Farage and Musk in war of words after billionaire says Reform leader should quit
The Tesla tycoon is reported to be considering donation of up to $100m to party
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Your support makes all the difference.Elon Musk has suggested that Reform UK needs to replace Nigel Farage with a new leader amid a row between the pair over jailed far-right political activist Tommy Robinson.
The Tesla tycoon said Mr Farage, who founded the party and is credited with its recent surge in the polls, ādoes not have what it takesā.
His call for change comes as a bitter blow after days of Mr Farage fawning over the worldās richest man, describing him as āa heroā and claiming he makes Reform ālook coolā.
Just hours after Mr Farage was on TV praising Mr Musk, the billionaire took to his social media platform X (Twitter) to declare: āThe Reform Party needs a new leader. Farage doesnāt have what it takes.ā
He then appeared to endorse Rupert Lowe, one of the partyās five MPs, as a replacement.
āI have not met Rupert Lowe, but his statements online that I have read so far make a lot of sense,ā Mr Musk wrote in response to a post asking whether the Great Yarmouth MP and former Southampton FC chairman should take over the top job.
Hitting back, Mr Farage said: āWell, this is a surprise! Elon is a remarkable individual but on this I am afraid I disagree.
āMy view remains that Tommy Robinson is not right for Reform and I never sell out my principles.ā
Mr Musk had been expected to hand a multi-million-pound donation to Reform to aid its efforts to win the next general election amid a feud with prime minister Sir Keir Starmer.
It is unclear why Mr Musk has withdrawn his support from Mr Farage, who he met at Donald Trumpās Mar-a-Lago mansion alongside Reform treasurer Nick Candy just weeks ago to discuss the partyās ground game and financing. Mr Farage and Mr Candy described their hour-long meeting as āgreatā.
But the dramatic U-turn comes after Mr Farage refused to join Mr Muskās calls to release Robinson from prison.
On Friday night, Mr Farage heaped praise on Mr Musk, calling him a āhero figure, especially for the youthā.
But, after Mr Musk on X shared a call to āfree Tommy Robinsonā, Mr Farage said: āHe sees Robinson as one of these people that fought against the grooming gangs. But of course, the truth is Tommy Robinsonās in prison not for that, but for contempt of court.
āWeāre a political party aiming to win the next general election. Heās not what we need.ā
Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, is serving an 18-month prison sentence for contempt of court, which began in October.
A Washington source told The Independent Mr Musk was āhaving a tantrum because Nigel pushed back on himā over Robinson. āHe does this constantly here, too,ā the source added.
Pollster Luke Tryl, UK director at More in Common, said: āLeave aside everything else, this shows Musk has no handle on UK politics.
āAbsent Farage, Reform would have been a postmark in history post-election and likely failed to win seats. Like him or not, and many donāt, he has an ability to connect with people most politicians canāt reach.ā
And a former Farage aide and Breitbart editor Raheem Kassam responded to Mr Musk saying āyou are a f****** moronā.
Despite distancing himself from Mr Musk over Robinson, Mr Farage bent over backwards on Sunday morning to defend the billionaireās incendiary X posts about home office minister Jess Phillips and Sir Keir.
Mr Musk suggested Ms Phillips ādeserves to be in prisonā for denying requests for the Home Office to lead a public inquiry into child sexual exploitation in Oldham.
He also attacked Sir Keir Starmer, saying the prime minister failed to bring ārape gangsā to justice when he was director of public prosecutions.
Reform UK leader Mr Farage told the BBCās Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme that Mr Musk had used āvery tough termsā but that āfree speech was backā on X under his ownership.
He said that ātough things get saidā¦ by both sides of the debateā, adding that Mr Muskās ownership of X makes it a place for āproper open debateā.
Mr Farage said: āThis man happens to be the richest man in the world, but equally, the fact that heās bought Twitter now actually gives us a place where we can have a proper open debate about many thingsā¦
āWe may find it offensive, but itās a good thing, not a bad thing.ā
By contrast, Labourās shadow health secretary Wes Streeting said Mr Muskās claims are a ādisgraceful smearā considering the Labour ministerās efforts to support victims of abuse.
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