Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Brexit Party to field election candidates after voting pact fails

- DANICA KIRKA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Gregory Katz of The Associated Press.

LONDON — Britain’s Brexit Party has failed to reach a tactical voting pact with the ruling Conservati­ves, saying Thursday that it will field 300 candidates in next month’s election to force Prime Minister Boris Johnson to deliver on his promise of a clean break with the European Union.

Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage said the party had to contest the seats in Britain’s Dec. 12 election to keep the pressure on Johnson, rebuffing Conservati­ve

Party arguments that doing so risks splitting the pro-Brexit vote and boosts parties that want to remain in the EU. His comments came on the final day for candidates to register.

“What we’ve got so far in this campaign is for Boris to promise to change direction, what we now have to do is to hold him to account, to make sure we get a proper Brexit, and that’s my job,” Farage told the BBC.

Britain is holding a national election on Dec. 12 because Johnson wants to secure a majority so he can take the U.K. out of the bloc by the next Brexit deadline of Jan. 31. All 650 seats in the House of Commons are up for grabs.

Johnson reached a Brexit deal with the EU but so far has not persuaded enough British lawmakers to pass it. The single-issue Brexit Party, meanwhile, prefers to leave the EU without a deal, something that economists say would damage both the British and EU economies.

The Brexit Party earlier this week agreed not to run candidates in 317 parliament­ary seats currently held by Conservati­ve lawmakers after Johnson pledged there would be no further extension of the Brexit deadline. But the Daily Telegraph reported Thursday that Farage rejected a last-minute strategic offer from the Conservati­ves to promise to only put up token opposition in 40 key seats if the Brexit Party would stand aside in other constituen­cies.

After the deadline for candidate nomination­s passed, Farage tweeted that a top Johnson adviser had been calling Brexit Party candidates and offering them jobs if they would withdraw from their races.

“The system is corrupt and broken,” Farage said.

Currently the Conservati­ves have 298 seats and the opposition Labor Party has 243. Analysts say to get a majority in Parliament, the Conservati­ves need to flip Labor Party seats in the north and east.

The Conservati­ves fear that voter support for Farage’s party could prevent them from winning some closely contested seats, robbing the party of an overall majority in the House of Commons.

Three smaller parties — the Liberal Democrats, the Greens and the Welsh-based Plaid Cymru — have already announced a tactical electoral pact to increase the chances of electing lawmakers who support remaining in the EU. The parties will throw their support behind whichever anti-Brexit candidate in certain districts is the strongest.

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