
Nigel Farage is trying to restrict your abortion rights, as Reform UK gains political momentum
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has suggested that he wants to reduce the abortion limit.
Former I'm a Celebrity contestant Farage, 61, told onlookers at a news conference that he believed the law - in which you can have an abortion up to 24 weeks of pregnancy - 'was totally out of date." He added that he wants to make it 'easier for women to have children' after announcing he would scrap some taxes and the two-child benefit cap, should be be given the keys to Number 10.
However, experts have labelled his plans as "fantasy economics' which have not been properly costed and accounted for – highlighting that his statements may sound good on paper and are easy to say when you're not actually the party in power, balancing the books.
'I am pro-choice, but I think it's ludicrous, utterly ludicrous, that we can allow abortion up to 24 weeks,' Farage said at the conference.
'And yet, if a child is born prematurely at 22 weeks, your local hospital will move heaven and earth and probably succeed in that child surviving and going on and living a normal life. So I believe there is an inconsistency in the law. I believe it is totally out of date.'
Less than 1% of abortions are thought to happen in the later stages of a pregnancy, according to government data. Experts in the abortion space say they are concerned that should Farage one day get power, 'floating the idea of reducing the time limit' is just the start.
'The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists has always said there is no case for reducing the abortion time limit and every single reputable medical body and reproductive health expert agrees,' Louise McCudden, MSI Reproductive Choices' UK Head of External Affairs, told Cosmopolitan UK.
'The vast majority of abortion procedures take place under 10 weeks. However, there are women for whom access to abortion care at 22 weeks is absolutely critical, including when medical complications occur in a wanted pregnancy, forcing women to make incredibly tough decisions very quickly.'
Abortion is legal in England, Scotland and Wales, but only if strict caveats are met. Two doctors need to agree that it would cause less harm to the woman's physical or mental health, or the health of existing children, than continuing the pregnancy before 24 weeks.
After 24 weeks, abortions are generally only permitted if the woman's life is at risk or if there is a severe fetal abnormality.
'The legal limit for an abortion is 24 weeks' gestation. This is the point at which the fetus is viable outside the woman's body,' states the government. 'Abortions may be performed after 24 weeks in certain circumstances - for example, if the woman's life is at risk or the fetus would be born severely disabled.
'Abortions where gestation is 24 weeks or over account for a very small number of abortions (0.1% of the total). There were 260 such abortions in 2022.'
Farage has previously suggested that there should be a debate about the maximum gestation period for abortion to be permitted.
When he announced former Conservative MP Andrea Jenkyns had broken ranks to become Reform UK's newest recruit in November, Farage said: 'Is 24 weeks right for abortion, given that we now save babies at 22? That to me would be worthy of a debate in parliament but should that be along party lines? I don't think so.'
Cosmopolitan UK has contacted Reform UK for comment.
Farage's comments come as Cosmopolitan UK has partnered with leading abortion provider BPAS to campaign to 'End 1861' and call for urgent law reform that would decriminalise abortion in England and Wales. It hopes to see the rare cases, like Nicola Packer's, to be treated with compassion rather than prosecution.
A BPAS spokesperson told Cosmopolitan UK: 'We do agree with Nigel Farage on one point - that our abortion law is out-of-date. Currently, under a law passed in 1861 - before women even had the right to vote - abortion remains a crime in England and Wales. Alongside medical bodies and women's rights organisations, we are backing Tonia Antoniazzi MP's cross-party amendment to the Crime and Policing Bill which would reform our archaic legislation by removing women from the criminal law in relation to ending a pregnancy. This is the right way to update our abortion law - through compassionate, considered reform, not through the imposition of cruel restrictions.'
You can find out more information about the campaign here. You can find our template on how to write to your MP about the issue here.
Kimberley Bond is a Multiplatform Writer for Harper's Bazaar, focusing on the arts, culture, careers and lifestyle. She previously worked as a Features Writer for Cosmopolitan UK, and has bylines at The Telegraph, The Independent and British Vogue among countless others.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Reform UK to win majority of seats in Cumbria says poll
Reform UK could win a majority of seats in Cumbria at the next election according to the latest poll. The party, led by former UKIP leader, Nigel Farage, won 5 seats at last year's general election but picked up votes across the country in both rural seats and Labour's industrial heartlands. The latest poll would see the party win in Barrow, Carlisle, Penrith and the Solway and Workington and Whitehaven according to online analyst, Election Maps UK. Nowcast Update: Reform just shy of a Majority, Tories fall to 5th. RFM: 319 (+314), 29.6% - [7 Short] LAB: 134 (-277), 22.3% LDM: 80 (+8), 14.4% SNP: 44 (+35), 2.8% CON: 33 (-88), 17.9% PLC: 7 (+3), 1.1% GRN: 6 (+2), 9.3% Oth: 8 (+3), 2.7% — Election Maps UK (@ElectionMapsUK) May 25, 2025 In the 2024 general election, Reform beat the Tories into second place in Whitehaven and Workington whilst pushing them close in Penrith and the Solway and Carlisle. READ MORE: Warning issued after scam emails sent to musical organisations | News and Star Labour has had a difficult time in the polls since winning their historic election as they forced through some controversial legislation on cancelling winter fuel payments for pensioners and keeping the two-child benefit cap. According to Election Maps UK, the party would fall just short of a majority on 318 seats with Labour next on 134 seats.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
'This Is Panic': Defence Secretary Forced To Deny Keir Starmer Is Rattled By Nigel Farage
A cabinet minister has been forced to deny that Keir Starmer is 'panicking' about the rise of Reform UK. John Healey defended the prime minister's decision to stage a hastily-arranged press conference specifically to attack Nigel Farage. The PM compared the Reform leader to Liz Truss over his spending plans, and also accused him of 'poisoning our politics'. On Sky News this morning, presenter Trevor Phillips told Healey: 'His speech had 1,100 words, 750 of them were about Nigel Farage. Why is he panicking?' The defence secretary replied: 'He's not panicking.' But Phillips went on: 'Why does the prime minister go into a hangar to talk about a bloke who's got five MPs on a week when the Russians are threatening, trade wars, all the rest of it. This is panic.' Healey said: 'He's challenging a party leader, Nigel Farage. He's challenging a party that did very well in the local elections, he's challenging a leader that is soft on Putin, that wants to sell off the NHS, that is making massive promises that he won't fund and can't deliver. 'Why the prime minister is saying this is that we are facing across the board, irrespective of party, a crisis of people's confidence and conviction that government can make a difference and anything can change the things that they see are wrong in this country.' He added: 'Keir Starmer is absolutely right to challenge Nigel Farage against these easy, soft solutions, and the promises that are false and he can never deliver.' Defence Secretary @JohnHealey_MP reaffirms Keir Starmer is "not panicking" when it comes to the rise of Reform UK, stressing it was "absolutely right" of the PM to challenge Nigel Farage in a speech on more: — Sky News (@SkyNews) June 1, 2025 The pair clashed as new analysis revealed Farage is on course for 10 Downing Street with a comfortable Commons majority. A calculation based on the most recent opinion polls suggests Reform UK would end up with 362 seats if a general election was held tomorrow. Labour would have 136 MPs elected, followed by the Lib Dems with 62 and the SNP with 38, the Electoral Calculus assessment suggested. In yet more bad news for Kemi Badenoch, the Conservatives would be the fifth-largest party with just 22 seats. The result would hand Farage a 74-seat majority, big enough for Reform UK to be able to govern without the need to rely on the support of other parties. Nigel Farage On Course For Commons Majority According To Latest Polls 'Dodgy Maths': Farage Slammed After True Cost Of 'DEI' Government Programmes Revealed Keir Starmer Says Nigel Farage Is Trying To 'Poison Our Politics'
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Farage does not care about Scotland, says Swinney
Nigel Farage 'doesn't care about Scotland', John Swinney has said, as the Reform UK leader is set to head north of the border. Mr Farage is expected to address a press conference in Aberdeen on Monday as the race in the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election enters its final days. While the SNP and Labour were seen as frontrunners in the seat in a contest sparked by Scottish Government minister Christina McKelvie, Reform UK has entered the mix ahead of the vote. But the party has come in for criticism for how it has campaigned in the seat, with attack ads on Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar being branded racist. Both of the frontrunners have also turned their attacks on Reform, with Mr Sarwar describing Mr Farage as a 'poisonous little man' and the First Minister accusing him of bringing 'racism and hatred' to the South Lanarkshire race. As campaigning enters its final days, Mr Swinney warned of the potential threat from Reform, saying: 'Things remain tough for too many families who feel let down by Labour – who have given up in this campaign – and the deeply concerning rise in support for Farage. 'Be in no doubt, Nigel Farage doesn't care about Scotland. He poses a threat to our values and must be stopped, and only the SNP can do that. 'In this by-election, the SNP is the only party investing in Scotland's future, delivering for families and confronting Farage. On Thursday, vote SNP to stop Farage.' Mr Swinney touted his own Government's record, including free prescriptions, free tuition and free bus travel for the young and the elderly, as well as plans to scrap peak rail fares and mitigate the two-child benefit cap. 'On the final week of campaigning in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse, it's clear which party is on Scotland's side,' he said. Mr Swinney's comments come as his party's Westminster leader Stephen Flynn said Mr Farage was 'just as dangerous to Scotland's long-term energy and economic future as the activists who would shut down the oil and gas industry tomorrow'. Mr Farage has long been an opponent of net zero, while his deputy Richard Tice told the PA news agency one of his party's key policies ahead of the Holyrood elections next year would be to push for increased oil extraction. Responding, a spokesman for Reform UK said: 'The SNP's hostile environment to oil and gas has been holding Scotland back for decades. 'From standing idly by whilst the Grangemouth refinery closed, to opposing oil and gas exploration in the North Sea, the SNP have not only failed to realise the countless jobs that could be created in the sector, but also sacrificed hundreds of jobs on the altar of their net zero obsession.'