
Credit: Waterstones
The pale Portland stone, the iron gates, and the quiet weight of a location that typically doesn’t make front-page news until something has gone horribly wrong in a government’s relationship with its own legal constraints provide a unique perspective of British institutional life when you stand outside the Supreme Court building on Parliament Square on a clear morning. The nation has never quite made up its mind about Gina Miller’s two victories inside that building and her two appearances outside of it. She is a champion of constitutional principles for roughly half of Britain. She is the one who attempted to obstruct what the other half voted for. You can learn something about her from both responses, but they don’t give you the whole picture.
Miller arrived in Britain as a young child after being born in Georgetown, Guyana, in 1965. Had the 2016 referendum not taken place, she might have continued to be a relatively unknown figure in the City while pursuing a career in investment management and co-founding SCM Direct. Among many other things, the referendum raised several constitutional issues that the political establishment was either unable or unwilling to adequately address.
| Field | Gina Miller | Rupert Lowe |
|---|---|---|
| Full name | Gina Nadira Miller | Rupert Lowe |
| Born | 1965, Georgetown, Guyana | 1962, England |
| Nationality | British (naturalised) | British |
| Profession | Investment fund manager, activist, businesswoman | Businessman, politician, former football chairman |
| Known for | Two Supreme Court victories against the UK Government on Brexit | Chairman of Southampton FC (1997–2006); Reform UK MP for Great Yarmouth (2024–) |
| Political position | Pro-EU; constitutional democrat; founded True and Fair Party | Right-wing populist; pro-Brexit; Reform UK |
| Key legal/political moment | Miller v Secretary of State (2017); Miller v Prime Minister (2019) | Elected to Parliament in Reform UK’s 2024 surge — 14% national vote share |
| Background | Co-founded SCM Direct investment firm; philanthropist | Career in recruitment and sport before entering politics at 61 |
| Public perception | Constitutional guardian to some; Brexit obstructor to others | Anti-establishment disruptor to supporters; populist provocateur to critics |
| Reference | Wikipedia — Gina Miller | Wikipedia — Rupert Lowe |
Miller entered that arena with the support of a legal team and a readiness to withstand an incredibly high level of public animosity. Her 2017 Supreme Court case proved that Article 50 could be triggered by Parliament rather than the executive. Boris Johnson’s prorogation of Parliament was declared illegal in her 2019 case. The Supreme Court rendered both rulings unanimously. Threats of death were generated by both. She has discussed the security arrangements surrounding her life in a tone that suggests she has come to terms with the fact that this is the price of her decisions.
Rupert Lowe came to British politics in a completely different way. The 62-year-old former chairman of Southampton Football Club, whose tenure from 1997 to 2006 was remembered with mixed emotions on the south coast, is also a businessman who worked in sport and recruitment for decades before coming to the apparent conclusion that Westminster needed people who would say things that the established parties wouldn’t. In the 2024 general election, he ran for Reform UK and won the Great Yarmouth seat, making him one of five Reform MPs elected in a vote that saw the party secure about 14% of the national share. This was an impressive performance for a party that had only been in existence for a few years. In the conventional sense, he is not a skilled political manipulator. For many of his supporters, that is precisely the point.
Beyond the online chatter surrounding both of them, what makes the Miller-Lowe pairing intriguing is that they represent genuinely opposing theories about what went wrong with British democracy and how to fix it. Miller essentially argues that democratic norms are safeguarded by institutions and that when governments circumvent those institutions, someone must take action. This argument is made through the legal system rather than at the polls. Her legal successes concerned the procedure by which constitutional change is carried out rather than the result of Brexit, as she has stated time and time again that she was not attempting to prevent it. According to her interpretation, the rule of law is not a technicality. It is what distinguishes an accountable government from a less stable one.
That is nearly exactly the opposite of Lowe’s argument and Reform UK’s in general. The party’s appeal is based on the idea that institutions, such as the judiciary, the BBC, Parliament, and the civil service, have turned into a self-serving class that shields itself from the kind of democratic pressure that voters can truly exert. According to this interpretation, the 2016 referendum was a clear directive that the establishment attempted for years to weaken or get around. As the disruptors who entered through the front door after the side doors were locked, Lowe and his associates pose as the corrective. Framing might work better as a campaign slogan than as a governing ideology. It’s also possible that the reason it resonates is that it has a genuine foundation.
Observing both of these individuals function within the same political environment gives the impression that Britain is still considering claims that the Brexit vote opened rather than closed. Miller’s decision to go to the Supreme Court and Lowe’s decision to go to Parliament are two distinct reactions to the same fundamental division in British public life: the division between those who believe that institutions will make the necessary corrections and those who have concluded that the institutions themselves are the issue. That argument has not yet been won by either side. There is no indication that either side will stop.
In a time when British politics has been conspicuously lacking in conviction, it is noteworthy that both Miller and Lowe are, in their own ways, conviction figures. They are not correct because of this. It does make them genuinely difficult to ignore, regardless of what one may think.
