Dr Lone Sorensen
Associate Professor of Political Communication, University of Leeds. Dr Sorensen researches populism, post-truth and performative and digital politics. She published her award-winning book, Populist Communication: Ideology, Performance, Mediation with Palgrave in 2021. She currently holds an AHRC Early Career Research, Development and Engagement Fellowship and is working on a project on digitally mediated climate change politics in the post-truth era.
UK Election 2024
Section 8: Personality politics and popular culture
87. Ed Davey: Towards a Liberal Populism? (Dr Tom Sharkey, Dr Sophie Quirk)
88. Why Nigel Farage’s anti-media election interference claims are so dangerous (Dr Lone Sorensen)
89. Nigel Farage and the political circus (Dr Neil Ewen)
90. Binface, Beany and Beyond: humorous candidates in the 2024 General Election (Prof Scott Wright)
91. What Corbyn support reveals about how Starmer’s Labour won big (Prof Cornel Sandvoss, Dr Benjamin Litherland, Dr Joseph Andrew Smith)
92. “Well that was dignified, wasn’t it?”: floor apportionment and interaction in the televised debates (Dr Sylvia Shaw)
93. TV debates: beyond winners and losers (Prof Stephen Coleman)
94. Is our television debate coverage finally starting to match up to multi-party politics? (Dr Louise Thompson)
95. Tetchiness meets disenchantment: capturing the contrasting political energies of the campaign (Prof Beth Johnson, Prof Katy Parry)
96. “We’re just normal men”: football and the performance of authentic leadership (Dr Ellen Watts)
97. ‘Make the friendship bracelets’: gendered imagery in candidates’ self-presentations on the campaign trail (Dr Caroline Leicht)
98. Weeping in Wetherspoons: generative Al and the right/left image battle on X (Simon Popple)
99. An entertaining election? Popular culture as politics (Prof John Street)
100. Changing key, but keeping time: the music of Election 2024 (Dr Adam Behr)
101. Truth or dare: the political veracity game (Prof John Corner)
As the headlines about alleged racism in Reform UK piled up during the election campaign, party leader Nigel Farage stepped up his own campaign to paint the media as undemocratic.
With a week to go before election day, a Channel 4 undercover investigation caught a Reform canvasser on camera using racist language about the prime minister Rishi Sunak, and saying the army should “just shoot” asylum seekers crossing the Channel. Reform has now dropped support for three of its candidates over a number of offensive comments, and a Reform candidate has defected to the Conservatives over the row.
Farage described the Channel 4 investigation as a “stitch-up on the most astonishing scale”. According to Farage, the canvasser was a paid actor set up by the broadcaster to make his party look racist. Reform then reported Channel 4 to the Electoral Commission, accusing the broadcaster of election interference.
When Farage appeared on BBC’s Question Time the following day, audience members challenged him about the racist comments and asked why his party attracted extremists. Farage subsequently attacked the BBC for having “rigged” the audience. The organisation was a “political actor”, he claimed.
Speaking at a Reform rally in Birmingham on the last Sunday of the campaign to an audience of 4,500 Reform supporters and canvassers, Farage attacked both the BBC and Channel 4 as partisan institutions not worthy of the label of public service broadcasters.
Accompanied by pyrotechnics and Union Jacks, Farage implied that the broadcasters, as part of the establishment, were conspiring to stop Reform in its tracks for fear of its success. He rehearsed this narrative in posts on X, framed as a “POLITICAL INTERFERENCE ALERT”.
This strategy of media populism is a mirror of US president Donald Trump’s rhetoric, and dangerous for democracy where it, as in this case, is unjustified. It doesn’t just paint broadcasters as a scapegoat for Farage’s own electoral failure, it sets the scene for complaints of election rigging in the new parliament.
Fake news, populist reality
It may be Trump who brought the phrase “fake news” into the mainstream, but Farage has long attacked the supposedly conspiring media elite as part of his populist approach.
Since his election to the European Parliament in 2014, Farage (then leader of Ukip) has repeatedly accused the BBC of bias and double standards. He has presented mainstream media as distorting reality (especially in connection with unfavourable representations of himself) in a way that interferes with people’s ability to practise their democratic rights.
He appears to have ramped up this rhetoric in the final weeks of the election campaign. For instance, Farage accused the Daily Mail, Google and Ofcom of “political interference” and “election interference” for various alleged mis- and under-representations.
He has now added TikTok to the list, saying they had suspended the live feed from Reform’s rally on 30th June because of alleged hate speech. Farage’s repeated use of terms such as “election interference” and “rigged”, which he used to describe BBC’s Question Time audience, are unlikely to be incidental. They are a striking imitation of Trump’s repeated accusations of the “rigged election” in the US since 2020.
This populist tactic serves two purposes. First, it uses Farage’s status as supposed persona non grata in establishment media circles as proof of his unorthodox truth-telling. As the Reform UK chairman, Richard Tice, introduced Farage at the rally, he complimented Farage’s bravery to stand up against a conspiring establishment, “to tell the truth … against all the pressure to stick at it”.
This self-portrayal of a certain truth-telling faculty is characteristic of populism. Untruthful claims and disinformation – such as some of Reform’s claims about climate change – are presented as truth and often taken as such by supporters because they appear to be authentically performed. This authenticity-based understanding of truth is what Trump’s then-campaign manager Kellyanne Conway famously referred to as “alternative facts”.
In the story populists invent about political reality, the truthteller/leader is a saviour of the good people who are being misled by a self-interested and lying political and media establishment.
Preparing for the future
The second purpose of Farage’s tactic of anti-media populism is the long game. By accusing the media of interfering in his electoral success, in combination with the UK’s first-past-the-post voting system, which favours the large parties, he can claim that his views have far greater support than Reform’s representation in Parliament suggests. He can then use this claim to build even greater momentum behind him for the following election in five years’ time.
Farage has openly declared his intention to become prime minister in 2029 and to build a movement to that effect during the upcoming parliament. The new Labour government now needs to consider how to best respond to his increasingly Trumpian rhetoric – even launching his campaign with a promise to “make Britain great again” – and expected disruptive behaviour and the threat these pose to the norms of British democracy.
A version of this article was previously published in The Conversation under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivatives licence: https://theconversation.com/why-nigel-farages-anti-media-election-interference-claims-are-so-dangerous-233698