Thu Jul 10, 2025 3:51 am
Former Conservative MP and party chairman Sir Jake Berry has announced he is defecting to Reform UK.
Writing in the Sun,, external Sir Jake said: "Old Westminster politics has failed. But there's a better way."
He said he was backing Reform UK "because I've always believed that change comes with challenging the old order. In shaking up the system when it isn't working".
Sir Jake becomes the second former Conservative Cabinet minister to announce his decision to join Nigel Farage's party this week. On Monday, ex-Welsh Secretary Sir David Jones announced he had left the Conservatives for Reform UK earlier this year.
Sir Jake is the fourth former Conservative MP to switch to Reform in the last two weeks, after Sir David, Ross Thomson and Anne Marie Morris.
Sir Jake represented the Lancashire constituency of Rossendale and Darwen from 2010 until 2024, when he lost his seat to Labour.
During his time in Parliament he was a close ally of Boris Johnson and served in several positions including in the Cabinet Office and as Northern Powerhouse minister.
He was appointed as the Conservative Party chairman by Liz Truss during her brief tenure as prime minister.
In a statement announcing his decision, Sir Jake was heavily critical of both his old party and Labour.
"For 25 years, I was proud to call myself a Conservative - 14 of those years, I served as an MP. I even sat at the Cabinet table twice. I believed in it. I gave it everything.
"But let's not kid ourselves. Britain is broken. It didn't start with Labour. The Conservative governments I was part of share the blame.
"We now have a tax system that punishes hard work and ambition. Just this week, we saw record numbers of our brightest and best people leaving Britain because they can't see a future here. At the same time, our benefits system is pulling in the world's poor with no plan for integration and no control over who comes in."
Privately, both Reform and the Conservatives are hinting there might be more defections to come.
Sir Jake's defection underscores Reform's growing political momentum - a trend highlighted by Labour's increasing focus on the party, shifting attention away from the Conservatives.
Tim Montgomerie - another Conservative backer who switched to Reform - told the BBC's Newsnight programme that Sir Jake was "one of the most efficient organisers in the Conservative Party - exactly what my new party needs".
"It is not the most well-organised party at the moment," he added.
He said there would be "bigger" defections to come that would "rock the Conservative Party".
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