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Farage says he would be ‘useful as an interlocutor’ with Trump

09 Nov 2024 3 minute read
Leader of Reform UK Nigel Farage speaking at the Reform UK Welsh Conference at the Celtic Manor hotel in Newport. Photo Ben Birchall/PA Wire

Nigel Farage has said he could be “useful as an interlocutor” between the Labour Government and Donald Trump.

The Reform UK leader said he has “a great relationship” with the US president-elect and knows people he believes will be in Mr Trump’s administration for “quite a long time”.

Speaking to the PA news agency at a Reform event near Exeter, Mr Farage described Mr Trump as a “pro-British American president” who gives the UK “potentially huge opportunities if we can overcome the difficulties that the whole of the Cabinet have been rude about him”.

Build bridges

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and the Government will be keen to build bridges with Mr Trump before he returns to the White House after a row over Labour activists campaigning for Kamala Harris, and controversy over comments previously made by Foreign Secretary David Lammy.

Mr Farage told PA: “I’ve got a great relationship with Donald Trump but equally I know many of the other senior figures who will be in this administration and I’ve known them for quite a long time.

“It seems to me that with a Labour Party and a Republican Party who disagree on so many things – who are such fundamentally different people – that I might be useful as an interlocutor. Unofficially, behind the scenes, to try and help mend some of those fences.

“If the Government choose to use me, I would do that not because I support the Labour Government but because I believe in something called the national interest.”

Red carpet

On Friday, Mr Farage said the UK should “roll out the red carpet” for Mr Trump.

He said: “Whether you like Trump or not, this is the important point that in terms of intelligence-sharing, in terms of defence, in terms of investment, in terms of trade, America is our most important relationship.”

Mr Trump’s election win spells uncertainty over the future of US backing for Ukraine.

Mr Farage said on Saturday that a “peace negotiation is a very good idea”.

“Whether it succeeds or not, actually doing it is the right thing,” he added, and later described the conflict with Russia as “like the Battle of the Somme with drones”.

Mr Farage was speaking ahead of his keynote speech at the Reform event. It is the second regional conference he has attended in two days, after Friday’s gathering of Welsh Reform backers.

Addressing supporters on Saturday afternoon, he said his party believes “optimistically that we can win power”.

He said: “The time has come for a new political force in this country that stands up for its fishermen, that stands up for its farmers, that stands up for free speech, that stands up for controlling its borders, that stands up for decency, that stands up for who we are as a nation.

“That stands up for all of our traditions, that believe in the British people, that believes in who we are.

“We believe in those things, we also believe optimistically that we can win power and turn this all around.”


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J Jones
J Jones
1 month ago

Nah, that’s a five syllable word when most of his and Trumps brainless followers can barely handle one or two.

Jeff
Jeff
1 month ago

Quisling.

Karl
Karl
1 month ago

Rather we all avoid the US for now. They are tge world danger to me.

Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
1 month ago

No thanks Nige. Go and do your MP work before there is a recall petition, stay out of the way and let our democratically elected government, which you are not part of, do the talking free from interference.

Fanny Hill
Fanny Hill
1 month ago

Farage is only interested in one thing, Farage. He couldn’t give a monkey’s about the interests of the UK. And now he’s also got his eyes on the Senedd. Arrogant t**t.

Llyn
Llyn
1 month ago

I’d prefer our diplomacy to be made along usual channels rather than Putin’s puppet Farage.

Cymro Penperllenni
Cymro Penperllenni
1 month ago

He is nothing but a parasite

Nobby Tart
Nobby Tart
1 month ago

Give me a job, give me a job, please?
What do you mean I already have one?
Clacton? Oh I’ve forgotten about that already!

S Duggan
S Duggan
1 month ago

God, this man is so tiring. I’m so looking forward to the day when he is as disgraced and ignored as Johnson and Truss.

Charles Coombes
Charles Coombes
1 month ago

Ban both of them from Wales.

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
1 month ago

More useful as fertiliser…

Steve Woods
Steve Woods
1 month ago
Reply to  Mab Meirion

…provided that toxic waste can be converted into something useful.

Steve Woods
Steve Woods
1 month ago

The dishonourable member for Clacton is a dangerous, grifting attention-seeker who should be ignored at all costs.

Hywel
Hywel
1 month ago
Reply to  Steve Woods

You’re right he’s dangerous, Steve, but he shouldn’t be ignored.
He’s following the pattern of fascists manoeuvring to gain power by promising the earth to every self interest group, blaming immigrants for all our ills, and looking to subvert our democratic institutions with a view to replacing them with their own agencies.
I hope the Cymry will recognise the threat and eliminate it at the ‘26 elections.

Fanny Hill
Fanny Hill
1 month ago

If only Wales could be more like Clacton. Farage free!

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