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Jeremy Clarkson fumes Nigel Farage will ‘solve NOTHING’ in savage Reform UK attack: ‘Voters will be DISAPPOINTED!’

Jeremy Clarkson has shared a rather damning assessment of Reform UK and its leader, Nigel Farage, as the political party continues to dominate headlines coming out of Westminster.

Reform UK has been at the forefront of the news cycle in recent weeks, in no small part thanks to a series of high-profile defections to the party.

So far in 2026 alone, Mr Farage has welcomed the likes of Robert Jenrick and Suella Braverman to the fold as Reform UK gears up for the next general election.

And while Mr Farage has batted away criticism of the growing number of Conservative Party defections, he’s now facing criticism of a different sort from one Mr Clarkson.

Clarkson's Farm season 4: Jeremy Clarkson

In his latest column, the Clarkson’s Farm star predicted that, should a Reform UK government ever come to fruition, those who voted for it would be “sorely disappointed”.

He defended his point by claiming there is a lack of transparency about the party’s policies in areas such as transport, agriculture, education, and the economy, suggesting that Mr Farage’s stance on immigration is enough for most Britons to vote for him.

Mr Clarkson then sarcastically wrote how some Reform UK voters will end up “expecting to wake up and find themselves in an Enid Blyton picture book”.

“But it won’t be like that the following morning or the following month or even the following year. Or at all, ever again,” Mr Clarkson warned.

Nigel Farage

He mocked how “sending a squad of policemen into immigrant-rich areas” to curb illegal immigration is causing controversy in the United States at the moment, referring to the ongoing Ice protests following the fatal shooting of two citizens in Minneapolis this month.

The Clarkson’s Farm star turned his attention to the small boats crisis in the channel, questioning what effective process Mr Farage will be able to adopt to make any meaningful impact there.

The presenter-turned-farmer explained how he’s seen the difficulties that Italy’s border police deal with in deterring the boats. “They can’t shoot at the people in the boats or ram them because that’s, you know, murder,” he mocked.

“It’s extremely easy to say you will tackle immigration, but actually putting those words into action is extremely difficult. As Mr Farage will doubtless find out,” the former Top Gear star predicted.

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Jeremy Clarkson

While he may not be convinced Mr Farage is the best man to lead the country next, Mr Clarkson did defend the Reform UK leader against claims from some on the hard-left that the party is “far-right”.

“Far-right is Hitler, and they’re a long way from that,” the Who Wants to Be a Millionaire host pointed out.

He concluded his piece by once again pondering what Mr Farage and Reform UK will actually be able to do about illegal immigration if they get the keys to Downing Street.

His rather daunting prediction ended: “The electorate will say that they’ve tried the Tories and they’ve tried Labour and they’ve tried Reform and that nothing ever changes.

Nigel Farage

“And when you’re out of reasonable options, that’s when people start going for options that aren’t reasonable at all.

“And that’s when you end up with an orange man at the helm,” he typed in The Sun.

While Mr Clarkson may not be too enthusiastic about a future with Reform UK at the helm of Britain, a new poll has suggested that Britons aren’t as equally pessimistic.

Reform is now at a 12-point lead ahead of Labour, according to a survey from BMG Research on behalf of The i Paper.

The timeline of Jeremy Clarkson's Diddly Squat Farm

The findings put Reform on 32 per cent (+4 on November), with Labour slipping to 20 per cent (-2) and the Tories falling to 17 per cent (-3).

This isn’t the first time Mr Clarkson has waded into the world of politics. Earlier this week, he unleashed a fresh attack on Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and his “nanny state”.

He also regularly voices his opposition to the proposals of Chancellor Rachel Reeves, thanks to Labour’s latest tax hikes on pub owners.


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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