logo
Where Nigel Farage lives - quaint village outside of London where house prices have plummeted

Where Nigel Farage lives - quaint village outside of London where house prices have plummeted

Daily Mirror01-05-2025

MP for Clacton and Leader of Reform UK, Nigel Farage, resides in an idyllic village around 17 miles from Westminster, where house prices reach around £570K but have been falling
Local elections are taking place across England today, with millions of voters heading to their nearest polling station. Hoping to win two or three mayoralties for his party is Nigel Farage, the MP for Clacton and Leader of Reform UK.
But when the 61-year-old politician isn't out campaigning or sitting in parliament, he can be found at his home in the quiet and quaint village of Downe, which is around 17 miles from Westminster. Downe, nestled in the London borough of Bromley, is renowned as the residence of Charles Darwin, the legendary 19th-century naturalist and "godfather" of evolutionary biology.

Situated just a stone's throw from Orpington, the village is enveloped by Kent's countryside, golfing greens and stately private residences. Mr Farage was born in Farnborough, Kent, to Guy and Barbara Farage.

He attended the prestigious Dulwich College, a fee-paying institution whose notable alumni include Jeeves and Wooster author P.G. Wodehouse and Ed Simons of The Chemical Brothers, reports the Express.
Nigel has always stayed true to his roots for Kent, choosing to live in Downe, which shares county lines. He is said to reside in a family home in the picturesque village, and given its swift access to central London, it's hardly shocking that properties there command an average price of £565,833, according to Rightmove data from last year.
The majority of property sales in Downe were semi-detached houses, fetching an average of £681,250. Terraced homes sold for around £335,000. Yet property values in Downe have slumped, as last year they were 50 per cent down from the previous year and 27 per cent down on the 2015 peak of £776,675.
Two TfL bus services, the 146 (Bromley-Downe) and R8 (Orpington-Biggin Hill via Downe), serve the village. It's a convenient 20-minute bus journey from either Bromley South or Orpington stations.

If Mr Farage is in need of a refreshing pint after a busy day in the office, Downe boasts two pubs - The Queens Head and George and Dragon. The former is a family-run, 16th-century traditional country pub, while the latter takes pride in its selection of real ales and seasonal food offerings.
Just a stone's throw away from the village is RAF Biggin Hill. This former fighter base played a crucial role in the Battle of Britain in the summer of 1940, defending London and south-east England from enemy bombing. This historical tale is narrated at the RAF Biggin Hill Museum and Chapel, where Winston Churchill's "Few" are commemorated.
If the MP is looking to hit the green at the weekend, the area has several courses to choose from, including the private members' West Kent Golf Club, High Elms Golf Course, Cherry Lodge Golf Club and Chelsfield Lakes Golf Course.

The main attraction for visitors to Downe is Darwin's Down House. Here, you can explore the study where the father of evolutionary theory penned On the Origin of Species. English Heritage recognises Darwin's family home as a site of outstanding international significance.
The renowned scientist would take daily walks around a circuit of the house's grounds known as the Sandwalk. He also established a laboratory in a brick hut and cultivated orchids in a greenhouse.
Set amidst gardens that served as Darwin's "living laboratory", visitors can now explore how the naturalist's observations contributed to the development of his pioneering theories.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'We are the party of the union who stand up for Scots and want to fix our NHS and schools - NOT Reform,' says Scots Tory leader Findlay
'We are the party of the union who stand up for Scots and want to fix our NHS and schools - NOT Reform,' says Scots Tory leader Findlay

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

'We are the party of the union who stand up for Scots and want to fix our NHS and schools - NOT Reform,' says Scots Tory leader Findlay

After a bruising by-election result last Thursday, Russell Findlay faces a big week as he attempts to start the fightback for next year's Holyrood elections. The vote in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse showed the scale of the challenge for the Scottish Conservatives, with the party finishing fourth and picking up just six per cent of the vote - a lower vote share than the party even had in the constituency on its darkest night in 1997 when it was wiped off the electoral map north of the Border. The fact that Reform secured more than a quarter of the votes and finished narrowly behind Labour and the SNP worsened the blow.. But the former journalist is now preparing for one of his biggest set piece events since becoming Scottish Tory leader by 'playing Murrayfield' this weekend. He won't quite have the same audience that Oasis will command later in the summer, but the Scottish Conservative conference at the national rugby stadium will be his opportunity to respond to the twin threats of Nigel Farage 's insurgent Reform UK party and an SNP which has been in power for nearly two decades But the former journalist is now preparing for one of his biggest set piece events since becoming Scottish Tory leader by 'playing Murrayfield' this weekend. Mr Findlay, who become leader last September, acknowledges that his party was 'crowded out' in the by-election but insists that a focus on 'common sense' policies and fixing fundamental problems created by 'two decades of SNP misrule' can allow the Scottish Tories to bounce back and help remove John Swinney from office next year. Despite the SNP now being regarded as the Establishment in Scotland following 18 years in power and Reform benefiting from an anti-Establishment backlash, Mr Findlay insists that both are similar in their attempts to capitalise on the same brand of divisive nationalist politics. He said: 'Nigel Farage is just like Swinney and Sturgeon - he's a populist, he will agitate and he will seek to inflame differences between people. 'We've lived with the SNP for decades and we know their tactics, we know what they are up to: they try to pit Scot against Scot and this is what Farage is doing; he's trying to sow division.' Reflecting on the causes of the rise of Reform from nowhere to 26 per cent of the vote in last week's by-election, Mr Findlay accepts that it was partly down to many voters being 'still in no great mood to hear from our party' because 'there is a lot of disappointment with what we got wrong over our time in government' - and also cited frustration at the 'absolute chaos' of the early days of the Labour government. 'I think it has fed this sense that politics is broken, politicians are all the same, and people feel just completely scunnered and I completely get that', he said. 'I see Nigel Farage as a complete and utter chancer but I can see why people think that the parties - my party and other parties - have let them down. 'But a cold analysis of the facts show that we are the party that stands up for the Union, we are the party that stands up for hard-working Scots, we are the ones that want to fix Scots' broken education system and indeed the NHS, not Reform.' In a full throttle attack on the Reform leader, he said Mr Farage 'seems to be more friendly with Vladimir Putin than he is towards the sanctity of the United Kingdom'. 'You just have to look at the chaos engulfing that party to see that it really is a one-man ego trip,' he said. 'He is not remotely interested in Scotland. 'When his deputy (Richard Tice) turned up at a Glasgow chippy and couldn't even tell us the name of the two defectors from our party, I think that was indicative of the complete disinterest they have in Scotland. 'There are also candidates as we know at the general election who were pro-independence, there were candidates who were anti-monarchy. 'Even Nigel Farage can't work out what he is - one minute he's a free market conservative of sorts, the next minute he is a free-spending Corbynite. 'He is essentially the same as the SNP - they are both populists, they will both say anything to anyone and they will blame someone else for their own problems. It has worked for John Swinney for decades and that is what Nigel Farage is doing.' He also criticised the current push from Reform to consider whether there needs to be a ban on wearing the burqa, which engulfed the party in another major row and more infighting. Mr Findlay said: 'It really isn't a very conservative policy to start trying to tell people what they can and can't wear - I mean maybe Nigel Farage will try to ban the kilt next. 'I understand the many circumstances where face coverings are problematic, we've seen that in some of the demonstrations for example, but I think police already have the powers in place to deal with that. 'This call that his new MP (Sarah Pochin) made perhaps betrays the reality of some of the thinking within Reform. It is pretty illiberal to start dictating what you can and can't wear on the streets of Britain - we are a free country. 'It appears to have been policy made up on the hoof, it resulted in the party chairman exiting it seems, and then apparently coming back, but it is something that does not sit at all comfortably with me.' Mr Findlay said he remained largely silent as a race row erupted over Reform UK's advert claiming that Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar would 'prioritise the Pakistani community', saying he didn't want to do anything to 'amplify' its video message, but believes it highlighted Reform have 'nationalist, divisive and unpleasant individuals'. Despite the significant challenge from Reform, he still believes his party can perform well in key target constituencies and on the regional list across Scotland and says he is 'fully committed in 2026 to getting the SNP out and giving Scotland the change it needs'. He rejected claims from Reform defector Thomas Kerr that the Scottish Tories are no longer interested in the central belt, saying it is 'nonsense', and vowed to start winning back voters who have stopped supporting the party. He said: 'The worry I have is that Scotland might seesaw between one form of inefficient wasteful socialist government coloured yellow to one coloured red. We really can't afford to keep putting into power these high-tax parties who have no interest in aspiration and don't have the wherewithal to stand up to the vested interests in the trade unions, for example, whether on education, health and justice. 'We need to show the people of Scotland that there is an alternative way, it doesn't have to be like this, we don't have to accept this miserable mediocrity inflicted on Scotland by the SNP. 'So many people in Scotland are conservative with a small c - they like our policies, we just need to persuade them that putting their cross in the ballot box beside our name is in their best interests.' He also railed against the 'lanyard class' who have dominated Scottish politics, saying he wants to get Holyrood working for the public rather than the politicians. With pressure already growing on the party's leader Kemi Badenoch, he insisted he still has full confidence in her leadership as they both attempt to 'reset' the relationship with the public as part of a major rebuild. While some Tory leaders have at times stayed clear from Scotland during Holyrood election campaigns, Mr Findlay insists Ms Badenoch will 'play a part' even though he will be the 'main focus' leading the push for votes. In a warning shot to plotters at Westminster or Holyrood, he said: 'I think if anyone thinks that further internal plotting is in any way helpful to our party they need their heads examined. 'We need to unite. People are not interested in politicians' or political parties' internal grievances and egos and personalities. It's about putting your shoulder to the wheel and working together to help deliver the results that we need in Holyrood next year and indeed in the next general election.' He concedes that, with the election now less than a year away, a key challenge will be getting himself known - and persuading the public he is different to the other leaders. Until 2021, he was 'deliberately anonymous' as a journalist investigating organised crime, and in 2015 he had acid thrown in his face on the doorstep of his Glasgow home by a hired hitman carrying a knife, in an attack witnessed by his young daughter 'I'm not yet a household name,' he said, although he joked: 'I have been subject to some squirmingly awful BBC parodies so maybe I've reached a sufficient level of fame in the bubble to qualify for acknowledgement.' Although he would rather the focus was on what his party stands for and would rather levels of fame or recognition were not a factor, he accepts it is 'part of modern politics' - and will try to use his own unique selling point of having had a career outside of politics to differentiate him from the other leaders and appeal to those disgruntled voters who want change at Holyrood. Mr Findlay said: 'I'd like to think that me not being a career politician is perhaps a good thing because I can see things from the perspective of ordinary people who are sick and tired of the way Holyrood doesn't address their interests or doesn't seek to fix the problems in their lives.'

Bigger and better person than Farage? Nigel thinks you're wrong
Bigger and better person than Farage? Nigel thinks you're wrong

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Bigger and better person than Farage? Nigel thinks you're wrong

Relax chaps, Reform is back under control. 'We did hit a speed bump,' Nigel Farage told a press conference in Wales: 'Zia lost his rag, he put out an intemperate comment or two,' but the former party chairman 'expressed his regret' and 'I forgave him.' So, where is he now? Not with us today. But any worry that Zia isn't answering his phone, or that his car was found abandoned in a pond, is misplaced. 'I'm loyal to people all the while they are loyal to me,' said Nigel - who I'm told laid a new patio in the middle of the night - and 'if anybody talks behind my back or betrays my trust, I'll never speak to them again.' Silence across the room. Message received. In that spirit, let me be the first to say, thank you Nigel for pushing the Government to reverse its winter fuel cut, rescuing millions of pensioners from certain death. Proof that you don't have to be in power to make a change - a principle tested with equal courage by Greta Thunberg and her net-weirdo flotilla - till they were 'kidnapped' by the IDF. Conditions in the Israeli prison are described as sub-human - I'm told they only have one flavour of ice-cream - and got worse when the PM rang Tel Aviv to demand that they 'release the sausages'. Imagine Greta's horror when confronted with a buffet of kosher hot dogs and told that there is no vegetarian option. 'Attention-seeking narcissist,' Piers Morgan called her - naked on a giraffe in Trafalgar Square - and it occurred to me that we live in an era of rolling self-owns. Zia quit after a Reform MP floated a burka ban, then returned saying he'd probably ban it himself. Greta's boat claimed it was sprayed with a 'white irritant substance' - when it was crewed by white irritants. And the Government, having banked everything on 'clearing up the Tory mess', reverses a winter fuel cut it previously said was necessary to avoid economic Armageddon. 'When should the City of London… expect the run on the pound?' asked Conservative Simon Hoare in the Commons. The minister sent on the suicide mission to defend this U-turn, a child soldier called Torsten Bell, oozed oily self-confidence, yet his hands trembled. He has only two modes of performance: bemused and angry, the latter red-faced and nose-twitching as he declared the opposition has 'no plan'. Prior to being in government, Torsten ran a think tank of the 'Paddington loves a wealth tax' variety and made popular videos about how one could abolish poverty by taxing Pimms – so watching him struggle with the realities of power (like Greta trying to explain the dangers of carbon to an Israeli interrogator) is a joy. If you can throw money at pensioners, asked Left-wing MPs, why not benefits for poor parents and the disabled? 'All levers are on the table,' Bell replied. Does the boy dream in meaningless cliches, too?! No wonder Wales is flirting with Reform, a land that values language and big characters. 'There are people,' said Farage, 'who think they are bigger and better than me.' Well, they're not. And proof is that if you ring Zia's number, Nigel's patio plays La Cucaracha.

'Rachel Reeves hopes public gives her credit for listening to winter fuel anger'
'Rachel Reeves hopes public gives her credit for listening to winter fuel anger'

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

'Rachel Reeves hopes public gives her credit for listening to winter fuel anger'

Rachel Reeves today tried to turn the page on Labour's biggest mistake so far. Only weeks after the party's landslide election victory, she stunned the country by announcing plans to strip around 10 million pensioners of their winter fuel payments. A Tory aide who served two Chancellors once told me that the winter fuel allowance was at the top of the Treasury hit list offered to No11's new incumbents. Ms Reeves's predecessors didn't fancy picking a fight with pensioners and baulked at being blamed for leaving OAPs struggling to heat their homes. But in the early days in Government, the Chancellor was focused on proving she had an iron grip on the public finances. It was clear from the start that it was a serious error, puncturing the optimism and goodwill from the public who had handed Labour a massive majority. Even senior Government figures acknowledged it had been a mistake but there were fears that they couldn't afford to U-turn - either politically or economically. However it became a running sore for Labour. MPs complained they were being inundated by complaints from constituents and it came up repeatedly on the doorstep in last month's local elections. Unnerved by the surge in support for Reform UK and growing unrest from Labour MPs, Keir Starmer and his Chancellor blinked. Follow our Mirror Politics account on Bluesky here. And follow our Mirror Politics team here - Lizzy Buchan, Mikey Smith, Kevin Maguire, Sophie Huskisson, Dave Burke and Ashley Cowburn. Be first to get the biggest bombshells and breaking news by joining our Politics WhatsApp group here. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you want to leave our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. Or sign up here to the Mirror's Politics newsletter for all the best exclusives and opinions straight to your inbox. And listen to our exciting new political podcast The Division Bell, hosted by the Mirror and the Express every Thursday. Initially Downing Street suggested we would have to wait until the Budget for the full details, leaving pensioners in the dark about whether they would be eligible. But Ms Reeves gave them hope by confirming an almost complete U-turn, with only the richest OAPs missing out. The Chancellor will take some flak in Westminster for this U-turn. There will be questions over how it's funded and whether the Government is vulnerable to pressure on other unpopular policies. But she'll be hoping that the public gives her credit for listening to their concerns, allowing the Government to draw a line under this sorry episode and shift focus to the positive things it's trying to do.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store