In 2019 he joined the Brexit Party and was chosen as a candidate to be an MEP in Scotland.[4] He was unsuccessful[5] and later stood as for the party for Dundee West.[6]
He has described himself as pro-immigration, but argued that current policies needed to be changed, saying: "It's not helpful whenever someone tries to have a discussion about immigration and the racist card is thrown at them. We need to grow the economy. Immigration is pushing wages down."[15] He has been involved in campaigns against the Offensive Behaviour at Football Act[12] and is anti-environmentalist, saying that "the green agenda means no flying, no jobs, no growth".[15]
He has criticised academics for allegedly stifling the debate around transgender topics, and has in turn been criticised for describing the transgender rights movement as asking for something that is biologically impossible.[16] He has also questioned the state support for gender-neutral toilets and school uniforms and described the dynamic of equality campaigners as potentially authoritarian.[16] He is also critical of lockdowns put in place by the Scottish government as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, saying: "The 'Stay at Home, Protect the NHS' mantra encouraged people with the virus to be stuffed into homes and that has probably helped to kill some of those people rather than encouraging a more flexible approach."[17] His claims were criticised by Dundee City Council leader John Alexander and the Scottish government.[17]
In October 2025 he invited the group JIMS (Justice for Innocent Men Scotland) to lecture to University Students. This talk was not authorised by the University and prompted and investigation into the matter [18]. JIMS have previously targeted victims of sexual abuse online[19]. Responses varied, with graffiti appearing on the University campus and nearby High School of Dundee buildings visible targeting Waiton[20], with student Taye Tharris criticising the University; “JIMS were permitted to lecture their views as facts to university students – that is not exposure to controversial views, but the outright teachings of controversial views. Students have been restricted in their freedom for what they can and cannot express, they were not allowed to even question JIMS.”. They would organise a student-led protest [21].
The Politics of Antisocial Behaviour Amoral Panics. Routledge Advances in Criminology. 2007. ISBN978-0415872720.
Waiton, Stuart (2012). Snobs' law: criminalising football fans in an age of intolerance (Take A Libertyed.). Scotland. ISBN978-0957155909.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)