Nigel Farage in front of an image of a private jet

‘Reform Party UK Exposed‘ have exposed the many private flights that Nigel Farage has taken as Reform UK leader. And as they’ve said, this demonstrates he isn’t the “man of the people” he claims to be:

Seems @Nigel_Farage is addicted to private jet travel.

He’s taken over 60 private jet flights in the UK alone this year. This doesn’t include international flights to the USA and Davos, and doesn’t include helicopter flights.

It was recently shown that he flew to Wales by… pic.twitter.com/iuONsJSnAg

— Reform Party UK Exposed 🇬🇧 (@reformexposed) May 1, 2026

The flight of success

The full post from Reform Exposed reads:

Seems [Nigel Farage] is addicted to private jet travel.

He’s taken over 60 private jet flights in the UK alone this year. This doesn’t include international flights to the USA and Davos, and doesn’t include helicopter flights.

It was recently shown that he flew to Wales by helicopter, then driving to the event to appear ‘normal’. He was onboard the helicopter multiple times this week. Some of the trips have been tiny trips from London to Norfolk or London to Brighton.

The 60+ trips also includes Mauritius, but not for example his March trip to Florida where he failed to meet Donald Trump.

I think we can put the ‘man of the people’ thing to bed.

We have a full spreadsheet with both flight log and confirmations via Nigel Farage’s social media posts:

Farage and his voters likely don’t care about the carbon cost of these flights. At the same time, at least some of those voters may want to know where the money is coming from for all these flights. They may also want to know what Reform’s donors are getting in return.

On this topic, climate change is very relevant. As we reported on 9 November, activist Chris Packham said the following about Reform:

More than $454 million went into the Republican campaign in 2024, more than $90 million went into Trump’s campaign. Here in the UK it’s not a secret the fossil fuel companies are funding Reform and the Conservatives. These people are either denying something which is extremely dangerous, or they’re puppeting for their paymasters.

Writing for the Canaryin April 2025, meanwhile, James Wright pointed out:

the Green Party branded the Reform head a “performer, a con artist”. They pointed to DeSmog research that shows Farage’s party has accepted £2.3 million from fossil fuel interests, big polluters and climate deniers since 2019.

Reform received £200,000 from First Corporate Consultants, which Terence Mordaunt owns. He is chairman of the notorious and opaquely funded Global Warming Policy Foundation, which denies man made climate change is happening.

In other words, it looks very much like Reform’s policy positions are for sale to the highest bidder.

Farage running scared

Farage certainly has a ‘greed is good’ mentality. At the same time, he knows he can only get away with so much. This is why he pretended he hadn’t shown up to that Welsh town in a helicopter. It’s also why Reform try to avoid too much chatter about their donations. This is especially true of the £5m ‘gift’ that Farage failed to declare – something we discovered on Wednesday 29 April.

As we reported:

In a 29 April interview with the *Telegraph,*far-right leader Nigel Farage alleged that his home was targeted by a firebomb attack back in 2025.

Fortunately, the Reform leader had received an untaxed, undeclared ‘gift’ of around £5m for security purposes at the start of 2024. Farage has stated that he’s disclosing the information because an unknown party has recently obtained details of his personal finances.

Additionally:

Fortunately for Farage, his security is being financed privately by billionaire Brexiteer Cristopher Harborne. The Thailand-based British billionaire has donated around £12m to Reform, much of it in hard-to-trace cryptocurrencies.

However, that £12m figure doesn’t include a£5m private ‘gift’ that Harborne made directly to Farage. Because the payout took place in 2024, shortly before Farage ended his brief retirement from party politics, he didn’t have to declare the money as a political donation. Likewise, its nature as a gift meant it was completely free of tax.

Farage was supposed to be doing the Sunday interview slots this morning, but he ‘bottled’ it at the last minute:

As I’ve written, Labour will get monstered on Thursday because of Keir Starmer. But Nigel Farage bottling out of his interview this morning is indicative of where Reform are at the moment. Something’s going wrong with their wider political strategy.

— (((Dan Hodges))) (@DPJHodges) May 3, 2026

Commentator Farrukh suggested Farage’s absence may be linked to the ongoing ‘£5m gift’ scandal:

Laura Kuenssberg, “Nigel Farage was set to be here, but he he changed his mind”

Does that have anything to do with his undeclared £5,000,000 gift? pic.twitter.com/58MwInAy4h

— Farrukh (@implausibleblog) May 3, 2026

You’ll notice that Green Party leader Zack Polanski did appear despite the entire media and political establishment gunning for him.

It just goes to show, doesn’t it; you can pay for a political leader’s private flights, but you can’t make them show up.

Featured image via The Canary

By Willem Moore


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