
Tom Skinner is famous for three things:
- Not being political.
- Being a member of Reform UK (a political party).
- “Bosh”.
Thomas Skinner used to post long ChatGPT paragraphs about how he’s not political, and he’s just a normal guy grafting. pic.twitter.com/WjcwjD3ZUn
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) January 20, 2026
In his efforts to explain how un-political he is, Skinner appeared on the politics show Question Time on 26 March. When asked why he did it, Skinner told everyone he was paid £2,000. Now, the BBC has thrown this claim into question:
Question Time can confirm that panellists who are not politicians are offered an appearance fee of £150.
— BBC Question Time (@bbcquestiontime) March 27, 2026
Bosh!
As Mukhtar highlighted, this is what Skinner brought to the table on Question Time:
This is the same guy who called Zack Polanski a bell end because he didn’t agree with his politics. pic.twitter.com/lRXvDy0efs
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) March 27, 2026
In the above clip, Skinner says:
what I don’t like about social media is it’s always about dividing people. It’s always about people screaming and shouting – ‘if you don’t agree with me, if you don’t agree with what I stand for, or if you don’t agree with my politics, I hate you, this, that, the other. You’re a gammon or you’re a snowflake’.
Why are we not… I try and spread a bit of positivity and a bit of love, do you know what I mean?
‘People should be nicer to each other‘ – wow – with pearls of wisdom like this, you can see why they’d pay him thirteen times the going rate.
Politics has to be about more than professional politicians. But Tom Skinner is hardly adding anything to the sum total of human wisdom with his ‘I am a bit of a geezer’ which he has monetised to punt his right-wing pro-Farage views. #bbcqt https://t.co/okG6dWvxUV
— Gerry Hassan (@GerryHassan) March 26, 2026
Because Skinner is linked to Reform UK (and also to US vice president JD Vance), people have argued the BBC should have made his political affiliations known:
Right-wing influencer and Reform UK member Tom Skinner was on Question Time last night – but the BBC just ignored his political links
https://t.co/GFsjMi8uKI
— The National (@ScotNational) March 27, 2026
Let’s be right, Tom Skinner isn’t on #bbcqt tonight due to his political insight but instead because he’s a vocal supporter of Reform
If Reform have put him forward over any one of their 8 actual MPs, it’s a shocking indictment of the sheer lack of talent within their party pic.twitter.com/AVWoYcAARb
— David (@Zero_4) March 26, 2026
Skinner claimed he wasn’t there to represent a political party; he was simply there to make a tidy £2k:
Isn’t it suspicious that a guy who kept saying “I ain’t political, I really ain’t” then meets JD Vance, suddenly claims he’s joined Reform, urges people to back Nigel Farage as the next PM, and is now being paid £2k by the BBC?
I’m actually not hating on him for taking the 2k. pic.twitter.com/TmV8taAIp3
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) March 27, 2026
Tom Skinner — Grand
At this point, it’s clear that someone is lying, and we’re inclined to believe it could be either party.
For some in depth analysis of Question Time, be sure to follow us on social media (links at the top of the page):
The Canary has been analysing #bbcqt every week this year to look for evidence of systemic bias. Here’s what we found in last week’s episode… #QuestionTime pic.twitter.com/JHZayR5eva
— Canary (@TheCanaryUK) March 26, 2026
Featured image via BBC
By Willem Moore
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