The real Reform voters have been revealed – it’s a slapdash coalition Farage will struggle to hold together | Aditya Chakrabortty
- by The Guardian
- Nov 13, 2025
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ho are Nigel Farageâs army, the voters who want him as our next prime minister? Few questions are as important in British politics. Were an election called tomorrow, the favourite for No 10 would be Farage, whose immigration policies are in some ways more extreme than those of the BNP were. His partyâs role model for government would be Donald Trumpâs US: Elon Musk-style cuts to our public services and masked agents snatching families off the streets.
A few months ago, many in Westminster and across the country would have considered this a cautionary nightmare, a catastrophe that would unfold if Keir Starmer failed. But in the week of another red-on-red assault and after 150 opinion polls in a row topped by Farageâs Reform UK, itâs no longer a scare story. Itâs the most likely prospect.
And still the question of who actually supports Farage meets cliches and bluster. He is âa tribune of working-class rage against the elitesâ, claims Downing Street adviser Maurice Glasman, while the BBCâs Chris Mason catches an âinsurgency vibeâ. An ex-City trader turned Brussels politico is now Merrie Englande incarnate, the teller of inconvenient truths from our bombed-out post-industrial heartlands. See our Nigel go hard-hatted into a steelworks! Watch him sink pints with ex-miners, or gambol along an Essex pier!
Thatâs the sales pitch; the actual customers are vastly different. I can exclusively reveal here the results of the largest-ever survey of Reform voters: more than 11,000 people who would vote for Farage tomorrow, were the polling booths open. Yet far from a single bloc marching under one ideology, they form a large, diverse and fragile coalition.
They stretch from Surrey to Sunderland, from affluent homes with mortgages long paid off to the hard-up. They disagree with each other and with Reform leaders. The results should be studied by anyone in politics, the unions and beyond wondering how to win back Reform voters and stop Farage from running Britain. A spoiler for those in Downing Street: waving flags wonât cut it.
The analysis comes from Hope Not Hate, the respected anti-racist organisation, based on extensive recent polling by Focaldata as well as focus groups. The summary report is available now, and the Guardian analysis is based on extensive access to the background data and focus group responses. What did they find? Well for one, the âred wallâ voters usually vox-popped by TV crews as the Farage faithful now make up a distinct minority of his supporters: only one in four of the Reform base. This is who analysts mean when they talk about Reform voters who go left on economics but right on social issues. Theyâre from towns, not cities, from the north and east of England, and very worried about getting poorer.
Contrast them with another lot dubbed by Hope Not Hate âhardline Conservativesâ. Theyâre about one in five of all Reform voters, often southern and well-to-do, and children of Thatcher. They clash with the first group on workersâ rights and wages and the NHS â and the tensions are growing.
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