Jenrick says his defection will ‘unite the right’

Robert Jenrick is now speaking exclusively to Laura Kuenssberg at BBC News and says he hopes his defection will “unite the right”.

He said:

This is uniting the right. My message for millions of people in the country who stuck with the Conservative party, often through gritted teeth because like me they were deeply frustrated, angry even, about what happened.

They voted again in 2024 and many of those voters have now come to Reform over the course of the last year or so – but there are still people sticking with the party.

If you want to get rid of this Labour government and have a strong reforming government to fix the country, there is frankly only one way to do that … that is to vote for Nigel and rally behind him and Reform.

He says if right-wing voters don’t vote for Reform, they could end up with Keir Starmer as prime minister or even in coalition with the Greens and Lib Dems.

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Key events

Jenrick tells the BBC that he made his decision to leave the Tories for Reform over Christmas.

However, he admits it was a decision made over several years and said the Conservatives had not changed.

He says he attended a cabinet meeting a week ago where it was discussed whether Britain is broken.

For those who believe it is broken, he says they said: “We can’t say it because it was the Conservative Party who broke it”.

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