Brexit leader Nigel Farage MP has forecast that his Reform UK party can win the next British general election. He told supporters in Birmingham, England, that the party was now consistently gaining new voters, supporters, and activists, will of whom are fed up with the establishment parties.
Farage, who was elected into the British parliament earlier this year, addressed thousands of delegates at his party’s annual conference on Friday and Saturday, saying, “The energy, the optimism, the enthusiasm that we’ve got in this room is not something that can be replicated by any other political party in this country.”
“The sky is the limit,” he remarked, laying the groundwork for the next five years of campaigning that will hopefully see him returned as Prime Minister to 10 Downing Street by 2029.
Farage took shots at recently elected, far-left Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, who has been revealed to have taken expensive clothing donations from wealthy donors.
Speaking of why he decided to quit his job as a broadcaster at GB News, among other ventures, to run for office, Farage noted the failure of the past Conservative government, which has seen a surge of violent crime and mass migration on a scale not seen in the UK in generations.
PROFESSIONALIZING REFORM.
Farage explained that the party would vet candidates at all levels of the party in the future as part of his bid to professionalize the party.
“We haven’t got time, we haven’t got room, for a few extremists to wreck the work of a party that now has 80,000 members and rising by hundreds every single day,” he said.
According to Farage, Reform UK needs to look to the example of the Liberal Democrats, who, despite winning far fewer votes nationally, were able to win 72 seats in parliament due to the first-past-the-post system.
Calling for the party to be credible on the ground everywhere, he stated that Reform UK can bring “success after success.”
“If we do those things – I never thought I’d say this – but I genuinely believe we can change the future of politics, the future of our country, perhaps get back a bit of pride of what it is to be British, respect our history, stand up for our values,” he said.
The first speech, from Friday, begins at two hours and six minutes, here:
The second speech begins around one hour, 18 minutes in, here:
Picture by Stuart Mitchell/IncMonocle and used with permission.