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Wednesday, November 13, 2024

‘Guess what, I bought them myself!’: Nigel Farage shows off his glasses as he mocks Keir Starmer over PM’s freebies row in speech to Reform UK’s conference after arriving on stage to Eminem hit ‘Without Me’


Nigel Farage today mocked Sir Keir Starmer over the Prime Minister’s freebies row as he addressed Reform UK’s conference in Birmingham.

Speaking to 4,000 of his party’s activists at the National Exhibition Centre, the 60-year-old pulled out his glasses as he swiped at the PM.

Sir Keir is currently embroiled in a huge row over accepting suits and spectacles worth thousands of pounds from Labour peer Lord Waheed Alli.

‘Do you like them?,’ Mr Farage asked Reform delegates as he began his conference speech this afternoon.

‘Very expensive but guess what, I bought them myself, how about that?’

Mr Farage arrived in the main conference hall to Eminem‘s ‘Without Me’, which has become the Reform leader’s anthem since he returned to frontline politics.

In a scandal that has been dubbed ‘passes for glasses’ or ‘wardrobegate’, Sir Keir is facing intense scrutiny over his links to Lord Alli.

It previously emerged how the millionaire businessman had been given a Downing Street security pass without apparently having a Government role. 

‘Guess what, I bought them myself!’: Nigel Farage shows off his glasses as he mocks Keir Starmer over PM’s freebies row in speech to Reform UK’s conference after arriving on stage to Eminem hit ‘Without Me’

Nigel Farage today mocked Sir Keir Starmer over the Prime Minister’s freebies row as he addressed Reform UK’s conference in Birmingham

Speaking to 4,000 of his party's activists at the National Exhibition Centre, the 60-year-old pulled out his glasses as he swiped at the PM

Speaking to 4,000 of his party’s activists at the National Exhibition Centre, the 60-year-old pulled out his glasses as he swiped at the PM

Mr Farage arrived in the main conference hall to Eminem 's 'Without Me', which has become the Reform leader's anthem since he returned to frontline politics

Mr Farage arrived in the main conference hall to Eminem ‘s ‘Without Me’, which has become the Reform leader’s anthem since he returned to frontline politics 

Mr Farage described the first months of Sir Keir’s premiership as ‘truly shocking’, asking conference attendees if they had ever known a PM get off to a worse start.

He said: ‘It’s truly shocking. I mean, the message of ‘things can only get worse’ is hardly inspiring, is it?

‘And now we’re living in a state, and you all know it, but they’ll deny it in Westminster until the cows come home, we’re living in a state with two-tier policing.

‘We’re living in a state with two-tier justice. We’re living in a state that is led by two-tier Keir and we’ve had enough already.’

The Reform UK leader also launched an attack on the Conservatives and said he does not ‘give a damn’ who becomes Tory leader.

Kemi Badenoch, James Cleverly, Robert Jenrick and Tom Tugendhat are all competing to replace Rishi Sunak in the role.

But Mr Farage delivered a withering verdict on all four Tory leadership candidates.

He said one has ‘the most inappropriate surname I’ve ever come across in my life which indicates an IQ rather higher than I think they have’ and another ‘lacks any discernible personality’.

One believes working in McDonald’s ‘for a week makes them working class’ while another is campaigning as a Liberal Democrat, Mr Farage claimed.

Mr Farage also used his conference speech to outline further details of his plans to build on the five parliamentary seats Reform won at July’s general election.

‘I never thought I’d say this, but we have to model ourselves on the Liberal Democrats,’ he said.

‘That doesn’t mean that you’ll see me cascading down waterfalls and I won’t behave in a way that I think is particularly stupid even if others think I do,’ he said.

‘But the Liberal Democrats build branches, the Liberal Democrats win seat at district, county and unitary level.

‘The Liberal Democrats build on that strength, the Liberal Democrats put literature and leaflets through doors repeatedly in their target areas.

‘And despite the fact they haven’t got any policies at all – in fact the whole thing’s really rather vacuous isn’t it – they managed with a vote much lower than ours to win 72 seats in Parliament.’

Mr Farage described the first months of Sir Keir's premiership as 'truly shocking', asking conference attendees if they had ever known a PM get off to a worse start.

Mr Farage described the first months of Sir Keir’s premiership as ‘truly shocking’, asking conference attendees if they had ever known a PM get off to a worse start.

Mr Farage admitted Reform 'could have done better' at this summer's general election

Mr Farage admitted Reform ‘could have done better’ at this summer’s general election

Mr Farage admitted Reform ‘could have done better’ at this summer’s general election.

‘At that stage of our development, we weren’t big enough, wealthy enough, professional enough to vet general election candidates properly,’ he said.

‘And we were let down – that amateurism let us down. We could have won a lot more votes and there are lessons that we need to learn from that.

‘So as I stood after the count in Clacton, in those early hours of July 5, I said that ‘yes of course, I would represent the constituency, the constituents in Parliament, but I had a job’ – and my job was to professionalise and democratise Reform UK.

‘That was a solemn promise and pledge that I made to you, the members.’

Mr Farage announced his party was in the process of recruiting full-time regional managers and regional organisers.

Earlier, the Reform leader vowed to build an ‘election-winning machine’ as he arrived at the conference venue in Birmingham.

Setting out his aim to ‘professionalise’ his party, Mr Farage joined other senior figures in suggesting Reform could replace Labour in power at the 2029 general election.

He claimed the next few years could see a ‘seismic sea change’ in British politics although he admitted there was work to be done to overhaul Reform’s structures.

During this year’s general election campaign, Reform were forced to ditch a number of parliamentary candidates over offensive comments.

Mr Farage admitted the racism rows that hit the party in recent months ‘damage the work of thousands of others’.

As he arrived at Reform’s conference, being held at Birmingham’s National Exhibition Centre, Mr Farage said he was looking forward to having a drink at the two-day event.

He later received a standing ovation as he entered the main conference hall to a remix version of Diamonds by Rihanna.

Mr Farage vowed to build an 'election-winning machine' as he arrived at Reform UK's conference in Birmingham

Nigel Farage today vowed to build an ‘election-winning machine’ as he arrived at Reform UK’s conference in Birmingham

Setting out his aim to 'professionalise' his party, Mr Farage joined other senior figures in suggesting Reform could replace Labour in power at the 2029 general election

Setting out his aim to ‘professionalise’ his party, Mr Farage joined other senior figures in suggesting Reform could replace Labour in power at the 2029 general election

Mr Farage admitted the racism rows that hit the party in recent months 'damage the work of thousands of others'

Mr Farage admitted the racism rows that hit the party in recent months ‘damage the work of thousands of others’

Speaking to reporters, Mr Farage set out his efforts to ‘professionalise’ Reform.

‘It means weeding out candidates that are totally inappropriate and damage the work of thousands of others,’ he said.

‘Let’s face it, the last election a lot of those candidates hadn’t been vetted at all. That has to change, that will change.

‘It also means building a structure on the ground – that’s a mixture of professional help but, clearly, it’s the voluntary side in the end that will make it happen.

‘What today is about is building branches, fielding candidates, fighting the county elections next year, it’s about building an election-winning machine.

‘The Lib Dems have done it in parts of the country and that’s what we have to do.’

On Reform’s chances of winning the next general election, Mr Farage added: ‘I think if ever there’s going to be a seismic sea change in politics, it’s in the next few years.’

And asked if that could see him become PM, he replied: ‘Me or somebody other who is better looking.’

Reform chairman Zia Yusuf, MPs James McMurdock and Lee Anderson, and immigration spokeswoman Ann Widdecombe all talked up their party’s chances of winning the next general election.

Mr McMurdock, MP for South Basildon and East Thurrock, told party activists from the conference stage: ‘There are people in this very room who will be Reform MPs alongside me in 2029.

‘The momentum is absolutely on our side. What we have achieved in such a short period of time is nothing less than extraordinary.

‘Nigel, or as I should call him the Honourable Member for Clacton, and Richard, the Honourable Member for Boston and Skegness, are the people to lead us into Downing Street.

‘We will then be ready to welcome Nigel Farage, not just as a member of Parliament, but as the prime minister’.

Mr Farage became an MP at the eighth time of asking in July as he was elected to represent Clacton in Parliament.

But the ex-UKIP leader has now found himself facing questions over his claim that he cannot hold in-person constituency surgeries in his Essex seat due to security fears.

He said he had been advised not to hold ‘old-style’ physical meetings to address locals’ issues in case they ‘flow through the door’ carrying blades ‘in their pockets’.

A conference attendee wears a T-shirt featuring Mr Farage on the opening day of the Reform gathering in Birmingham

A conference attendee wears a T-shirt featuring Mr Farage on the opening day of the Reform gathering in Birmingham

A man dressed in Union Jack glasses and hat poses for a photo at the Reform conference

A man dressed in Union Jack glasses and hat poses for a photo at the Reform conference

One delegate was spotted wearing a 'God, Guns and Trump' hat at the Birmingham event

One delegate was spotted wearing a ‘God, Guns and Trump’ hat at the Birmingham event

Lee Anderson (second from right), Reform's chief whip, is expected to target significant gains at next year's local elections and general election victory in 2029 in his conference speech

Lee Anderson (second from right), Reform’s chief whip, is expected to target significant gains at next year’s local elections and general election victory in 2029 in his conference speech

‘Do I have an office in Clacton? Yes. Am I allowing the public to flow through the door with their knives in their pockets? No, no I’m not,’ Mr Farage told LBC radio.

But the Speaker’s Office and Parliament’s security team are understood to have no recollection of telling Mr Farage he should not hold in-person surgeries in his constituency.

Sources said neither would have advised any MP not to hold a surgery because this would interfere with their democratic duties, but would instead have offered security advice on how measures could be taken to ensure their safety.

There is no record of such advice ever having been given to Mr Farage.

As well as a speech by Mr Farage, Reform’s deputy leader Richard Tice, chairman Mr Yousuf and MPs Mr Anderson, Rupert Lowe and Mr McMurdock were set to address the party’s two-day conference in Birmingham.

Mr Anderson, Reform’s chief whip, is expected to target significant gains at next year’s local elections and general election victory in 2029 in his conference speech this afternoon.

He will say: ‘We have five MPs and we are growing our membership and support every day. Next year we will win hundreds of council seats across the UK.

‘We must take this fight to Parliament so we can take back control of our country and in 2029 win the general election.’

Mr Anderson was Reform’s first MP after he joined the party in March following his suspension from the Conservatives over ‘Islamophobic’ comments about London Mayor Sadiq Khan.

The conference comes a day after Mr Farage announced he was giving up ownership of Reform UK.

Unlike other political parties, Reform is a limited company of which Mr Farage is the majority shareholder.

But he yesterday announced he was changing the ownership structure so the party was owned by its members, saying: ‘I no longer need to control this party.’

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