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    Nigel Farage live: Reform leader has drink thrown at him in Clacton as he pledges to be ‘bloody nuisance’

    Nigel Farage confirms he will stand as Reform UK candidate in general electionSign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailNewly-crowned Reform UK leader Nigel Farage had a milkshake thrown at him today after he kicked off his general election campaign in Clacton-on-Sea.The incident came after Mr Farage promised to be a “bloody nuisance” in Westminster. A 25 year-old woman has been arrested. During his campaign launch, the former Ukip leader set out his goal for Reform UK to effectively take over the Conservative Party – and potentially put him in No 10 in future. On Tuesday he told ITV’s Good Morning Britain his goal was to take the party over rather than join it.In his first major public speech since announcing his candidacy he addressed a crowd of hundreds at Clacton Pier. Shouts from the crowd included “get ‘em Nige” and “we love you Nigel”. He told those gathered: “Send me to Parliament to be a bloody nuisance.”But Mr Farage did not have to go to Westminster to stir up chaos, as his supporters clashed with protestors over a sign that said: “Farage not welcome in Clacton”.Show latest update 1717512050Breaking: Two people arrested after milkshake thrown over Nigel Farage as he launched general election campaignEssex Police investigating the incident said they had arrested a 25-year-old woman, from Clacton, at the scene on suspicion of assault on Tuesday.While officers were responding and making this arrest, a second individual, a man, was arrested on suspicion of assaulting an emergency worker, said the force. Both individuals remain in custody for questioning.Maryam Zakir-Hussain4 June 2024 15:401717511416Farage: ‘I’ll make sure Starmer doesn’t shift the UK closer to the EU’Nigel Farage said he would make sure Sir Keir Starmer does not shift the UK closer to the European Union, if he is elected as an MP.The Reform UK leader said: “Brexit destroyed Labour, it split Labour very, very badly.“I’m going to be there, as a voice, making sure that Starmer doesn’t take us closer back to the European Union.”Mr Farage also said it was “entirely possible” to reduce net migration to zero which “still leaves lots of room for special skills where we may have a shortage”.Maryam Zakir-Hussain4 June 2024 15:301717510706Reform UK leader would be ‘champion’ for Clacton Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said he would be a “champion” for Clacton, which he described as a “forgotten, end-of-the-line town”. Speaking from the Moon and Starfish pub in the Essex town, he said: “I had to decide, do I want to stand as a Member of Parliament and spend every Friday working in Clacton? Huge decision for me, huge decision for me, I’ve decided, I do.”He added: “I’ll be here as many Fridays as I can, of course I will. My message to the people of Clacton is, ‘these people here supported me in Ukip and the local MP at the time, Douglas Carswell’.“They supported me hugely in the Brexit referendum campaign, and they want someone to stand up for their beliefs, and they don’t see that in today’s Conservative Party, they certainly don’t see that in today’s Labour Party.“I will be their champion on the national issues and on the local issues, having a national figure representing a forgotten, end-of-the-line town, who knows I may well be able to bring some investment and do some good.”( More

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    Sunak and Starmer prepare for their first debate as disruptor Farage roils UK election waters

    Sign up to our free Brexit and beyond email for the latest headlines on what Brexit is meaning for the UKSign up to our Brexit email for the latest insight The two main contenders to be Britain’s next prime minister were set to face off in a televised debate on Tuesday, with Conservative leader Rishi Sunak hoping to boost his party’s dismal outlook and Labour’s Keir Starmer aiming to cement his status as favorite.The two-way leaders’ debate comes a day after populist Brexit-backer Nigel Farage dealt a blow to Sunak’s hopes of winning the July 4 election by announcing he will run for Parliament at the helm of the right-wing party Reform U.K.Farage kicked off his campaign Tuesday in the eastern England seaside town of Clacton-on-Sea, where he is making an eighth attempt to win a seat in the House of Commons. His seven previous tries all failed.The return of the populist politician, a key player in Britain’s 2016 decision to leave the European Union, is a major headache for Sunak’s party, which already trails Labour in opinion polls. Farage and Reform look likely to siphon off votes of socially conservative older voters that the Tories have been targeting.He claimed the Conservatives, who have been in office since 2010, had “betrayed” Brexit supporters because immigration had gone up, rather than down, since the U.K. left the EU.While Farage stands some chance of defeating Clacton’s Conservative incumbent and getting elected on July 4, he acknowledged that his larger goal is to lead the “real” opposition to a Labour Party government if the Conservatives lose, as many expect. Farage urged voters to “send me to Parliament to be a bloody nuisance.”As he left a pub where he had been speaking to the media, Farage was splattered with a beverage, which appeared to be a milkshake, by a bystander. Milkshakes became an unlikely political weapon during Britain’s acrimonious disputes over Brexit after the 2016 referendum. Farage was one of several politicians splattered with a sticky beverage in 2019.The attention-grabbing Farage has injected volatility into an election that will almost certainly result in either Starmer or Sunak becoming Britain’s leader.The two men will go head-to-head in a debate on broadcaster ITV, with Sunak likely to stress his stewardship of the economy, which has seen inflation fall to just over 2% from a peak of more than 11% in late 2022.Starmer, whose main campaign refrain is the single word “change,” aims to persuade voters tired of the Tories that Labour can be trusted with the U.K.’s economy, borders and security.Further debates are scheduled by other broadcasters before polling day, some featuring multiple party leaders and some just the two front-runners. More

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    Nigel Farage has milkshake thrown over him after launching general election campaign

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailNigel Farage has had a McDonalds milkshake thrown over him after launching his campaign for the general election. A young woman approached the new Reform UK leader on the steps of a pub in Clacton before hurling the yellow-coloured drink over him. She then smiled and casually walked away, with some onlookers applauding, as Mr Farage headed towards his campaign bus. It is not the first time Mr Farage has been hit with milkshakes by critics, having been similarly targeted in Newcastle in 2019.The young woman hurled the drink at close range More

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    Nigel Farage vows to replace the Tories as he launches his revolution

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailNigel Farage launched his eighth bid to become an MP today with a promise of plans to replace the Conservative Party in a revolution which will shake British politics.The Reform UK leader launched his bid to get into parliament in front of cheering crowds on Clacton pier on the Essex coast, declaring it to be “a revolution to change British politics”.The event – which was open to members of the public, who attended in their hundreds crowding into the street, lining footbridges and slopes around the launch – contrasted hugely with the stage managed events of Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer.But a young woman throwing what appeared to be banana milkshake in his face after he completed his media round revealed that not everyone in the Essex seaside town welcomed him and illustrated the dangers of being so exposed.Young woman throws milkshake at Farage More

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    Nigel Farage appears to ditch key Reform UK immigration policy during live interview

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailNigel Farage appeared to ditch a key Reform UK policy live on air, admitting that his party’s plan to process asylum seekers in British Overseas Territories is “not terribly practical”.The former UKIP leader hit the airwaves ahead of launching his election campaign at Clacton pier today after announcing his dramatic return to political frontlines on Monday, as exclusively first revealed by The Independent.He was challenged over the party’s “secure detention for all asylum seekers” plan. Contained in Reform’s provisional manifesto, the policy states: “Asylum claims that arrive though safe countries will be processed rapidly offshore in British Overseas Territories. This will stop the scandal of undocumented asylum seekers absconding to work illegally or commit crime.”Click here for our live coverage of the general election campaign.Nigel Farage during a press conference to announce he will become the new leader of Reform UK and that he will stand as the parliamentary candidate for Clacton, Essex More

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    Diane Abbott to stand to be Hackney Labour MP as Starmer’s Labour confirms candidates

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailDiane Abbott has been cleared to stand as a Labour MP days after she swiftly deleted a tweet accusing Sir Keir Starmer of lying about his respect for her.Ms Abbott has been rubber stamped as a candidate by the party’s powerful National Executive Committee (NEC).It comes as former leader Jeremy Corbyn accused Labour of hanging her “out to dry” as Britain’s first Black female MP faced horrific racist abuse.Writing for The Independent, Mr Corbyn said the treatment of the veteran politician, who has been at the centre of a storm over whether she would be allowed to stand for the party, had been an “utter disgrace”.Diane Abbott has said she intends to ‘run and win’ as a Labour candidate (PA) More

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    Blocked Labour candidate Faiza Shaheen quits the party and accuses it of a ‘hierarchy of racism’

    Sign up to our free fortnightly newsletter from The Independent’s Race Correspondent Nadine WhiteSign up to our free fortnightly newsletter The Race ReportBlocked Labour candidate Faiza Shaheen has dramatically quit the party and accused it of a “hierarchy of racism”. The left-winger had been due to contest the Chingford and Woodford Green seat held by Iain Duncan Smith. But she was told on Wednesday that the party was suspending her after she liked social media posts that criticised Israel and its actions in Gaza.Ms Shaheen resigned after the decision to block her became official today, when Labour’s National Executive Committee (NEC) declined to nominate her. Ms Shaheen with ex-Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn More

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    General Election polls – latest: Labour could surpass 1997 landslide victory as YouGov predicts Tory wipeout

    Starmer says he would be prepared to deploy nuclear weapons if needed to defend UKSign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailLabour are on course to surpass Tony Blair’s landslide majority in 1997, according to YouGov’s first major poll of the general election campaign.The pollsters’ MRP forecast, based on data from more than 58,000 people, suggests Sir Keir Starmer’s party will win a huge majority of 194, with some 422 seats, while the Conservatives could suffer their biggest loss since 1906, winning just 140 seats.The poll – which came after Nigel Farage announced his intention to stand as an MP, in a blow to the Tories – also followed Redfield and Wilton’s second nationwide poll, of 10,000 people – which put the Tories on just 20 per cent, 26 points behind Labour. Another mega-poll published over the weekend had earlier suggested that the Tories could win just 66 seats in parliament.The result would be a Labour landslide, with Sir Keir Starmer’s party securing 476 MPs – a majority of 302 – once tactical voting has been taken into account. This blog will keep track of every major poll released between now and the general election, and what it means for the parties. Show latest update 1717509844ICYMI: YouGov: Labour on track for historic 422-seat win as Tories predicted to lose key seatsLabour is projected to win 422 seats across the UK in a historic landslide victory, according to a new MRP prediction from YouGov released on Monday.Under this prediction, today, Labour would enjoy a 194-seat majority, larger than the one achieved by Tony Blair at the 1997 general election.The forecast predicted the Conservatives would lose 223 seats and be left with just 140. That would be the worst loss for the Tories in well over 100 years, since then-prime minister Arthur Balfour lost 246 seats in 1906.Alicja Hagopian reports.Joe Middleton4 June 2024 15:041717491824Burley tells Cleverly the Tories will get “battered” according to YouGov pollSky’s Kay Burley listed the twelve cabinet members who are predicted to lose their seats in the YouGov poll that has Labour are on course to surpass Tony Blair’s landslide majority in 1997.She told home secretary James Cleverly the party is “going to get battered according to this”.He responded: “The whole point of an election campaign is you make your case to the British people and when I speak to people they want to hear what our plan for the future.”Joe Middleton4 June 2024 10:031717447352Labour will win more southern seats than Tories, YouGov poll suggestsIn a blow to Rishi Sunak, YouGov’s new poll suggests Labour could be on course to win more seats in the south of England than the Conservatives, even when excluding London.Andy Gregory3 June 2024 21:421717445347YouGov poll suggests biggest Labour majority since 1924YouGov’s MRP poll predicts Labour would win a 194-seat majority – which would mark the highest number since Stanley Baldwin won a majority of 208 in 1924.Andy Gregory3 June 2024 21:091717442795The Lib Dems are on course to win 44 seats, according to YouGov’s new poll – which would be four times as many as in 2019.Unsupported twitter embedAndy Gregory3 June 2024 20:261717441535YouGov poll in graphs: How many seats could each party win? More