Nigel Farage taps anger in UK’s Brexit-dominated EU election

No one in Britain is more enthusiastic about this week’s European Union elections than people who hate the EU.

Hard-core Brexit supporters are chomping at the bit to cast ballots for Nigel Farage’s newly formed Brexit Party, whose sole policy is to leave the EU as soon as possible. They’re attending rallies in their thousands to chant “Ni-gel! Ni-gel!” and denounce what they call the betrayal of their referendum vote to leave the bloc. Three years after that decision, political gridlock in Parliament means the U.K. is still not out the exit door.

The five-yearly elections to the European Parliament are generally sleepy affairs in Britain; only about a third of the electorate bothered to vote in 2014. But Brexit has made Thursday’s vote an emotionally charged showdown with high stakes for Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservative government.

“There is a momentum, an energy behind the Brexit Party,” a beaming Farage told The Associated Press before addressing more than 1,000 supporters at a rally in Frimley Green, a commuter-belt village 30 miles southwest of London. “There are millions of people out there asking a question: What kind of country are we if we turn our backs on a democratic result?”

If things had gone to plan this election — being held across the 28 EU countries between Thursday and Sunday — would not be taking place in Britain, which was due to have left the bloc on March 29. But with departure postponed, potentially until Oct. 31, Britain must elect its 73 representatives, even though they may only serve briefly in the 751-seat EU legislature, which has a wide array of budgetary and scrutiny powers.

Opinion polls suggest Farage’s Brexit Party could pick up as much as a third of the vote in an election many see as proxy Brexit referendum, with many defecting from May’s deeply divided Conservative Party.

The pro-EU Liberal Democrats and the Greens are also seeing big surges, largely at the expense of the main opposition Labour Party, which is divided over whether to support a second Brexit referendum.

Arguably the U.K.’s best- known Brexiteer, Farage is a longtime thorn in the side of the EU, a prominent U.K. fan of President Donald Trump and a hate figure for liberal and pro-European Britons. He helped lead the “leave” campaign in Britain’s 2016 EU referendum using messages that have been accused of racism — one billboard showed a line of migrants under the slogan “breaking point.” Electoral authorities have since investigated the funding of Farage’s Leave.EU campaign and fined it for breaking electoral spending laws.

After the referendum Farage quit as leader of the U.K. Independence Party, which later lurched to the anti-Islam far right.  He launched his new party last month to harness the anger and frustration felt by many Brexit-backers over the impasse in Parliament.

Farage says more than 100,000 people have paid 25 pounds to become registered supporters. Election regulators are investigating the party’s finances after claims it broke the rules by accepting donations from overseas.

In Frimley Green, the largely white, middle-
aged crowd — packed into a 1970s leisure center that usually holds darts tournaments — roared as Farage condemned the “betrayal” of Brexit and May’s “shameful” deal with the EU.

Farage, 55, has sat in the European Parliament for two decades and run unsuccessfully for Britain’s Parliament seven times, but the crowd lapped up his tirades against the “career political class.”

“He’s the only one who speaks for us,” said Kerry Hawkins, wearing a “team Nige” T-shirt with Farage’s face plastered on it.

The Brexit Party wants to rip up the divorce agreement agreed between May and the bloc — and three times rejected by Parliament — and leave without a deal on future trade terms. Jill Lawless, Frimley Green, AP

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