The name Ann Widdecombe means different things to different people, depending largely on how old you are and, to a lesser extent, your Saturday evening TV viewing habits.
The 71-year-old former Conservative is in the news today after winning a seat for the Brexit Party in the South West in the European elections.
She said the result âreaffirms the vote of 2016, because there was only one reason for voting for the Brexit Party and that was if you wanted a Brexit.â
Widdecombe added that the result sends âa very clear message to Westminster - again - that if they donât sort out leave, at the next general election both the big parties are going to face carnage.â
Her name means different things to different people, depending largely on how old you are and, to a lesser extent, your Saturday evening TV viewing habits.
She made headlines anew last month after it was announced she quit the Tories to join Nigel Farageâs Brexit Party, a move which prompted a polarised response on social media.
On one side, people like Damien who praised her âno nonsense approachâ...
And on the other, people like Helen who described her as a âvicious far-right horrorbagâ.
So who is the real Ann Widdecombe? Well, hereâs the veteran politician explained, depending on how old you are.
If Youâre Aged 16-25...
... then Widdecombe is a reality TV star, famed for her appearances on Strictly Come Dancing and Celebrity Big Brother (CBB).
She performed remarkably well in both considering her lack of dancing is offset by her talent for making controversial remarks.
Widdecombeâs 2010 appearance on Strictly saw her voted through nine rounds by the public, despite consistently low marks from the judges. Who was right? Well, have a look for yourself.
But even at the height of her Strictly fame, there were those who were warning the jovial person on your screens wasnât quite who you thought she was.
Eight years later and Widdecombeâs âanti-gayâ views came to the fore during her stint on CBB when she branded the prospect of a romance between Shane Jenek and Andrew Brady as âdisgustingâ.
The episode was largely glossed over by the showâs producers and Widdecombe went on to finish as runner-up in the final public vote.
If Youâre Aged 25-34...
.. then youâre old enough to remember her opposition to gay marriage, climate change scepticism and support for the death penalty, gay conversion therapy and homeopathy.
OK, a lot to get through here so letâs break it down.
Gay Marriage
Commenting on David Cameronâs decision to legalise gay marriage in a 2014 interview with the Guardian, Widdecombe said:
âWhat I do say is that the state must have a preferred model, and the model that has served us throughout the millennia is marriage â a man and a woman in a union that is generally open to procreation. Marriage isn't about two people; it is the basis for the family.â
Climate Change
Widdecombeâs views on climate change have shifted slightly over the years but speaking to the Express in 2009 on the EUâs plan to phase out inefficient TVs, she said:
âThere is no climate change, hasnât anybody looked out of their window recently?â
The Death Penalty
In 2002 in the wake of the Soham murders of Jessica Chapman and Holly Wells, Widdecombe said the death penalty should be âavailableâ for use in the most heinous of crimes. She said:
âIf it can be shown that it is a real deterrent and its availability, not its regular use, is enough to deter murderers and save innocent lives, then I think that is a case that can be made.â
Gay Conversion Therapy
Continuing on the theme of âanti-gayâ remarks, in 2012 Widdecombe promoted the idea that gay people can be made straight using completely discredited âgay conversion therapyâ.
Writing in her Daily Express column, she said:
âAnybody can get help for anything from psychotherapists in this country except apparently gays who do not want to be gay.â
Homeopathy
Homeopathy, the use of highly diluted substances that perform no better than placebos, was banned by the NHS in 2017. But in 2010, Widdecombe signed an early day motion supporting the NHSâ use of the discredited practice.
If Youâre Aged 35-45...
... then youâre old enough to remember her controversial views on womenâs rights.
Widdecombe is now a practising Roman Catholic, having left the Church of England in 1993 for, among other things, her objection to women priests.
In a 2012 interview with the New Statesmen, she said:
âI left the Church of England because there was a huge bundle of straw. The ordination of women was the last straw, but it was only one of many. For years I had been disillusioned by the Church of England's compromising on everything. The Catholic Church doesn't care if something is unpopular.â
In 1996, Widdecombe was serving as the Tory minister for prisons, and defended the governmentâs policy of shackling pregnant prisoners when receiving care. She said:
âSome MPs may like to think that a pregnant woman would not or could not escape. Unfortunately this is not true.â
Widdecombe has been long opposed to abortion, a stance she insists has nothing to do with her religion as it is ânot moral issue - if I come up and kill you, you do not say itâs a moral, individual issueâ.
If Youâre 45+...
... then sheâs forged a career as a life-long Conservative politician.
Widdecombe first became an MP in 1987 and served as minister of state for prisons, shadow secretary of health and shadow home secretary before retiring from politics in 2010.
She now joins a small but possibly growing list of political veterans who are now expressing their support for Farageâs Brexit Party.
AND FINALLY...
Whatever you do, donât say Widdecombe is not a virgin.
During a BBC Radio 4 interview in 2007, a reporter had produced a profile of her that assumed she had had at least âone sexual relationshipâ. She replied:
âBe careful, that's the way you get sued.â
The subject of Widdecombeâs virginity was even the subject of a segment of a Louis Theroux documentary in 2002.