SHOCKING Reform News as HISTORIC Announcement Made With Jeremy Clarkson!!

“I Don’t Think There’s a Farmer Alive Who Supports Labour Anymore”: Jeremy Clarkson Drops a Political Bombshell – And Reform UK Is Already Calling It Historic

Jeremy Clarkson has just said out loud what many people in rural Britain have been thinking quietly for months.

In a wide-ranging interview, the Clarkson’s Farm star declared he does not believe there is a single farmer left in the country who still supports Labour. Even more significantly, he says the next generation of British agriculture — young farmers — is turning towards Reform UK.
Whether you agree with Clarkson or not, this is a major moment. When one of the most recognisable voices in British farming speaks this bluntly about the countryside’s political mood, people listen. And Reform UK is already treating it as evidence that something historic is happening on the ground.

The Clip That Went Viral

The comments exploded after Reform’s Zia Yusuf shared footage of Clarkson speaking about farmers, Labour, the Green Party, and Reform.

Clarkson told an interviewer: “There’s one party in particular that seems to be doing very well with the young farmers that I do know. Caleb tells me all of his friends, all of them, are Reform. And I don’t think there’s a farmer alive who’s Labour anymore.”

That single line has been clipped, shared, and debated across social media. It is not a poll result. It is not a formal survey. But it is a powerful cultural signal. Clarkson has spent years showing the public exactly how difficult modern farming is — the paperwork, the weather, the razor-thin margins, the bureaucracy. When he says farmers are walking away from Labour, it lands hard.

The Green Party Question That Made It Worse

The moment got even sharper when a Times Radio host asked Clarkson why more farmers weren’t turning to the Green Party.

His response was classic Clarkson — straight-faced and cutting:

“Um, well, apart from their ‘property is theft’ agenda would make farming quite tricky… I don’t think the Greens are particularly business-friendly. And farming is a business.”

The clip has been widely shared by Reform supporters as proof that parts of the media still don’t understand rural Britain. Asking farmers why they aren’t voting Green, they argue, shows exactly how disconnected Westminster conversations have become from farmyard reality.
Why This Matters: Rural Britain Is Angry

Clarkson’s remarks tap into something much bigger than one celebrity interview.

Farmers feel punished, ignored, and spoken down to. The inheritance tax raid, growing regulation, pressure on family farms, energy policy, and the sheer cost of staying in business have left many in the countryside furious. They believe Labour does not understand them. They believe the Greens lecture them. And they increasingly believe Reform is the only party listening.

A Generational and Cultural Earthquake

This is not just about one election cycle. It is about momentum.

If Reform can win over angry farmers, frustrated rural voters, and younger people working in agriculture, it stops being just a protest movement. It starts becoming a genuine political force with roots in parts of the country that used to be taken for granted by the old parties.

Labour will obviously dispute the idea that they have zero support among farmers. Government ministers argue their policies are about public finances, public services, and long-term sustainability. But the political problem for them right now is perception. And the perception in much of rural Britain is brutal.
The Big Question

Jeremy Clarkson is not a politician. He is not even a card-carrying member of any party. He is simply someone who has spent years filming the daily reality of British farming — and he has concluded that the old loyalties are gone.

So here is the question that now hangs over British politics:

Are British farmers finally walking away from the old parties and walking towards new ones?

Is Clarkson right when he says young farmers are turning to Reform? Is rural Britain undergoing a quiet but historic realignment? Or is this moment being overblown?

Let me know what you think in the comments below.

Because when the countryside turns, British politics usually follows. And right now, the countryside is speaking very loudly.