Yorkshire Post

Farage heckled after ‘Mafia’ jibe at MEPs

-

NIGEL FARAGE was heckled in the European Parliament after accusing MEPs of “behaving like the Mafia” over the conditions of Brexit.

The former Ukip leader was told to retract his “unacceptab­le” remark by the Parliament’s president, Italian Antonio Tajani, and said that, in respect of national sensitivit­ies, he would instead brand them “gangsters”.

The row came as the Parliament heard a string of senior MEPs insist that Britain cannot enjoy “the same or better conditions” in its relations with the European Union as full member states after Brexit.

And the European Parliament’s Brexit co-ordinator, Guy Verhofstad­t, told MEPs that he expected the UK to return to the EU in the future, when a younger generation recognises withdrawal as “a loss of time, a waste of energy and a stupidity”.

MEPs in Strasbourg were debating the European Parliament’s red lines for any withdrawal agreement in two years’ time. The European Parliament effectivel­y holds a veto on any Brexit deal as it must be approved by a majority of MEPs in a vote after having first received the assent of a qualified majority of national leaders in the European Council.

The debate came after Prime Minister Theresa May said curbs on freedom of movement would not come into force immediatel­y after Britain has quit the European Union.

Speaking during a trip to Saudi Arabia, Mrs May said there would be an “implementa­tion” phase once a deal had been struck, with business and government­s needing a “period of time” to adjust to the new rules.

“In terms of the deal that we negotiate and the arrangemen­ts that will come there, what we have talked about, you’ve used the phrase ‘transition­al phase’; I have used the phrase ‘implementa­tion period’,” Mrs May said.

 ?? PICTURE: AP. ?? DEFIANT: Former Ukip leader Nigel Farage attends a session of the European Parliament in Strasbourg yesterday in which a row erupted over his comments.
PICTURE: AP. DEFIANT: Former Ukip leader Nigel Farage attends a session of the European Parliament in Strasbourg yesterday in which a row erupted over his comments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom