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What Reform UK’s senior figures really think about women and families

February 21, 2026 at 12:02 PM
By Millie Cooke
What Reform UK’s senior figures really think about women and families
As Reform UK surges in the polls and attempts to get its top team ready to fight an election, The Independent has taken a look at exactly what key figures in the party have said about marriage, women, abortion and fertility – and what it might mean for policy

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As Reform UK surges in the polls and attempts to get its top team ready to fight an election, The Independent has taken a look at exactly what key fig As Reform UK surges in the polls and attempts to get its top team ready to fight an election, The Independent has taken a look at exactly what key fig Monitor developments in What for further updates.

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As Reform UK surges in the polls and attempts to get its top team ready to fight an election, The In

As Reform UK surges in the polls and attempts to get its top team ready to fight an election, The Independent has taken a look at exactly what key figures in the party have said about marriage, women, abortion and fertility – and what it might mean for policy NewsUKUK PoliticsWhat Reform UK’s senior figures really think about women and familiesAs Reform UK surges in the polls and attempts to get its top team ready to fight an election, The Independent has taken a look at exactly what key figures in the party have said about marriage, women, abortion and fertility – and what it might mean for policyMillie Cooke Political Correspondent Saturday 21 February 2026 12:02 GMTBookmarkCommentsGo to commentsBookmark popoverRemoved from bookmarksClose popoverFarage responds to Reform candidate’s call for higher taxes on people without childrenJoin the Independent Women newsletter with Victoria Richards for a thoughtful take on the week’s headlinesJoin the Independent Women newsletter Join the Independent Women newsletter Email*SIGN UPI would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent. Read our Privacy noticeReform UK has a chequered history when it comes to women and families, with some of the party’s more prominent figures having faced criticism for their views. Matt Goodwin, the party’s candidate in the upcoming Gorton and Denton by-election, has previously called for young girls to be given a “biological reality” check, as well as suggesting people who don’t have children should be taxed extra as punishment, while the party’s new head of policy, Dr James Orr, has previously argued that marriage is best for children when it is between a man and a woman. Nigel Farage himself has also faced criticism for his comments about women, last year suggesting that men are prepared to sacrifice family lives for successful careers in a way many women aren't. As the party surges in the polls and attempts to get its top team ready to fight an election, The Independent has taken a look at exactly what key figures in the party have said about marriage, women, abortion and fertility – and what it might mean for policy. Nigel Farage’s party has promised to scrap the Equality Act if it wins a general election (Getty)Marriage In 2025, Mr Farage was accused of “vile homophobia” for claiming straight couples are more stable than gay relationships during a press conference welcoming former Conservative MP Danny Kruger to Reform UK.Mr Farage, who has twice been married and is now in a relationship, said “the most stable relationships tend to be between men and women” after he was asked about past comments made by the right-winger, who became the first sitting Tory MP to join Mr Farage’s party.Mr Kruger, who defected to Reform from the Tories last year, previously told a National Conservatism conference that marriage between men and women was “the only basis for a safe and successful society”.This is a view that has been echoed by the party’s new head of policy.Speaking to the Family Education’s Trust’s 2025 Annual Conference, Dr Orr said: “All the data shows that the children are better off, are best off with a mum and a dad, preferably in the house, preferably biologically related to them. It's a difficult piece of data to put forward in our permissive age, but it's true.” Describing families which are made up of a heterosexual couple with children as “natural”, he added: “There needs to be some kind of normative ideal, there needs to be some benchmark that we can at least aspire to… that the state, to some extent, can help families aspire to.” Abortion Nigel Farage has previously taken aim at UK abortion laws, saying they are “totally out of date”, arguing it is “ludicrous we allow abortion up to 24 weeks”. Mr Kruger, the Reform MP for East Wiltshire, in a debate on abortion once disagreed that pregnant women had an “absolute right to bodily autonomy”, sparking protests in his constituency.He later clarified that he does “not wish to dictate what a woman should do with her own body, as has been claimed”, adding that his position on abortion "reflects the status quo" and that he supported the 1967 Abortion Act. It came as MPs voted to decriminalise abortion in England and Wales, reforms which were designed to protect women while maintaining penalties for medical professionals and abusive partners who terminate a pregnancy outside the current legal framework.A Reform spokesperson last year said the party does not have a stance on abortion and has no intention of making changes to the current abortion laws. However, the party’s new head of policy has described Britain’s abortion laws as “extreme”. “Two or three days ago, I think, there was an interview on Times Radio with a medic arguing that - even though Britain has one of the most extreme abortion regimes in the world, 24 weeks, we're up there with North Korea, China and, God help us, Canada - this wasn't extreme enough, that we should be pushing for 37 weeks, 38 weeks”, Dr Orr told Family Education Trust’s 2025 annual conference.Fertility and birth rates Earlier this month, The Independent revealed that Reform UK’s candidate in an upcoming by-election, Matt Goodwin, previously called for women and young girls to
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