Nigel Farage leaves door open to re-joining
Tories after election
Published
1 day ago
By Brian
Wheeler
Political
reporter. in Manchester
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-66997104
Nigel
Farage has been welcomed with open arms by many Conservatives in Manchester -
leading some to wonder if he could re-join the party after decades of
campaigning against it.
On Sunday
night, the former UKIP and Brexit Party leader was cheered to the rafters at a
gala dinner for grassroots Conservatives, after Priti Patel hailed his role in
delivering Brexit - and helping Boris Johnson win the 2019 general election by
standing candidates down.
Then he
received a hero's welcome from right wing Tories' at Liz Truss's conference
fringe event on Monday. Footage of him partying with Ms Patel later that night
has been widely shared on social media.
Having
observed Farage-mania at close quarters at this year's conference, Tory
commentator Tim Montgomerie said: "I'm convinced party members would
choose him as leader if they could."
Mr Farage
told BBC News he has been "overwhelmed" and "gobsmacked" by
the reception he has had, which he says proves Tory activists are
"desperate for ideas, desperate to believe in something".
This is the
first Tory conference Mr Farage has attended since 1988. He was "utterly
barred" from the annual gatherings when he was a leading light in UKIP, he
says, although he often used to turn up anyway.
On one
memorable occasion in Manchester he rolled up to the security gates in an
armoured personnel carrier, to show he was "parking his tanks on the
Tories' lawn". Subtle it was not.
Mr Farage
tore up his Tory membership card in the early 1990s in protest at then leader
John Major signing the Maastricht Treaty, which created the European Union. He
then became a founder member of what would become UKIP.
Since
leaving frontline politics after the 2019 election he has become a presenter on
GB News, allowing him access to the conference as a journalist.
His friend
Jacob Rees-Mogg told the BBC's Politics Live Mr Farage has always been a Tory
at heart and suggested the party should "roll out the red carpet" if
he ever wanted to rejoin.
Conservative
Party chairman Greg Hands seemed deeply unimpressed with this idea, saying the
former UKIP leader had campaigned against the Tories for years and did not want
them to succeed.
Rishi Sunak
dodged the issue when asked if Mr Farage could ever be allowed back in, telling
GB News: "Look, the Tory party is a broad church. I welcome lots of people
who want to subscribe to our ideals, to our values."
Mr Farage
told the channel he could not join a party that had "put the tax rate up
to the highest in over 70 years", allowed net migration "to run at
over half a million a year" and not "used Brexit to deregulate to
help small businesses".
Speaking
later to the BBC, he said he would not join the Conservative Party "as it
currently is", but added: "Never say never.
"If
after the next election they reset and realign then I might."
But maybe
the Tory party shouldn't start printing a new membership card yet.
One
long-term ally of Mr Farage was sceptical about whether he would ever return to
the Tory fold.
"There
is no way he would ever join the Tories after the way they have treated
him," he said.
"He
just enjoys winding them up."


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