Meet The Brexit Party's Climate Science Deniers

Itโ€™s just over a fortnight since Nigel Farage was back in the headlines, launching his new Brexit Party to contest the upcoming European Parliament elections, in what he describes as a โ€œdemocraticย revolution.โ€

The former UKIP leader, who left his old party in December after deciding it had become too right-wing even for him, vowed he would return to frontline politics if Britainโ€™s departure from the EU was delayed anyย longer.

While it might seem like a single-issue party, thereโ€™s something striking about the list of candidates weโ€™ve been gradually drip-fed since its formal launch on 12 April: the sheer number who still canโ€™t accept the science on climate change or just donโ€™t think itโ€™s worth the effort of doing anythingย about.

With the rise of the Brexit Party threatening to send a new crop of climate science deniers to the European Parliament โ€“ and a full list of candidates now published โ€“ here are some of the partyโ€™s leading figures whose views on climate change are either ill-informed, obstructive, orย both.


Read more profiles of climate science deniers in DeSmog’s Climate Disinformationย Database


Nigelย Farage

Farage has a history of spreading misinformation about climate science, of which DeSmog has kept track over the years. He told an interviewer in 2013: โ€œI’m all for pollution controls but to obsess with carbon dioxide, which as I understand it, is a perfectly natural occurring phenomenon, strikes me asย strange.โ€

Farage has also called wind energy โ€œthe biggest collective economic insanity Iโ€™ve seen in my entire life.โ€ That would be the cheapest source of new power, along with solar, energy experts now say.

Under his watch, UKIPโ€™s 2015 and 2017 general election manifestos pledged to rip up green measures, including a promise to repeal the UKโ€™s Climate Change Act, withdraw from the Paris Agreement and spur onย fracking.

On the day of the Brexit Party launch, Farage told BBC Radio 4 there was โ€œno difference between the Brexit party and UKIP in terms of policy,โ€ which gives an indication of where the Brexit Party stands on climateย change.

Ann Widdecombeย 

Although she might be better known by some for her moves on Strictly Come Dancing, the controversial former Conservative minister also made a name for herself as one of a small band of hard-line climate science deniers in the House ofย Commons.

Widdecombe, who retired from Parliament in 2010, was one of only five MPs to oppose the 2008 Climate Change Act. The following year she told the Daily Express: โ€œThere is no climate change, hasnโ€™t anybody looked out of their windowย recently?โ€

Six years after the bill passed into law, Widdecombe wrote that she was proud to have been one of the โ€œrebelsโ€ and credits fellow Conservative Nigel Lawson, founder of the climate denial campaign group the Global Warming Policy Foundation, with convincing her. In the same article, she compared the rejection of climate science denial to book-burning in 1930sย Germany.

Another skeptic of wind power, Widdecombe has called the turbines โ€œvast, ugly, inefficientโ€ and โ€œbird-mashing.โ€ Evidence suggests wind turbines are responsible for far fewer bird deaths than other factors, including fossil fuel powerย stations.

Annunziataย Rees-Mogg

Annunziata Rees-Mogg is a headhunter, former journalist and unsuccessful Conservative parliamentary candidate, having stood for the party in the 2005 and 2010 general elections. Her brother is Jacob Rees-Mogg, the โ€œhardโ€ Brexiteer Conservative MP and an opponent of measures to tackle climateย change.

While editor of the investment magazine MoneyWeek, Annunziata Rees-Mogg wrote articles recommending how readers could best profit from the Canadian โ€œtar sandsโ€ boom and predicted that coal was about to make a comeback to the UK. In another article, though, on โ€œHow to profit from the worldโ€™s water crisisโ€, she noted that climate change โ€œwill mean more extreme weather conditions and more water in theย sea.โ€

Rees-Mogg was previously editor of the European Journal, a magazine owned by anti-EU thinktank the European Foundation, founded and chaired by Conservative MP Sir Bill Cash. The Foundation is part of a network of pro-Brexit anti-regulation organisations based out of offices in and around Tufton Street. The UKโ€™s principal climate science denial campaign group, the Global Warming Policy Foundation, is based at 55 Tufton Streetย offices.

Continuing a long tradition of people confusing the climate and the weather, Rees-Mogg once tweeted: โ€œI’m really enjoying this global warming. Simply tropical for late April inย London.โ€

Claireย Fox

A regular guest on BBC Radio 4โ€™s โ€œMoral Mazeโ€ programme, Claire Fox runs a libertarian think tank called the Institute of Ideas, rejecting government intervention even on issues like child pornography and online terror videos.

In a debate with environmental journalist George Monbiot, reported by the climate science denial blogger Ben Pile, she was asked whether she wanted people to be โ€œfree to pollute,โ€ answering: โ€œI wantย freedom.โ€

Fox has frequently tweeted about her denial of climate science, calling the UNโ€™s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) โ€œadvocacy researchโ€ and says treating the body as โ€œhigh priests of The Science and final word on climateโ€ would be a โ€œbetrayal of scientificย inquiry.โ€

Fox has also tweeted supportively of Viscount Matt Ridleyโ€™s climate science denial and recommended people look to Bjorn Lomborg, who argues it would be too expensive to tackle climate change in a meaningfulย way.

Fox is a former member of the Revolutionary Communist Party and forms part of a pro-free market network based around the Spiked magazine, funded by US oil billionaires the Koch brothers, as DeSmog revealed.

Alka Cuthbert, another Brexit Party candidate, is also a regular Spiked contributor. They are joined by Stuart Waiton, a Senior Lecturer atย Abertay University who has called for all hate crime legislation to be repealed, says anti-smacking legislation โ€œcriminalises parentsโ€, and who has spoken at Fox’s Battle of Ideas extravangazaย on why people are becoming reluctant to โ€œfight for Queen andย countryโ€.


Read DeSmog’s investigation into the Koch-funded Spikedย network


Georgeย Farmer

George Farmer is the chairman of Turning Point UK (TPUK), a newly launched right-wing student organisation and an offshoot of Turning Point USA (TPUSA), a staunchly pro-Trump network on Americanย campuses.

Turning Point UK describes itself as defending free markets, limited government and personal responsibility. Neither Turning Point USA nor Turning Point UK declares their funders, although founder Charlie Kirk acknowledged in an interview that some donors โ€œare in the fossil-fuelย space.โ€

Farmer has repeatedly attacked the recent wave of climate change protests which have gripped the Western world. Reacting to the news that 16-year-old climate activist Greta Thunberg, who inspired the school climate strikes, had been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, Farmer tweeted:

Donald Trump was also nominated for the award.

In another instance, he mocked the climate change protests which paralysed London last month as the work of a privileged group of young people without work whose purpose was to โ€œto annoy people withย jobsโ€.

TPUSA played a key role in organising opposition to student campaigns for universities to divest from fossil fuels. It also produced a video that claims NASA scientists are โ€œwrong about climate changeโ€, and founder Charlie Kirk has publicly supported President Trumpโ€™s assertion that he will withdraw the US from the Parisย Agreement.

Farmer is also an ardent supporter of Donald Trump, tweeting โ€œTrump is fixing America, he is truly making it great againโ€ and suggesting President Trump should be celebrated as a โ€œrealย peacemakerโ€.

Farmer is a former Tory party donor and the son of Lord Farmer, a billionaire who made his name through metal trading, a former Conservative treasurer and a life peer in the House of Lords. Lord Farmer is also a long-standing Toryย donor.

The UK Conservative Party has advised its student associations โ€œnot to work with [TPUK] in any capacityโ€.

Nathanย Gill

Nathan Gill is the current Brexit Party MEP for Wales, the former UKIP leader in Wales and a climate scienceย denier.

He told BBC Wales in 2015 that climate change was not man-made and that it was โ€œridiculousโ€ to think humans could change the climate. He also said it was โ€œcomplete stupidity to think by sticking a bunch of wind turbines all over Wales that we are somehow going to stop the weather fromย changingโ€.

In 2018, Gill said in a statement that he would vote against the EUโ€™s Renewable Energy Directiveย as:

โ€œThe European Commission continues to impose never-ending objectives for emissions reductions. EU policies oblige us to invest vast amounts of money on initiatives that will have little or no effect on climateย change.โ€

โ€œBrexit means that we can stop pursuing meaningless and ineffective environmental targets made in Brussels and work together with the rest of the world to protect the environment in a way which protects our energy supply and jobs,โ€ heย added.

Gill defected to the Brexit Party from UKIP in Decemberย 2018.

Michaelย Heaver

Michael Heaver is the co-founder of the UKIP-backed website Westmonster, which publishes Breitbart-inspired, provocative and anti-establishmentย blogs.

Westmonster was launched in January 2017 with funding from Nigel Farageโ€™s financier, multi-millionaire insurance tycoon Arron Banks. Heaver, who co-owns Westmonster, is Farageโ€™s former personal pressย advisor.

According to the BBC, upon its launch Westmonster was expected to benefit from the social media reach of Leave.EU, Farage and Bankโ€™s unofficial Leave campaignย group.

Heaver has repeatedly expressed uncertainty about accepting mainstream views on climate change. Writing on Twitter in 2011, he said: โ€œClimate change is an interesting one, I don’t exactly tow the line on that one. Far-left green movement worries meย though.โ€

In 2012, Heaver described the news that climate change denier Peter Lilley had been appointed to the House of Commons Energy and Climate Change Select Committee as โ€œsignificantโ€.

Westmonster hardly ever writes about climate change and environmental issues, instead focusing on the Brexit debate. However, the website has repeatedly attacked the Green Party, both in the UK and acrossย Europe.

Blogs published on Westmonster have previously mocked links between terrorism, migration and climate change despite experts increasingly describing climate change as a threat-multiplier for suchย issues.

In a short blog post describing the launch of the Extinction Rebellion movement in Parliament square in October 2018, Westmonster described protesters as a โ€œfar-left mob who seem interested in maximumย disruptionโ€.

Martinย Daubney

Martin Daubney served as the longest-running editor of โ€œlads magโ€ Loaded, after working on the sports pages of the disgraced newspaper, News of the World. He is a regular commentator on current affairs, frequently criticising feminism.

Daubney has tweeted numerous times about climate change, claiming that: โ€œEvolution we can prove. Unless you’re blinded by faith. Climate change cannot be proven. Unless you’re blinded byย faith?โ€

He has also tweeted positively about a Spectator article by climate science denier Matt Ridley, which reproduces a familiar trope that carbon dioxide is simply โ€œplant foodโ€. ย He also called a piece by long-time climate science denier James Delingpole that claimed climate change was responsible for โ€œzeroโ€ deaths globally โ€œsuperb.โ€

Lanceย Forman

Lance Forman is the owner of a luxury smoked salmon business, having previously worked as a Special Advisor to former Conservative MP Peter Lilley. Like Ann Widdecombe, Lilley voted against the UKโ€™s Climate Change Act in 2008 and has a record of opposing climate policies and rejecting climateย science.

Forman has called climate change โ€œa mythโ€ and responded to a tweet from Westmonster, a โ€œpro-Brexit, pro-Farage, pro-Trumpโ€ website set up by Leave.EU founder Arron Banks: โ€œDo you think most politicians really believe in Climate Change? Of course not, but they all say they do, or theyโ€™d beย lynched.โ€

Forman recently tweeted: โ€œEven the global warming brigade have stopped calling it global warming now in favour of climate change, which means anything they want it toย mean.โ€

In December 2015, following the signing of the Paris climate agreement, Forman wrote an article in the Newham Recorder, in which heย said:

โ€œThe fact is, that climate change belief or denial is no different to religionโ€ฆ And if there is to be climate change, why focus on the negative? The drying up of the Dead Sea in recent decades has led to a partnership by former enemies, Jordan and Israel, to create a joint project to rehydrate it. Climate change in this situation has been a force for peace and forย good.โ€

Brianย Monteith

Another that doubts the (in his own words) ‘harm’ of climate change is Brian Monteith, a PR man currently working as Editor of ThinkScotland โ€” a โ€œvirtual thinktankโ€ that sees its role as โ€œdefending free markets and an open liberalย societyโ€.

Montieth is also Director of Communications for pro-hard Brexit campaign group Global Britain, and was once a researcher for the Centre for Policy studiesย โ€”ย a thinktank at the heart of a shadowy campaign network based out of offices in and around 55 Tufton Street (more on that networkย below).

Montieth is a regular contributor to The Scotsman newspaper, and has argued that the BBC holding an editorial meeting to decide a line on climate change wasย โ€œmore worryingโ€ than the Savile scandal in an article reposted approvingly by climate science denial campaign groupย the GWPF.ย 

In another commentary for The Scotsman he also criticisedย campaign group Extinction Rebellion, arguing that climate change โ€œisn’t the biggest threat to life on earthโ€. In that article heย arguedย that โ€œpolicies advocated by uber-green protesters would imperil recent improvements in global living conditions,โ€ and that โ€œif we want to avoid extinction, extinguishing socialism in all its guises should be ourย priority.โ€

Tufton Streetย Connections

As well as fielding all these climate science denier candidates, the Brexit Party is also putting up a number of individuals with strong connections to a network of pro-Brexit, anti-regulation lobbying organisations based in and around offices at 55 Tufton Street.

This shadowy network is responsible for politicians pushing for a hard or no deal Brexit that could see environmental regulationsย slashed.

Richardย Tice

Richard Tice is a multi-millionaire property developer and financier and the chair of the anti-EU Brexit Party. A long-standing Brexiteer, Tice is a deregulation advocate, called for a โ€œno dealโ€ outcome to the Brexit process, and urged the adoption of World Trade Organisationย rules.

Together with businessman John Longworth, Tice co-founded Leave Means Leave, a pressure group campaigning for a hard Brexit. The organisation was previously based at 55 Tufton Street, along with numerous right-wing, free-market organisations including the UKโ€™s principal climate science denial campaign group The Global Warming Policy Foundation.

Tice co-founded the Leave.EU campaign with Arron Banks and Nigel Farage. In May 2018, Leave.EU was given a maximum fine of ยฃ70,000 by the Electoral Commission for exceeding the statutory spending limit during the EU referendum campaign, with the groupโ€™s chief executive, Liz Bilney, being referred to theย police.

Tice is the grandson of Bernard Sunley, a major property developer and opencast coal mine owner. The charitable trust Sunley set up in his name and which is now run by the family makes hundreds of donations each year, including to the controversial Countryside Alliance, which supports fox hunting, and has campaigned for the BBC presenter, Chris Packham, to beย sacked.

Johnย Longworth

John Longworth is the former director-general of the British Chamber of Commerce (BCC). He was suspended for breaching the groupโ€™s neutrality rules after he told the BCCโ€™s annual conference Britain would be better off leaving the EU, and laterย resigned.

Longworth chairs Leave Means Leave, a campaign group set up following the EU referendum which advocates the adoption of World Trade Organisation rules. It was previously based at 55 Tufton Street and was accused by a whistle-blower of colluding with eight other organisations, including the Global Warming Policy Foundation, to push for a โ€œhardโ€ย Brexit.

Longworth writes for Brexit Central, a news site edited by Taxpayersโ€™ Alliance founder Matthew Elliott, and is on the advisory board of both the Institute of Economic Affairs free-market think tank and the Economists for Free Trade group, which backs a โ€œno dealโ€ Brexit and includes climate science deniers Jacob Rees-Mogg, Owen Paterson and Matt Ridley.

Not Allย Deniers

It would be unfair to say all the Brexit Party candidates oppose action on climate change, though. Weโ€™ve been able to identify one who seems to want to do something about it: James Glancy, an environmentalist and former royalย marine.

Announcing his candidacy, Glancyย wrote in The Sun:

โ€œBeyond Brexit, I see an opportunity to implement the strongest animal welfare and environmental legislation in the world. It is a chance to reset our relationship with nature, away from the Common Agricultural Policy. I strongly disagree with those who want to weaken environmentalย policy.โ€

He also tweeted support for an article by Tory grandee William Hague, headlined ‘The time for denial is over. Conservatives have to take the climate crisisย seriously’.

And then there’s Katherine Harborne, an environmental scientist who is a current Brexit Party MEP for the West Midlands. She’s so convinced about climate change she even took on BBC politico and Adam Smith Institute fanboy Andrew Neil to task on it on twitter.

Perhaps Dr David Bull, TV presenter and Brexit Party candidate for the North West will back her up next time (as he seems happy to acknowledgeย basic climate science,ย too).

So there’sย that.

Main image:ย Michael Vadonย CC BYSA 2.0. Updated 06/05/19: Details about Stuart Waiton, Katherine Harborn, David Bull and Brian Monteithย wereย added.

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