Tom Jones

Tom Jones is a writer and Conservative councillor for Scotton and Lower Wensleydale.

What Labour’s Jimmy Savile attack on Nigel Farage reveals

Nigel Farage is on the side of sex offenders like Jimmy Savile. That's the verdict of Labour Technology Secretary Peter Kyle, after the Reform leader criticised the government's Online Safety Act. Kyle, is of course, speaking nonsense: opposing a law that fails to protect children and cracks down on free speech doesn't put you in the same group as Savile. But Kyle's comments do make one thing clear: Labour is seriously rattled about the rise of Reform. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQsA9OdEtEI Farage has demanded an apology from Kyle, who has so far refused to back down. Instead, having told Sky News 'make no mistake if people like Jimmy Savile were alive today he would be perpetrating his crimes online – and Nigel Farage is on their side', Kyle has doubled down.

Does David Bull know why people vote Reform?

In a week of high drama, in which Reform lost its chairman and then saw him return 48 hours later, the party could have hoped for a quiet news day. Slim chance of that. After Zia Yusuf returned as party chairman, Reform held a press conference to announce that Yusuf would head the party’s DOGE unit to uncover waste at councils – and would be replaced as chairman by Dr David Bull. A former Conservative, Bull is better known than his predecessor was when taking the role, having formerly presented Newsround and Most Haunted, becoming an MEP for the Brexit party in 2019 and the co-host of the TalkTV weekend breakfast show in 2022. As James Heale notes, he is also popular with members, being both ‘a gregarious character and a longtime Farage loyalist.

Inside the Conservative clubs that are turning Reform

My first job was working behind the bar of the Richmond Conservative Club in North Yorkshire. The place was as you might expect: dark blue doors, no women in the bar – other than on Fridays – and a ban on red ties. There were portraits on the walls of Margaret Thatcher and Winston Churchill. The local MP, William Hague, sometimes held his surgeries there. The Richmond club is still open, but many others have closed since the 1950s, when more than a thousand clubs offered cheap beer, snooker and bingo to almost three million Tory members. The party’s membership is now a fraction of what it once was; only 95,000 people voted in last year’s leadership election. Last month, in the run-up to the local elections, Nigel Farage visited the recently closed Frodsham club in Cheshire.

Crying ‘fascism’ didn’t work before, and it won’t work now

‘Could we get a precise definition of fascism before all this kicks off today?’ So asked Merryn Somerset Webb, a senior columnist at Bloomberg, just before polling day in America. It was – and is – a question worth asking. The election of Donald Trump was inevitably going to draw the comparison, particularly after Kamala Harris (remember her?) said that she believed Donald Trump ‘is a fascist’. There is even a Wikipedia page on ‘Donald Trump and fascism’.