“Après le déluge, moi”: Nigel Farage’s Masterplan?
If what I am imagining to be Farage’s strategy is successful, he will have pulled off the most dramatic internal regime change in the history of the Conservative Party.
If what I am imagining to be Farage’s strategy is successful, he will have pulled off the most dramatic internal regime change in the history of the Conservative Party.
Top Tories are having to fill front-row seats with their aides to make the conference hall appear full.
Those who have no sympathy for the rural community or its fieldsports should nonetheless express extreme indignation at banks freezing accounts or suspending services because they dislike the opinions or activities of their clients.
Nigel Farage’s de-banking crisis has led to a wider debate about banks prioritising social issues over investment strategies. Conservative states in the US are already leading the way in the fight for common sense.
The BBC have apologised to the former UKIP leader for inaccurate reporting, but Natwest has come under a lot of pressure for bringing politics into banking.
The bank claims that the decision to close the former UKIP leader’s account had nothing to do with his political views, but Farage believes their 40-page report says otherwise.
Farage claims to have been rejected for an account at seven different banks in the UK after his decades-old account was shut down, seemingly without reason as the trend of “de-banking” of right-wing figures becomes more and more common.
The former prime minister’s values clash with most of those said to be held by Reform, though its leader has been coy when questioned on a possible defection.
Farage has officially gone public with his intention to re-enter the fray. Whatever else might be said about him, his track record of leading insurgencies is second to none.
Interviewer and former leader of UKIP Nigel Farage failed to push Mr. Trump on precisely how he would go about ending the war.