Orlando Sentinel

Brexit Party wants to team up with Tories; Johnson says no

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON — Nigel Farage, the minor-party leader who played a major role in Britain’s decision to leave the European Union, is trying to throw his weight around again in the U.K.’s Brexit-dominated election.

Farage on Friday piled the pressure on British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, saying his Brexit Party will run against Johnson’s Conservati­ves across the country in the Dec. 12 early election unless Johnson abandons his divorce deal with the EU.

Farage spoke a day after U.S. President Donald Trump barged into the British election campaign, urging his friend Farage to make an electoral pact with Johnson’s Conservati­ves. Trump told Farage on the Euroskepti­c politician’s own radio phone-in show Thursday that he and Johnson would be “an unstoppabl­e force.”

Johnson on Friday gently rebuffed Trump’s suggestion and ruled out an electoral pact with Farage.

“If I may respectful­ly say to all our friends around the world the only way to get this thing done is to vote for us,” Johnson told ITV News. “If you vote for any other party, the risk is you’ll just get Jeremy Corbyn, the Labour Party, dither and delay.”

All 650 seats in the House of Commons are up for grabs in the election that is coming more than two years early, with winners to be chosen by Britain’s 46 million voters. If the Brexit Party runs in only a small number of seats, that would help the Conservati­ves, who are vying with Farage for the support of Brexitback­ing voters.

Farage’s party, which was founded earlier this year, rejects Johnson’s Brexit deal, preferring to leave the bloc with no agreement on future relations in what it calls a “clean-break” Brexit. It holds seats in the European

Union’s legislatur­e but has none so far in Britain’s Parliament.

Launching the Brexit Party’s election campaign on Friday, Farage said Johnson’s deal “is not Brexit” because it would mean continuing to follow some EU rules and holding years of negotiatio­ns on future relations.

“Boris tells us this is a great new deal. It is not. It is a bad old treaty. And simply, it is not Brexit,” Farage said.

Farage, who played a key role in the 2016 campaign for Britain to leave the EU, said if Johnson agreed to abandon his deal, the Brexit Party would form a “nonaggress­ion pact” with the Conservati­ves, standing aside from running against them in many areas.

“I believe the only way to solve this is to build a ‘leave’ alliance across this country,” Farage said. “If it was done, Boris Johnson would win a very big majority.”

Farage warned that if Johnson rejects the offer, “we will contest every single seat in England, Scotland and Wales.”

He said Johnson needs to make up his mind before the nomination­s for candidates close on Nov. 14.

On the U.K. radio show Thursday, Trump called Johnson “fantastic” but also undermined him by claiming that “certain aspects” of the prime minister’s EU divorce agreement would make it impossible for Britain to do a trade deal with the U.S.

The ability to strike new trade agreements around the world is seen by Brexit supporters as one of the key advantages of leaving the EU. Most economists, though, say trade deals with the U.S. and other countries are unlikely to compensate for Britain’s reduced commerce with the EU, which currently accounts for half of U.K. trade.

Forecaster­s say a no-deal Brexit would have an even more severe effect on the U.K. economy and would hurt EU nations as well.

Purist Brexiteers such as Farage dislike the Brexit agreement struck by Johnson — as they did a previous effort by his predecesso­r Theresa May —because it keeps the U.K. bound by EU rules and financial obligation­s for up to three years while a new trade relationsh­ip is negotiated. The terms would also see Northern Ireland bound by EU trade and customs rules indefinite­ly to avoid checks on the border with EU member Ireland that could undermine both the regional economy and peace in Northern Ireland.

 ?? BEN STANSALL/GETTY-AFP ?? Nigel Farage said his Brexit Party will run against the Tories unless the PM abandons his divorce deal with the EU.
BEN STANSALL/GETTY-AFP Nigel Farage said his Brexit Party will run against the Tories unless the PM abandons his divorce deal with the EU.

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