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Jun 27, 2026

How one Brexit giant came just inches from dangerous disaster

How one Brexit giant came just inches from dangerous disaster

ANALYSIS - MARTYN BROWN:

Share Article Facebook X LinkedIn Reddit Bluesky Email Copy Link Link copied Add as a preferred source on Google Add us as preferred source Comments By Martyn Brown, Political Editor 07:00, Sat, Jun 27, 2026

Westminster Insider

Martyn Brown is our Westminster Insider (Image: Express)

It’s not every day that you have one of the country’s most prominent politician’s life in your hands. Tuesday this week was one of those days. In fact it was a very special day overall.

Not because Richard Tice, Reform UK’s deputy leader, was just inches away from plunging into the river Thames. But because it happened to be the 10th anniversary of the historic Brexit referendum in which 17.4million Britons voted to leave the European Union. Anyway, back to Tice. Why was Nigel Farage’s right-hand-man so close to danger, I hear you ask?

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Tice

Richard Tice waving Uion Flag to mark tenth anniversary of Brexit vote (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster / Daily Express)

It was all in the name of Brexit, of course. Reform’s action-man had agreed to pose in front of the Houses of Parliament waving a giant Union Jack to mark the occasion. The only problem was, to get the best shot, our photographer needed him to stand on the Thames Embankment wall.

I was a bit hesitant to ask – for the obvious safety risks – but Tice jumped at the chance with great enthusiasm. Did the fact that he’d just arrived from what he described as a “proper lunch” (code for boozy) have anything to do with his daring confidence? Most definitely. I was a bag of nerves as the 6ft 3in colossus confidently clambered onto the wall with the menacing grey-green water below.

One false step and I would have had the scoop of my life but also a very, very, big problem. He then manoeuvred into position before waving the red-white and blue flag with gusto above his head. As all photographers do, Jonathan Buckmaster – the Express’s legendary veteran snapper, kept asking for more. “Just a few more, please”, “in your left hand”, “now in your right hand, if you don’t mind”. I winced with every extra command. Tice was undaunted, flapping away as if his life depended on it.

By this point a man walked by and shouted a few profanities beginning with the letters F and C at the Brexiteer. Tice, mid-flap, responded: “it’s always nice to see bitter Remoaners”. He was clearly enjoying himself but I needed him down on terra-firma now, especially as the heatwave sun was beating down.

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