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UK police launch murder investigation following death of former minister Widdecombe

By Thomson Reuters Jul 10, 2026 | 10:53 AM

LONDON, July 10 (Reuters) – British police said they had launched a murder investigation into the death of Ann Widdecombe, a 78-year-old former government minister whose death was announced earlier on Friday.

Widdecombe was a Conservative member of parliament between ​1987 and 2010, and held several junior ministerial positions in former prime ‌minister John Major’s government.

“Our murder enquiry is in its early stages but moving at a significant pace,” Devon and Cornwall Police said in a statement.

“We are deploying all of the necessary resources to find out exactly what has happened and to locate the person responsible who we believe to be a ‌white ​male.”

Police said they were called to Widdecombe’s address around ⁠midday on Thursday where she was ⁠found to have died and sustained serious injuries. Forensic examinations were continuing at the property, they added.

Interior minister Shabana Mahmood said in a post on X that she was deeply saddened and described the circumstances of the death as “extremely distressing”.

Two ​serving British members of parliament have been murdered in the last decade.

The Labour lawmaker Jo Cox was shot and stabbed by a Nazi-obsessed loner during the Brexit campaign ⁠in 2016. The Conservative lawmaker David Amess was stabbed ⁠to death in 2021 by a man inspired by the militant ​group, Islamic State.

WIDDECOMBE KNOWN FOR SOCIALLY CONSERVATIVE VIEWS

Throughout her political career, Widdecombe was known for ​her socially conservative views, including opposition to abortion and to equalising the ‌age of consent for homosexual and heterosexual relationships.

She also defended a policy of shackling pregnant prisoners during child birth to prevent their escape.

Although unmarried and a self-proclaimed virgin, the Catholic convert praised family values.

After leaving parliament, she appeared on the TV talent show “Strictly Come ⁠Dancing” in 2010. Despite her awkward dancing style and criticism from the judges, she was popular with viewers.

She later joined Nigel Farage’s Brexit Party and served as a member of the ⁠European Parliament between 2019 ‌and 2020. Her most recent post was as immigration spokesperson for ⁠Reform UK, the rebranded Brexit Party, which leads in most ​opinion polls.

Following ‌the announcement of her death, and before details of the ​murder inquiry were ⁠announced, former colleagues from both the Conservative and Reform UK parties paid tribute to her.

Former Conservative prime minister Boris Johnson described her in a post on X as “a heroic Brexiteer and a great speaker who could move Tory audiences to such ecstasy that she was a very hard act to follow.”

(Reporting by William James and Andrew MacAskill; editing by David ​Milliken and Sharon Singleton)