Nigel Farage has disclosed the sustained barrage of death threats he receives on a monthly basis, as he pushes for increased security following the murder of Reform UK immigration and justice spokeswoman Ann Widdecombe.
| PULSE POINTS |
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Nigel Farage, leader of the Reform UK party, has revealed that he receives over 300 threats each month. 📰 DETAIL: Since February, Farage has received 1,577 threats, with 597 being death threats, primarily via X (formerly Twitter). The Reform leader attributed his decision to seek privately-funded security to the vast number of death threats he receives on a regular basis. The revelation comes in the wake of the murder of Ann Widdecombe, a highly prominent former Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) and minister turned Reform spokeswoman. Farage was reportedly offered taxpayer-funded security in September last year, but Farage rejected the offer as it amounted to a 75 percent cut in his security. 💬 KEY QUOTE: “Frankly, I find it astonishing that, just a short period after he was elected to Parliament, the authorities, the government, chose to massively downgrade his security.” – Robert Jenrick, Reform Shadow Chancellor 🎯 IMPACT: This revelation coincides with reports that counter-terrorism police have taken over the investigation into the death of the 78-year-old Widdecombe. Police initially suggested there was no evidence of a terror motive, but reports of investigators uncovering far-left materials at the suspect’s residence, approximately 200 miles from Widdecombe’s home where she was murdered. Laurence Taylor, Head of Counter Terrorism Policing, said it was “clear” that Widdecombe’s murder was the result of “a targeted attack.” Against this backdrop, many are likely to regard Farage’s request for increased security measures as understandable and warranted. 📺 FLASHBACK: Farage is set to meet with the Royal and VIP Executive Committee (Ravec), the British government’s independent body which handles the security of elected officials, to discuss his security concerns. The disclosure follows a now-deleted post on X by Natalie Fleet, Labour MP for Bolsover and Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Safeguarding and Violence Against Women, who described the reaction to Widdecombe’s killing and Reform’s subsequent demands for better security as “faux outrage.” |
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