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Richard Tice: Reform leader denies offering Lee Anderson money to defect to his party

Richard Tice told Sky News "no money or cash" has been offered to Tory MPs - but he has had conversations with senior figures who he claims are "furious" with the government's handling of immigration.

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Tice: UK 'sick of toxic Tories'
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Reform UK leader Richard Tice has denied reports that Tory deputy chairman Lee Anderson was offered money to defect to his party.聽

Mr Tice told Sky News that "no money or cash has been offered to any Tory MP whatsoever".

He added: "This is about Lee Anderson using the threat of defecting to Reform to negotiate himself the deputy chairmanship of the Tory party because when the article first appeared back in February, coincidentally, he was just appointed in the same deputy chairmanship."

The Sunday Times reported that Mr Anderson, an outspoken MP who has represented Ashfield since 2019, claimed last month to have been offered "a lot of money" to join the party.

Mr Tice was quick to strongly refute this on Sunday morning, calling the story "completely wrong".

However, he said while no money has ever been offered to Tory politicians, he has had conversations "with ministers, former ministers (and) MPs who are absolutely furious with what the government is doing".

He said they were angry "about the complete betrayal of mass immigration" and "the failure to control or stop the boats".

Pic: Cover Images via AP Images
Image: Lee Anderson. Pic: Cover Images via AP Images

"The reality is the Tory party is in the dying throes of what I think is the last majority Tory government that I should probably see in my lifetime and that's a very good thing. We're determined to punish them for their failures for breaking Britain.

"They need to be ousted and we're going to play a very significant part in that."

Reform UK was formed in 2018 out of the ashes of the Brexit Party with the support of ex-UKIP leader Nigel Farage.

Reform could prove to be a thorn in the side of the Conservatives

Nick Martin - News correspondent
Nick Martin

People and politics correspondent

Reform UK leader Richard Tice knows his party is unlikely to form the next government.

"In politics you always have to be an optimist," he told Sky News on Sunday.

But the party - and what it stands for - could prove to be a thorn in the side of the Conservatives, who need every vote they can get in the next general election.

Previously known as the Brexit Party under former leader Nigel Farage, Tice hopes that Reform can capitalise on Tory disillusionment, as voters struggle with the cost of living crisis and National Health Service waiting times.

But it is migration that could give parties like Reform the boost they need.

Record net migration and Tory infighting is fertile territory for parties hoping to entice upset voters.

Tice says: "The Tories have let us down. They've betrayed Brexit. They haven't controlled our borders as they promised."

But the Tories warn that a vote for Reform is a vote for Labour.

And that's probably true.

As the Brexit Party, Reform kept a fragile truce with the Conservatives.

In the lead up to the 2019 general election, then party leader Farage did not field candidates in the 317 seats won by the Tories in 2017 on the proviso that then prime minister Boris Johnson stuck to his promises on Brexit.

Tice says the chances of the same happening at the next election are "absolutely zero".

It is seen as being to the right of the Conservative Party on the political spectrum and wants to see "net zero immigration" - meaning the number of people legally allowed to come to the UK should equal the number emigrating.

Earlier, cabinet minister Laura Trott said she was not worried about the Tories being outflanked by Reform at the next general election.

But Mr Tice said she was wrong to be blasé about its threat, with polling indicating a rise in support for his party.

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Laura Trott on migration figures

In a warning to the prime minister, he said: "We're ready for an April or May election, we think that's coming and we will stand in every single seat across England, Scotland, and Wales. Rishi we are already."

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Reform UK has only taken small proportions of the vote in recent by-elections.

But that has not stopped some Conservatives fearing that Mr Tice's party could exploit voter unhappiness over record levels of legal migration, and Channel crossings.

Mr Sunak is under pressure after new figures revealed net migration is at an all-time high - despite a Conservative 2019 manifesto pledge to bring numbers down.

The data places migration levels at three times higher than before Brexit.

It has posed a fresh challenge for the prime minister, who earlier this month faced a setback with his plans to stop illegal immigration after the Supreme Court ruled the flagship Rwanda deportation scheme is unlawful.