When Sir Jacob Rees‑Mogg was on the podcast, he argued that Britain now faces a stark choice between a united Conservative-Reform right and a hard‑left coalition, setting out why he believes a pact with Nigel Farage and Reform UK is now a moral duty, what such a deal could look like in practice, and how years of technocracy, judicial overreach and failed Conservative leadership have brought the country to this moment.
If you missed it, you can watch the other part of our interview with Sir Jacob here:
This Week on Voices
All the articles published on Voices for a Free Future this week:
Is There Any Party for Prosperity?
When Nigel Farage’s Reform UK joined the Conservatives, Labour and the Liberal Democrats in pledging to maintain the pension triple lock, something important happened in British politics: the possibility of a government promoting prosperity in the next parliament died. Alas for the young, who already face a nightmare.
The Numbers the Chancellor Reads Out Are Fiction
Last Sunday, Keir Starmer took to the Guardian to declare that workers, pensioners and children were all better off, that the critics should be ignored, and that his government was “standing up for w…
If Kanye West Is Too Offensive for Britain, Then So Is Valentina Gomez
Britain has cancelled one of its biggest music festivals, disappointed hundreds of thousands of fans, cost a major live-events business a great deal of money, and wiped out work for countless freelan…










