Nigel Farage: The straight-talking Brexit campaigner

Warlord

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Nigel Farage has spent his political career campaigning for Brexit – and his crusade continues.

The man who wanted his country back and, after succeeding, his life back, Mr Farage oversaw the transformation of the UK Independence Party from a fringe party to major political force during the Brexit campaign.

The former City boy was the driving force behind Ukip’s surge following the 2014 European elections, steam-rollering his way to the front and centre of public consciousness with his staunchly politically incorrect stance on everything from immigration to breastfeeding.

Mr Farage, now 55, is still determined to secure what he calls “a proper Brexit”, which he says is about the UK becoming an independent country – being free, being able to make our own decisions, and being out from under the rule book of the European Union, as he puts it.

Thought of by many as the face of Brexit, Mr Farage has spent 25 years as the leading campaigner for the UK’s withdrawal from the European Union, and has been a Member of the European Parliament since 1999.

The Brexit Party leader, who almost died in a light aircraft in 2010, is known for his straight-talking style and seemed at times to hold Ukip together by the sheer force of personality.

But despite his verve and political presence, Mr Farage has been unable to persuade voters to put him in the UK Parliament.

He fell at the final hurdle in his attempt to turn Ukip’s Euro election “earthquake” into a Commons seat for himself in 2015 – but the sweetest victory of all was to come for Mr Farage.

Accused of stooping to racist imagery with the infamous “Breaking Point” poster depicting streams of refugees fleeing to the EU, Mr Farage saw his decades-long campaign for Britain to quit Brussels triumph in the 2016 referendum.

Not long after the referendum, he decided to step aside as party leader, leaving the national stage as one of the most divisive – and successful – politicians of modern times.

But his political days were not over. In April 2019, Mr Farage launched the Brexit Party, vowing to lead a fightback against an establishment which he said has betrayed the country over Brexit.

Mr Farage said Britain had become a nation of “lions led by donkeys”.

In May 2019, he said he was “concerned” about the level of “hatred” being directed at him after he was doused with a banana and salted caramel milkshake while on a walkabout in Newcastle city centre.

Launching the Brexit Party’s General Election campaign in November 2019, Mr Farage attracted a sizeable press pack, with reporters, broadcasters and photographers queued outside the venue up to an hour before he was due to speak.

The politician has himself turned his hand to broadcasting and has a show on UK radio station LBC, where he recently conducted a half-hour long interview with US President Donald Trump.

Mr Farage has been a prominent supporter of Mr Trump and boosted his own profile across the Atlantic during frequent appearances at the Republican’s rallies during the last US election campaign.

Both Mr Farage and Mr Trump have suggested that Brexit and the controversial tycoon’s election as president are linked phenomena.

The “Ukip fox is in the Westminster hen house”, he once told reporters after making sweeping gains in the local elections.

But the Commons looks unlikely to be welcoming him any time soon after he ruled out making an eighth bid to become an MP ahead of the December 12 General Election.

Instead he predicted he could “serve the cause better traversing the length and breadth of the United Kingdom supporting 600 candidates”, in a threat to the Tories.

https://www.itv.com/news/2019-11-05/nigel-farage-the-straight-talking-brexit-campaigner/
 
The British government will not extend the transition period that follows a Brexit withdrawal agreement, a spokesman for Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Monday.

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The Tory general election campaign was forced into an all-out battle with Nigel Farage’s Brexit Party today.
Three senior Cabinet ministers rounded on Mr Farage in a bid to persuade him to back down from fielding 600 candidates against the Conservatives in the general election.
Jacob Rees-Mogg and Therese Coffey said Mr Farage risked handing victory to Jeremy Corbyn and helping to permanently derail Britain’s departure from the European Union.
Commons Leader and arch Brexiteer Mr Rees-Mogg claimed Mr Farage could “snatch defeat from the jaws of victory” and pleaded with him to “retire from the field”.


Work and Pensions Secretary Ms Coffey said Mr Farage risked “being the person who lets Brexit evaporate”.
But Mr Farage dismissed the Tory attacks as “all the same stuff” he had heard in previous elections.
“I led Ukip into the 2015 general election. I had all the same stuff, all the same arguments. The Tory tribe screaming and shouting, ‘Don’t take our votes’,” he told ITV’s Good Morning Britain.
“The Ukip vote took more votes from Labour than it did from the Conservatives, [David] Cameron wouldn’t have even got a majority without Ukip.”
He claimed: “We are going to hurt the Labour Party in the most extraordinary way. We’ll do it in South Wales, we’ll do it in the Midlands, we’ll do it in the north of England.
“Those Labour voters have been completely betrayed by the Labour Party. They are my number one target. I got those votes in 2015, I’ll do it again.”
Boris Johnson last week rejected Mr Farage’s offer of a pact if he dropped his Brexit deal.
A chorus of Brexiteers upped the pressure on Mr Farage, while one Brexit Party candidate in the West Midlands defected to the Conservatives and backed Mr Johnson’s deal as the best available.


Mr Farage hit back at criticism from Tory Brexit hardliner Steve Baker in today’s Daily Telegraph, saying: “Who chickened out, who chickened out?”
He claimed Mr Baker had criticised the Government’s Brexit plan but “when the chips were down, like a good boy, voted for it.”

More at: https://news.yahoo.com/nigel-farage-pushes-tory-campaign-112900904.html
 
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