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‘Reform has an enormous opportunity – but its chance to reshape Britain could slip away,’ Jacob Rees Mogg says

Is Reform ready to govern Britain, or is the blob devouring it already? People are starting to ask this.

Not Reform’s enemies, but some of its supporters, because indeed the day-to-day grind of political power away from the rallies and the viral clips, the party may be starting to go native.

On paper, Reform should be flying ahead. The latest YouGov poll puts reform on 27 per cent, the poor old Tories on 16 per cent. Voters are disillusioned and want a movement that will deliver.

Where Reform has power through controlling councils, it is unfortunately bungling golden opportunities. in Staffordshire.

The Reform-run council has reportedly halted the sale of council owned farms. This is the sort of state interventionist meddling Reform has historically railed against.

Yet now a Reform council decides it wants to own farms rather than selling land to pay off debt and cut its interest burden.

Staffordshire has hundreds of millions of pounds of debt and spends around £25million a year in interest annually selling assets to reduce debts benefits all taxpayers, while being a landlord is not the business of councils.

In Kent, it gets worse. A Reform-led council is standing up for the Health and Safety Brigade, apparently telling villagers to tear down their Union Jacks and Saint George’s flags before Christmas so that the lights can go up.

Jacob Rees Mogg

It appears inconsistent and to the voters who elected Reform because they were different and because they were fed up with the so-called uniparty, it now finds Reform is acting as a spokesman for the bureaucracy.

And then we come to tax. In the local elections reform promised to slash waste and cut bills. Now, in six of their councils covering more than 2million households, council tax is going up, taking a total of £127million of taxpayers’ cash.

On the other hand, Nigel Farage’s announcement changing his stance on tax earlier this week was undeniably wise.

Mr Farage said: “We want to cut taxes. Of course we do, but we understand substantial tax cuts. Given the dire state of debt and our finances are not realistic at this current moment in time.”

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Now, governing is different from campaigning, but backtracking and contradiction should be approached with caution. Some momentum is lost and trust destroyed, these councils seem to be being bamboozled by the bureaucracy.

The blob is winning and too many Reform councillors are going along with it. Nigel Farage is undoubtedly a capable leader.

He is one of the most effective communicators in British politics, and the only person in the country who can rally Reform’s base and keep it united.

Nigel Farage

But if Reform cannot make radical changes at the council level, voters will ask how could it run the country?

Reform’s opportunity is enormous, but if it squandered, then Reform’s chance to reshape Britain could slip away.

The question now isn’t whether reform can win, it’s whether Reform can govern.

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LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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