Friday, July 10, 2026 | London 27°C · Overcast
DailyGlimpse

Ann Widdecombe: Brexit-backing former minister turned Strictly star

Politics
July 10, 2026 · 1:15 PM
Ann Widdecombe: Brexit-backing former minister turned Strictly star

BBC Homepage

More menu

More menu

Search BBC

Close menu

BBC News

Menu

More

Ann Widdecombe: Brexit-backing former minister turned Strictly star

Figure caption,

The career of former Tory minister Ann Widdecombe

By Jennifer McKiernan,Political reporter and Kate Whannel,Political reporter

  • Published 10 July 2026, 09:14 BST

Updated 1 hour ago

Ann Widdecombe, a former Conservative minister who defected to Reform UK, has died aged 78.

She was a household name even before she reinvented herself as a reality TV star, with a high profile spell on Strictly Come Dancing, known for her forthright views and no-nonsense attitude.

A leading figure on the right of British politics for decades, and an enthusiastic early backer of Brexit, she signed up for Strictly in 2010, shortly after leaving Parliament, having represented the Kent constituency of Maidstone for more than 20 years.

Not the most polished dancer - she described her own moves as "galumphing" - she made it to the semi-final before being knocked out.

Her appearance kick started a showbiz career which also saw her take part in Celebrity Big Brother and star in panto as the Evil Queen in Snow White.

Her long-term friend broadcaster Gyles Brandreth described her as a "curious mix of Danny DeVito and Margaret Rutherford".

Image caption,

Ann Widdecombe with her Strictly dance partner Anton Du Beke in 2010

Widdecombe was born in Bath, Somerset, in 1947 and went on to study Latin at Birmingham University, then Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Oxford University, before being elected as a Runnymede District councillor.

She was a member of the Conservative Christian Fellowship and held staunchly socially conservative views, opposing abortion, assisted dying and gay rights and supporting the reintroduction of the death penalty.

She was highly critical of David Cameron's move to legalise gay marriage and in 2019 provoked an angry response after suggesting science might one day "produce an answer" to being gay.

First elected as an MP in 1987, she faced cruel comments about her appearance, with one newspaper calling her "Doris Karloff" - a reference to old Hollywood horror star**,** Boris Karloff.

But she brushed off the barbs, saying: "I am toothy, dumpy, ugly, overweight, a spinster – what the hell."

She was also not shy of criticising her Conservative colleagues, famously describing Michael Howard as having "something of the night about him".

Despite being one of the few female MPs in Parliament in the 1980s, she had little time for feminists, describing them as "whingers".

Reflecting on her political career in 2016, she said: "I never went round looking for problems so I never found them. The only problem I found as a woman MP were there were insufficient loos."

A keen-animal lover, she was also one of the few Conservative MPs who opposed fox-hunting.

Her devotion to animals led to her setting up a section of of her website, the Widdyweb, for the pet cats she has lived with, adopting goats and becoming the patron of a donkey sanctuary.

Image source, Reuters

Image caption,

Ann Widdecombe defected from the Conservatives to Reform UK in later life

Three years after becoming an MP, she got a foot on the ministerial ladder as a junior social security minister and was then promoted to the employment brief.

In 1995, she was promoted to prisons minister, where she got into a row after defending a policy of chaining pregnant prisoners to prevent them from escaping.

Following the 1997 Labour landslide, she served under William Hague as shadow health secretary between 1998-1999 and shadow home secretary between 1999 - 2001.

When she retired from politics in 2010, she was disappointed not to have been offered a place in the House of Lords by David Cameron.

Widdecombe continued writing, publishing four fiction novels and an autobiography, and made many broadcast appearances, including as a guest host of news quiz Have I Got News for You.

In 2013, she was awarded a papal honour, as Dame of the Order of St Gregory, for her services to politics and public life, particularly her opposition to abortion and assisted dying.

She had converted to Catholicism in the 1990s, telling The Times: "To have a church which calls a sin a sin and has done with it is a blessed relief."

She returned to politics as a prominent Brexit campaigner, winning a seat as a Brexit Party MEP for South West England in the 2019 European Parliament election, until the UK left the EU at the end of January 2020.

Widdecombe re-joined the party, which had been renamed Reform UK, in 2023 as their immigration and justice spokesperson.

She shared her home in London with her widowed mother, Rita, until her death in 2007.

Speaking to the BBC's Woman's Hour in 2010, she said that being an MP could be lonely but that she was able to cope with it.

"I like my own company very much indeed, just as well because I might be the only one who does," she joked.

Former Tory minister Ann Widdecombe dies at 78

*   Published 2 hours ago 

UK MEPs urge EU to 'learn lessons' of Brexit

*   Published 15 January 2020 

How well is David Cameron's book selling?

*   Published 25 September 2020 

Departing MEPs leave their mark on art project

*   Published 1 February 2020 

Sign up for our Politics Essential newsletter to read top political analysis, gain insight from across the UK and stay up to speed with the big moments. It'll be delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Related topics

The video playlist

Watch our pick of standout clips from across the BBC

Previous Next

  • 1:23 I was spiked by injection on a girls' holiday. 00:01:23, play video I was spiked by injection on a girls' holiday
  • 1:23 Bayeux Tapestry arrives in London. 00:01:23, play video Bayeux Tapestry arrives in London
  • 1:04 Should parents apply for jobs for their kids? 00:01:04, play video Should parents apply for jobs for their kids?
  • 1:12 Women suffer more in the heat, here's why. 00:01:12, play video Women suffer more in the heat, here's why
  • 0:37 Roommate says Charlie Kirk suspect confessed. 00:00:37, play video Roommate says Charlie Kirk suspect confessed
  • 1:00 Who pays on a first date? 00:01:00, play video Who pays on a first date?
  • 1:17 What's the craziest thing you've done as a twin? 00:01:17, play video What's the craziest thing you've done as a twin?
  • 0:42 This painting might contain the most awkward blank space in history. 00:00:42, play video This painting might contain the most awkward blank space in history
  • 1:16 Why are the US and Iran fighting again? 00:01:16, play video Why are the US and Iran fighting again?
  • 0:44 What we know as triple murder manhunt continues. 00:00:44, play video What we know as triple murder manhunt continues
  • 1:20 Iran faces uncertainty with its new political order. 00:01:20, play video Iran faces uncertainty with its new political order
  • 0:57 Aid worker who ran World Cup viewings killed in Israeli strike. 00:00:57, play video Aid worker who ran World Cup viewings killed in Israeli strike
  • 0:46 Will Russian fuel crisis change Putin's plans in Ukraine war? 00:00:46, play video Will Russian fuel crisis change Putin's plans in Ukraine war?
  • 0:24 Will we get a bank holiday if England wins World Cup? 00:00:24, play video Will we get a bank holiday if England wins World Cup?
  • 0:39 Greg James and Graham Norton's pre-Swift wedding plot. 00:00:39, play video Greg James and Graham Norton's pre-Swift wedding plot

Top stories

Live. Twelve dead and 23 missing in Spain wildfire as crews battle to contain blaze

*   10660 viewing 11k viewing 

Live. Watch Wimbledon semi-finals: GB's Fery breaks back against Zverev in first set

*   96820 viewing 97k viewing 

Bayeux Tapestry arrives in UK for first time in 900 years under police guard

*   Published 8 hours ago 

More to explore

Elsewhere on the BBC

Most read

  1. 1Man 'nearly sucked out of window mid-air' on Ryanair plane, passengers say
  2. 2Disney's 'dismal' live-action Moana panned by critics
  3. 3Ann Widdecombe: Brexit-backing former minister turned Strictly star
  4. 4Met police investigating Reform over election donations - reports
  5. 5Pioneering treatment saves identical twins from rare pregnancy condition
  6. 6Prince Harry plays pickleball at Invictus Games event, but no Meghan
  7. 7Bayeux Tapestry arrives in UK for first time in 900 years under police guard
  8. 8'People don't realise how at risk they are': A day with an ambulance service in a heatwave
  9. 9'Cool in 90 seconds' - the fake portable air conditioners sweeping the internet
  10. 10Ukrainian agent accused of murdering Monaco bomb suspect changes story

BBC News Services

Copyright © 2026 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.