Special forces veteran says his new mission is politics | Politics | News


A controversial veteran of the Special Boat Service has insisted he is serious about running for Mayor of London. Ant Middleton, who won fame as the chief instructor on Channel 4โ€™s SAS: Who Dares Wins, is intent on standing in the 2028 election. He is running as an Independent but has expressed support for Reform UK and hopes to hold a conversation with party leader Nigel Farage.

Reform has yet to select an official candidate but there is the potential for multiple would-be mayors competing for the votes of Right-leaning Londoners. In last yearโ€™s contest, Labourโ€™s Sadiq Khan won with 43.8% of the vote, with the Conservatives taking 32.7% and Reform UK winning just 3.2%.

Mr Middleton came under cross-party fire for his online claim in July that even third generation immigrants should not hold โ€œtop-tier Government positionsโ€. On Thursday, lawyers for the Ministry of Defence were granted a temporary injunction to stop Mr Middleton describing his activities in the special forces after he took part in a podcast on the โ€œquiet split between UK and US forcesโ€.

Despite numerous controversies and time behind bars, Mr Middleton insists he is determined to pursue a new career in politics with the goal of bringing people together.

He said: โ€œI’m jumping back in to serve. My wife said to me the other day, โ€˜We lead a lovely life. Are you sure you want to do this?โ€™ And when I started talking about it, she said, โ€˜Stop. The last time I saw that look in your eyes was when you volunteered to go back out to Afghanistan.โ€™โ€

Expressing his support for Mr Farageโ€™s policies, Mr Middleton โ€“ who addressed the Reform UK conference last year โ€“ said: โ€œI’ve always been aligned with Reform. I like Nigel.

โ€œI’ve been a friend of Nigel’s for a long time. Iโ€™m really, really keen on his policies, I really like the direction that they’re going in.โ€

When asked about the potential for Mr Middleton standing for Reform UK, a spokesperson said the party had not opened its selection process and noted the election is more than 880 days away.

Describing his determination to run, Mr Middleton said: โ€œItโ€™s honestly a calling to serve my people, the people, and to serve London. It is our capital. It is the crown jewel of England.โ€

The 45-year-old father of five said he plans to spend the next 25 to 30 years in politics.

โ€œIf I do not become Mayor of London, then you better believe that you might see me in the House of Commons or in the cabinet one day,โ€ he said.

If elected to the mayoralty, he pledged, he would donate his โ€œfull mayoral wage to a military veterans charityโ€.

He wants to see conditional immunity for veterans who served in Northern Ireland restored as a โ€œbare minimumโ€ and described the treatment of those who served in the military as โ€œdisgustingโ€.

He said: โ€œYou’re just left to fend for yourself, which is fine. But then don’t feed us to the wolves.โ€

Arguing that veterans should be celebrated, he said: โ€˜We should be rewarding them in a way where we are constantly grateful, constantly thankful and constantly appreciative of of the service that they gave to Queen and country.โ€

A sense of shared identity, he argues, is key to bringing together different communities.

โ€œWhen you lose your sense of identity, you lose your sense of purpose and a sense of belonging,โ€ he said. โ€œThose two things are really, really keen for unity.โ€

Mr Middleton joined the armed forces as a teenager and would later serve in the Royal Marines and the Special Boat Service before forging a career as an author and broadcaster.

Describing the impact of swearing an oath of allegiance to the monarch, he said: โ€œI genuinely thought, as a young 17-year-old that I was the Queen’s personal bodyguardโ€ฆ It gave me such a sense of purpose and belonging and identity.

โ€œOnce you get an identity like that and a [sense of] purpose [and] belonging, then you’re going to thrive and you’re going to have a sense of drive to make sure that you uphold that to the highest of standards.โ€

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