fed up of men not being real men," she says. "Starmer is a bit of a wimp, where Nigel Farage is a funny guy - he gives the same vibes as Trump in a way."
'Shy Reformers'
But most of Reform's recruits seem to have defected from the Conservative Party, according to the data, and this is where the party sees real opportunity.
Anna McGovern was one of those defectors after the astonishing defeat of the Tories in the general election.
She thinks there may be "shy Reformers" - women who support the party but are unwilling to speak about it publicly.
"You don't see many young women like myself who are publicly saying they support Reform," she says.
"I think many people fear that if they publicly say they support Reform, what their friends might think about them. I've faced that before, where people have made assumptions of my beliefs because I've said I support Reform or more right-wing policies."
But representation isn't their entire strategy. Reform have pivoted to speaking about controversial topics - the sort they think the female voters they're keen to attract may be particularly attuned to.
"Reform are speaking up for women on issues such as transgenderism, defining what a woman is," McGovern says.
And since Reform's original five MPs joined parliament, grooming gangs have been mentioned 159 times in the Commons - compared to the previous 13 years when it was mentioned 88 times, despite the scandal first coming to prominence back in 2011.
But the pitfall of that strategy is where it could risk alienating other communities. Pochin, Reform's first and only female MP, used her first question in parliament to the prime minister to ask if he would ban the burka - something that isn't Reform policy, but which she says was "punchy" to "get the attention to start the debate".
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'What politics is all about'
Alex Philips was the right-hand woman to Farage during the Brexit years. She's still very close to senior officials in Reform and a party member, and tells me these issues present an opportunity.
"An issue in politics is a political opportunity and what democracy is for is actually putting a voice to a representation, to concerns of the public. That's what politics is all about."
Luke Tryl is the executive director of the More In Common public opinion and polling firm, and says the shift since the local elections is targeted and effective.
Reform's newer converts are much more likely to be female, as the party started to realise you can't win a general election without getting the support of effectively half the electorate.
"When we speak to women, particularly older women in focus groups, there is a sense that women's issues have been neglected by the traditional mainstream parties," he says. "Particularly issues around women's safety, and women's concerns aren't taken as seriously as they should be.
"If Reform could show it takes their concerns seriously, they may well consolidate their support."
According to his focus groups, the party's vote share among women aged 18 to 26 shot up in May - jumping from 12% to 21% after the local elections. But the gender divide in right-wing parties is still stark, Tryl says, and representation will remain an uphill battle for a party historically dogged by controversy and clashes.
A Reform UK spokesman told Sky News: "Reform is attracting support across all demographics.
"Our support with women has surged since the general election a year ago, in that time we have seen Sarah Pochin and Andrea Jenkyns elected in senior roles for the party."

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Daily Mail
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- Daily Mail
Moment TikTok star clashes with protesters outside Epping asylum seeker hotel as demonstrations continue after Ethiopian man charged over 'sexual assaults'
This is the awkward moment a TikTok star clashed with protesters outside the controversial migrant hotel in Essex on Sunday. Yesterday, angry locals gathered outside The Bell Hotel in Epping for the second time to protest against its use as accommodation for asylum seekers after a man staying there was charged over three 'sexual assaults'. Ethiopian asylum seeker Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu, 38, appeared at Colchester Magistrates' Court on Thursday, July 10, where he denied a number of offences. Thursday's demonstration started peacefully, but ended with three arrests after clashes with counter protesters and an incident which saw a police van drive into a man. Six arrests were made during the protest on Sunday evening which attracted more counter demonstrations and has spilled over in to today as people continue to stand outside this morning. Amongst those in attendance last night was TikTok star and boxer Ed Matthews. The 24-year-old from Brentwood in Essex, who has over 248,000 Instagram followers, livestreamed his visit to the protest. He could be seen posing for selfies with fans before approaching police officers standing outside the hotel with a can of Stella in hand. He ignored the officers warning and proceeded to tell those around him to 'move out the way' before piercing a hole in the can and drinking from it in a bizarre performance 'If I shotgun this, is that illegal?', he asked one officer who replied: 'Why would you do that mate? Drink your Stella somewhere else.' However, Matthews ignored the cop and proceeded to tell those around him to 'move out the way' before piercing a hole in the can and drinking from it in a bizarre performance recorded by men with cameras. The influencer seemed to be under the impression he was popular with all of the protesters as he walked around confidently with his own film crew in tow. But things got awkward when he was confronted by others who were less than impressed with his presence. Calling him over for a chat, one man shouted: 'You come down here for your ten followers? Don't come over here filming.' A few of the other demonstrators attempted to hide their faces with their hoods and t-shirts as Matthews and his cameraman approached. Matthews defended himself, insisting 'everyone's filming', and when asked why he had joined them said: 'I'm here for the right reasons.' The man then told him off for his stunt with his can of beer in front of officers, telling him he's making the whole protest look like a 'joke' and told him to 'do things properly'. The man then told him off for his stunt with his can of beer in front of officers, telling him he's making the whole protest look like a 'joke' and told him to 'do things properly' 'What are you here promoting? Stella? I'm here to protect the kids,' the man added as they began to square up to each other. Matthews attempted to walk away when another man said: 'Take your camera and f*** off.' The pair then got into a heated discussion as the TikToker asked: 'Why are you being rude mate? We are here for the right reason, ain't we?' 'No you ain't, you're here because you want f***ing content,' the man replied. Waving his beer in the air, Matthew said: 'What? Because I had a Stella?' But the man had clearly had enough and knocked the can out of his hand as he said: 'I don't give a s**t about the Stella. Get out of here now, I'm telling you to f**k off.' Matthews then sulked off towards a group of younger boys who looked overjoyed to see him. The men can be heard still shouting about how he should join them in protesting peacefully, to which he shouted back: 'We should all be working together. This is what they want mate, for us all to be arguing. 'We are all here for the right reasons. No need to get rude.' He then joined a group of people who were standing on the back of a pick-up truck to watch some commotion between officers and protesters. 'Do you think I want the streets unsafe?' he said into the camera, adding: 'It's just people kicking off for the livestream. There's no need for it.' One young fan asked him if he was okay after getting his Stella knocked out of his hand, to which he replied: 'I'm good. It's cool, I'm driving anyway.' Essex Police said six arrests were made on Sunday night for 'violent disorder' after the peaceful protests turned into 'mindless thuggery'. Chief Superintendent Simon Anslow said: 'Disappointingly we have seen yet another protest, which had begun peacefully, escalate into mindless thuggery with individuals again hurting one of our officers and damaging a police vehicle.' The force announced before the protest that it would order demonstrators to remove face coverings when requested under section 60AA of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994. They said anyone who refused to remove a face mask when asked to do so was likely to be arrested and could be imprisoned if convicted. Officers said: 'The right to peaceful protest is protected by law and allows everyone freedom of expression, but this must be done respectfully and if there is a risk to public order, we will act appropriately.' Demonstrators gathering on Sunday displayed signs which opposed the hotel holding migrants as protestors let off red, white and blue smoke flares. Bottles and flares were thrown towards police vehicles stationed outside the hotel by some protesters who led chants such as 'send them home' and 'save our kids'. Police also surrounded a counter-protester, an elderly woman, who was escorted by police out of the area as a group of masked protesters followed her and shouted abuse. More images from last night's gathering showed cars beeping their horns as they drove by, waving Union Jack flags out of the window as onlookers cheered. People wrapped in St George's flag faced down riot police who lined up in a queue on Hemnall Street Further signs displayed by two women read: 'I'm not far right, I'm worried about my kids' and 'Make Epping Safe Again', while another read: 'We go home when they go back'. A line of police vans and officers blocked off the entrance to the hotel with protesters facing them on the other side of the pavement. UKIP politician Nick Tenconi led chants outside the hotel as he called on protestors to gather outside 'every week'. Yesterday's gathering came after tempers flared on Thursday, when a group of hardcore agitators appeared to stop three Essex Police riot vans from driving past the hotel to support their colleagues in the centre of the town, before protestors took to the road to block and attack police vans. Dramatic footage from that night showed a demonstrator being driven into by one of the police vehicles, which appeared to spark chaos outside the hotel. Keith Silk, 33, from, Loughton, was arrested on Saturday and has been charged with violent disorder and criminal damage following clashes outside the hotel. He was remanded into custody and will appear at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court today. Dean Walters, 65, of Harlow, has also been charged and released on bail to appear at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court on September 24, with stringent conditions until then. Another man arrested on Thursday for failing to comply with a dispersal order has been released on conditional bail. A man was seen being put into the back of a police van at the Epping protests on Sunday night Essex Police said: 'Our investigations into the incidents which followed a peaceful protest in Epping on Thursday evening are continuing at pace and we thank the public for sharing vital information.' Local MP Neil Hudson condemned Thursday's 'violent scenes' in a post on X, after eight police officers were injured. He said: 'This is completely unacceptable. Police put themselves in harm's way to keep us safe. People have the right to peacefully protest but these violent scenes are not us, not Epping, not what we stand for. 'I urge folk to listen to the advice of the police while we work to sort this.' In the footage captured on Thursday, an Essex Police van was seen knocking over a young man, who stood in Epping High Road, in what appears to be an attempt to stop the vehicle leaving. In a comment addressing the video, a spokesperson for the Met said: 'Met officers attended Epping, Essex, on the evening of Thursday, 17 July, following a request by Essex Police to support with an ongoing protest and counter-protest. 'On arrival, officers were met with significant hostility from protesters, with police vehicles damaged and officers threatened with violence. 'During their attendance, officers attempted to leave the immediate area due to safety concerns and were subsequently blocked in by the group of protesters using barriers. A man with a St George's flag mask rode past the protesters who lined the pavements holding flags and signs UKIP politician Nick Tenconi led chants outside the hotel as he called on protesters to gather outside 'every week' 'We go home when they go back' reads this sign held outside the hotel yesterday evening Crowds were seen facing police who lined up outside the hotel as smoke bombs were launched During Thursday's protest, a police van leading the convoy was seen hurtling through a plastic barrier 'During this, a police van made contact with one of the protesters.' Protesters had erected a make-shift barrier made up of pallets and plastic fencing in the road to stop police leaving the scene on Thursday. The first of four Essex Police vans crashed through the barrier, leading to a protester to stand in the road, who was then knocked out of the way by the second van as people screamed: 'Oh my god' and 'what the f***'. The youth who was mowed down by the police van is then seen getting up and brushing himself down as he shouts at the convoy. Another man, who was standing by the side of the road, also fell to the ground during the chaotic clip - which has been seen millions of times online. It is unclear whether either man needed medical attention. Essex Police officers, dressed in full riot gear, were seen sat in the vehicles - as thugs are seen attacking the vans, kicking and launching missiles at them. Footage also showed riot police smash a shield into a protester's face and knock his teeth out in a heated clash. The clip shows the man in a grey vest square up to an officer before he is hit with full force. Riot police smashed a shield into a protester's face and knocked his teeth out in a heated clash outside the hotel Footage of the encounter shows the man in a grey vest square up to an officer before he is hit with full force In the aftermath of Thursday's protest incident the injured man spoke to camera where he relayed his account of events and explained the teeth were now in his 'pocket' A car, understood to be a police vehicle, was seen with a heavily damaged windscreen last night Protesters gathered outside the migrant hotel where a demonstration on Thursday descended into violent chaos Dozens of officers were seen standing close to the protesters with riot helmets in their hands yesterday The injured man then looks down at his hand in disbelief as he clasps his teeth and shows them eagerly to fellow protesters including a lady with the Flag of St. George draped over her shoulders. In the aftermath of Thursday's protest incident the injured man spoke to camera where he relayed his account of events and explained the teeth were now in his 'pocket'. He claimed: 'I was trying to talk to him (the riot officer) and he smashed me in the face with his shield.' The protester can then be seen reaching into his pocket before he presents what resembles a yellow luminescent highlighter, a bottle top, and two teeth. Other footage shows the man furiously shouting at the riot police after his teeth have been knocked out as the man filming comments 'he's fuming mate'. There had been among up to 100 officers who battled with anti-migrant protesters who had confronted a counter anti-racism demonstration. Speaking after Thursday's incidents, ACC Hooper said: 'If you were one of those individuals that was responsible for the damage - particularly to my officers or vehicle - you can expect a knock on your door.' He added: 'Eight of my officers... were assaulted last night and that is absolutely, totally unaccepted. They have come here to do a role, to support their communities – they're a part of that community. And that's what we won't tolerate.'


BBC News
a few seconds ago
- BBC News
Reform UK's Nigel Farage proposes sending prisoners overseas
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has proposed sending some prisoners overseas to serve their sentences, as part of a raft of measures he says would create around 30,000 prison places and cost £ at an event in London, he also announced plans to build five prisons, return foreign prisoners to their country of origin, and recruit 30,000 police said the UK was "facing nothing short of societal collapse" and that a Reform government would halve crime in five years. Labour said the policies were "unfunded" - while the Conservatives accused Farage of offering "tough talk without the faintest idea how to deliver it". Asked after his speech how the policies would be funded, Farage said tax rises would not be needed and that Reform was "advocating cutting huge amounts of public spending," including the HS2 rail project and net-zero said crime costed the British economy £170bn, adding: "It isn't really a question of can we afford to do this - it is really a question of can we afford not to do this?"Reform UK estimates its proposals would cost £17.4bn over five years, with an annual cost of £3.48bn. Plans to hire more police officers make up £10.5bn of the overall bill. In order to create more prison spaces, Farage said his party would use the Army to build five new low-security 'Nightingale' prisons on Ministry of Defence land, creating 12,400 spaces for "lower category offenders".The Nightingale label is a reference to the network of emergency temporary hospitals set up during the Covid said he would be willing to force Reform-run councils to accept new prisons in their area, adding that it would bring well paid jobs to local communities. Reform is also proposing to create 10,400 places by transferring foreign prisoners to their country of origin. In exchange, the UK would be prepared to accept British offenders serving sentences abroad, he said.A further 10,000 prison places could be found by sending serious offenders to serve their sentences abroad, the party said his party would consider multiple locations and pointed to Kosovo, Estonia and El Salvador as possibilities, although when pressed on the central American country's human rights record, he said it was an "extreme example". Earlier this year, the El Salvadorian President offered to take prisoners in the US - including those with American citizenship - and house them in El Salvador's mega-jail. Other countries have pursued similar arrangements - in 2021 Denmark agreed to pay Kosovo an annual fee of £12.8m for an initial five-year period to rent 300 of their prison spaces. Successive UK governments have reportedly explored the idea of sending prisoners to BBC has been told that both former Conservative ministers and current Labour ones came to the view that such a plan would be very September of last year, the government said it was "making no such plans or announcements in relation to Estonian prison places".A growing prison population, coupled with a lack of new prisons, has put pressure on the system. Last year, the Prison Governors' Association warned that prisons in England and Wales were days away from running out of space, leading to the government letting some inmates out of prison early. Responding to the speech, Labour Party chair Ellie Reeves said Reform was "more interested in headline-chasing than serious policy-making in the interests of the British people."She added that Labour was "backing up its word with action," pointing to the party's plan to hire 13,000 more police officers and community support officers by the time of the next election in 2029.A Conservative Party spokesperson said Farage was "offering tough talk without the faintest idea how to deliver it" adding that he had not explained how he would fund the additional prisons places. They said the Tories would pass a law making it easier to deport foreign criminals.


BBC News
a few seconds ago
- BBC News
Scarborough Town Council quizzed on mayor's 600% allowance increase
Scarborough Town Council has been asked to justify its decision to increase the town mayor's allowance by 600%, despite committing to cautious Thomas Murray, of Reform UK, will be given a £3,500 allowance, after the authority's annual budget was approved last a full meeting of the Reform-run council, Independent opposition councillor Rich Maw expressed "serious concerns" over the members of the council defended the hike, saying the mayor "should not be left out of pocket" for the unpaid role. They added there had been an increase in mayoral duties and savings had already been made in other to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, a group of charter trustees - councillors who represented the town's unparished areas on North Yorkshire Council - were previously responsible for maintaining civic said: "Under the former charter trustees, the mayor received £500 and the deputy mayor £100, which was considered sufficient for both their civic duties."I just respectfully ask the following: What is the justification for increasing the allowance to £3,500, please?" Murray said the figure was based on how many engagements he might attend in a given year and how much each event had cost added: "The allowance is set at £3,500 because I'm aware that this is public money."However, the estimate that I came up with is a lot more than that."So, it would cost me to be the mayor, and as this is an unpaid role, this money is solely for me to exercise my duties efficiently."Murray previously told the LDRS the council would be cautious about how it spent money, making sure it was used "meaningfully and not wasted".According to fellow Reform councillor Stuart Murray, the authority had already saved £5,000 in money that was allocated in relation to the mayor's chains and civic UK leader Nigel Farage was challenged over the spending decisions in Scarborough on the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme, and said he had "no idea" about the said: "Is he doing it or she doing it as a full-time job? I've no idea.""What we could do is just get multi-millionaires to stand as candidates everywhere and indeed our Doge team are doing the work unpaid," he said."If people have got resources and they do it for free, that's great. I don't know the Scarborough Council situation." Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.