
Nigel Farage has speculated that Ann Widdecombe was the victim of “premeditated murder”. He’s attracting controversy for the statement; especially because he also said ‘it doesn’t pay to speculate’ at this time:
Devon and Cornwall Police: “We would ask people not to speculate about what might have happened, particularly on social media.”
Nigel Farage: “From what I can see of it, from what I can make out, this was premeditated murder.”
— Ben Kentish (@BenKentish) July 11, 2026
Speculation
On 10 July, Joe Glenton reported the following of Widdecombe:
A 26-year-old white male suspect has been arrested after former Tory minister and Reform UK politician Ann Widdecombe was found dead. She was an MP for over two decades and was known for her far-right and homophobic views.
The police have since released the suspect. It wasn’t speculation to report on the above, though, because it was reported by the police that they’d made the arrest. The following from Farage, however, is most certainly speculation:
From what I make out, this was premeditated murder. Whether it was politically motivated, whether it was someone with a grudge. I don’t think it pays at this time to speculate
We understand the 24-hour news cycle encourages this sort of thing from media figures. Take this from Mike Graham, for instance, who was a presenter on TalkTV until they sacked him over a racist social media post:
All pointing towards a police cover-up right now… https://t.co/GvM4pwLHXJ
— Mike Graham
(@Iromg) July 11, 2026
Generally, it’s understood that politicians should hold themselves to a higher standard. We’re not sure anyone would expect this from Farage, of course, given his many ongoing scandals, but still.
Farage just can’t respect the wishes of the family and the request of the police : ie not to speculate
He’s feeding speculation for his own perceived political advantage
Just like he always does https://t.co/hjtIJLZsmk
— Bruce McD (@brucemcd23) July 11, 2026
As Ben Kentish noted in a tweet:
Devon and Cornwall Police: “We have made the active decision not to release further information…Releasing such information prematurely could compromise ongoing enquiries and may prejudice future investigative opportunities.”
Nigel Farage: “The car went onto the drive at approximately 12.30pm on Wednesday.”
Farage is openly just engaging in theorising too, saying:
One theory doing the rounds is that it was a burglary gone wrong. But a car went onto the drive at approximately 12.25-12.30 on Wednesday. She had done one interview in the morning… She was due to do another one at 1pm. So if you were a burglar, would you literally drive your car onto someone’s drive?
Farage and his big mouth
Farage is making it increasingly clear that he’s not fit to hold higher office. Whether it’s the many donation scandals or his loose lips, the man simply cannot behave himself. And while we’re often in favour of a little anarchic behaviour, that’s not the case when said behaviour solely benefits billionaire backers and dodgy donors.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
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(@Iromg)