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Monday, January 19, 2026

Andrew Rosindell quits Tories and defects to Reform UK

This post was originally published on this site.

Jessica Rawnsley

imageUK Parliament

Andrew Rosindell has resigned from the Conservative Party and defected to Reform UK.

The former shadow minister and MP for Romford said the Tories were “irreparably bound to the mistakes of previous governments” and not willing to take “meaningful accountability” for poor decisions.

He said he had spoken to Nigel Farage on Sunday evening before agreeing to join his party. The Reform UK leader called him “a great patriot” who “will be a great addition to our team”.

A Conservative source said Rosindell’s departure was a prime example of Farage doing Badenoch’s “spring cleaning” and that Reform was “welcome” to him.

Rosindell’s move comes after Robert Jenrick joined Reform on Thursday, hours after being sacked from the shadow cabinet by Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, who had accused him of plotting to defect.

Rosindell said in a statement on X that the “views and concerns of constituents such as mine in Romford have been consistently ignored for far too long”.

“Our country has endured a generation of managed decline,” he added. “Radical action is now required to reverse the damaging decisions of the past and to forge a new course for Britain.”

Rosindell, who was shadow minister for foreign affairs before his resignation, said he had joined the Conservative Party when he was 14.

He cited the Labour government’s decision to hand the Chagos Islands to Mauritius and the “failure of the Conservative Party both when in government and more recently in opposition to actively hold the government to account on the issue” as among the reasons for his defection.

“Both the government and the opposition have been complicit in the surrender of this sovereign British territory to a foreign power,” he said.

Farage said: “The Tories’ lies and hypocrisy over the Chagos Islands betrayal has tipped him over the edge, and we are delighted to welcome him to our ranks.”

The move comes hours after the Reform leader insisted his party was “not a rescue charity for every panicky Tory MP” and would not become the Conservative Party 2.0.

Reform will not accept any more defectors after local elections are held on 7 May, he wrote in the Daily Telegraph.

A Conservative source said Rosindell had been “threatening to defect for months, denying it was happening as recently as Saturday”.

They added: “We’re not going to be distracted from holding this disastrous Labour government to account.”

imageA graphic showing eight high-profile Conservatives who have defected to Reform UK since 2024. It shows a headshot of each with a name, date of defection, and a short description of their former role. Top row: Robert Jenrick (January 2026) – Sitting MP and ex cabinet minister, Nadhim Zahawi (January 2026) – Former cabinet minister, Jonathan Gullis (December 2025) – Former MP and junior minister. Middle row: Danny Kruger (September 2025) – Sitting MP and ex minister, Jake Berry (September 2025) – Former MP and minister, Nadine Dorries (September 2025) – Former cabinet minister. Bottom row: Andrea Jenkyns (November 2024) – Former MP and junior minister, Lee Anderson (March 2024) – Sitting MP and ex party deputy chairman.

The Labour Party chair Anna Turley said: “The stench of a failed and dying Tory Party now engulfs Reform.

“Nigel Farage is now unconditionally trying to rehabilitate their disastrous record,” she added. “The public won’t be fooled: the Tories failed Britain and Reform want to do it all over again.”

A Liberal Democrat source said the defection was “a change of rosette for a career politician worried about getting a P45”, adding: “The public are fed up hearing about how Britain is broken from the very same people who broke it.”

Rosindell becomes Reform’s seventh MP and the third sitting Conservative MP to join the party, following Danny Kruger and Jenrick.

About 20 former Tory MPs have switched their allegiance to Reform UK, including former Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi, who did so on Monday 12 January.

Jenrick told a news conference where he announced his defection to Reform that the Tories “broke” the country and had “betrayed its voters”, with the UK now “in decline”.

He later told the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg that the country needed a “new and exciting” leader “who hasn’t been part of that failed consensus”.

Badenoch called it a “good day” for the Conservatives and said Jenrick was “now Nigel Farage’s problem”.

She wrote in the Telegraph that Reform was destined to fail as it welcomed “toxic people” who “destroy organisations”.

“A movement built on grievance and serial disloyalty is doomed to fail, and they will be at each other’s throats soon enough,” she said.

Correction – an earlier, breaking news version of this story incorrectly stated that Rosindell was the seventh Conservative MP to defect to Reform UK. He is actually the third sitting Conservative to switch allegiance, and takes the number of Reform UK MPs to seven.

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