Nigel Farage’s politics are a combination of British nationalism plus whatever the Yanks believe in. As a result, Farage will often come out with stuff that sounds bizarre to English ears — such as scrapping the NHS. The latest example of this is Farage speaking out against the Covid vaccinations:
Farage: "I believe in vaccinations when they're vaccinations. I don't think what happened with Covid were vaccinations. You have to keep having them every 6 months."
Conspiratorial nonsense.
Some vaccines like Covid shots need seasonal doses as immunity fades & viruses change. pic.twitter.com/NyeDi4E3fv
— Adam Schwarz (@AdamJSchwarz) January 7, 2026
Absolute freak behaviour.
Yankification of Britain
As we’ve reported, Donald Trump and his health secretary RFK Jr. both have some odd opinions around medicine. Late last year, this saw them claiming paracetamol may cause autism — a claim they later backed away from. Oh, and for reference, this is RFK Jr:
RFK Jr. swims in DC's sewage-tainted Rock Creek with his grandchildren despite a National Park Service bacteria warning. pic.twitter.com/3MpVf1AqYU
— Molly Ploofkins (@Mollyploofkins) May 13, 2025
Personally, we don’t take health advice from weirdoes who subject their grandchildren to potentially harmful bacteria, but that’s just us.
The important thing to note is that while some politicians are happy to advise you don’t get vaccinated, that doesn’t mean they won’t:
Nigel Farage:
“I didn’t wear a mask last time and I won’t wear them this time. This is nonsense.”
Also
"I will not get vaccinated" pic.twitter.com/OHHgSU0ODe— JmRoyle #LFC #YNWA #BLM #RejoinEU (@MyArrse) December 11, 2025
Of course, this isn’t the first time Farage has waded into the debate:
Today the Telegraph reported Covid vaccines may have helped fuel rise in excess deaths.
At last others are waking up to the need for a full, immediate inquiry into vaccine harms. https://t.co/jQcWP3UyAh
— Nigel Farage MP (@Nigel_Farage) June 5, 2024
Various health experts have written about Covid vaccine misinformation, with a recent article from the British Medical Journal reporting:
Vaccine misinformation and disinformation being spread in the US—including by senior politicians—is affecting patients and researchers in Europe, experts have warned.
Speaking at the World Vaccine Congress Europe in Amsterdam on 14 October, public health policy makers and industry leaders warned of the “domino effect” of messaging coming from the US. The conference also heard that investment in vaccine development and technologies had started declining as a result of the negative sentiment in the US and recent political decisions.
Speakers said that since President Trump retook office and made Robert F Kennedy Jr his health chief, the administration had cut vaccine research funding, made unfounded claims about vaccines and autism, fired vaccine experts and other health staff, and given mixed messaging on measles vaccination amid a deadly outbreak of the disease.
Conspiracy
Reporter Don McGowan reported in September:
Ah, I see Farage’s other business is being given a run out this afternoon.
In case anyone isn’t aware, Farage is the Chairman [and founder] of an odd, anti-vax, anti-World Health Organisation called, Action on World Health.
Renowned anti-vax crank, Aseem Malhotra is their ‘Chief Health Advisor’.
Action on World Health say they want to ‘replace the WHO’. It’s a whole Brexit but for health thing. They even use the same slogans — Take Back Control etc.
It’s headed up by another shady guy called David Roach who is a lobbyist for the nicotine industry.
Now, the logical conclusion, the anti-vax propaganda to the captive audience. The RFK Jr moment.
They’ve now sewn the seeds of doubt around vaccines to a 3/4 full NEC hall.
Someone tell me again, how Farage and his businesses are not a threat to the public. Please.
As the YouTuber HBomberGuy detailed, there’s a lot of money to be made in vaccine scepticism:
It was always very clear why the right descended into conspiracy on the topic of Covid. Combating the pandemic required a state-driven response and for collective action. This was the stuff of nightmares from the libertarian shite hawks who push small government and individualism.
It was particularly nightmarish because it showed that the state can (and did) end problems like homelessness overnight. If it wasn’t for the waves of conspiracy which the right whipped up, maybe people would have asked ‘why doesn’t the state fix other problems?‘ rather than ‘is there 5G in my Covid vaxx?‘
Featured image via Flickr
By Willem Moore
This post was originally published on Canary.