NIGEL Farage famously gets off scot-free. He is bowled soft questions and allowed to spout hate and division. He’s rude and sneery. And blows his top quicker than a dodgy fire hydrant if he is challenged.
I never said that he will say – even as footage is unearthed of him saying exactly whatever it was he didn’t say.
Mostly an interviewer will just hand the media broom onto the next journalist for the sweeping away of inconvenient dirt. Without asking Farage why he is being bankrolled by reclusive Thai-based crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne, who gave his party £9m in August last year. And, as just reported, a ‘gift’ of £5m before the last election.
Never mind, he’s our next prime minister, the leader columns in the usual suspect newspapers will later opine (a stuffy old word favoured by leader writers, an odd breed).
If one-tenth of the time and energy devoted to attacking Sir Keir Starmer were to be spent truly examining Reform UK, how revealing that might be. Incidentally, and this is for another day, anyone who may replace Starmer will face exactly the same concerted and undiluted campaign of media hostility.
Anyway, here is an interview you won’t have seen or read, as it was made up by the writer of this blog…
Woman interview: Hello, Mr Farage. Welcome to the show.
Farage (trying to look interested while glancing at his watch): It’s my pleasure.
Interviewer: I’d like to start by asking why you did not reveal that you were given £5m by the crypto billionaire Christpher Harborne shortly before the general election in 2024.
Farage: Nobody’s business but mine. Next question.
Interviewer: You’ve not answered this one yet. At the time you said you were not interested in standing in the election or in staying in politics. Then you suddenly changed your mind after a very wealthy man gave you £5m.
Farage: It was to help with my security.
Interviewer: Was that because someone once threw a milkshake at you? Clearly guarding against airborne milkshakes must cost an awful lot of money.
Farage: Nice try, dearie. But you are just being flippant.
Interviewer: With respect, I am not. The public needs to know how much money you receive from donors. And, incidentally, £5m pounds is almost ten times as much as the average person in the UK will earn in a lifetime, according to the Office of National Statistics.
Farage: Well, more fool them. It’s a free market out there.
Interviewer: What, there’s a free market in people being given five million quid by rich men for no apparent reason?
Farage: Your questions are very tedious. I don’t have to sit here. I’m a busy man.
Interviewer: Busy promoting yourself, one might say. What qualities do you possess that are necessary in a prime minister? You’ve barely been an MP for ten minutes and you spend more time in the air than in your constituency. You’ve never been near a government ministry. Isn’t that unusual?
Farage: Far too busy for anything like that, dearie.
Interviewer: What, busy making a bothersome tit of yourself, first in the European Parliament, and more recently at Westminster, where you flounce out in during PMQs or organise a mini-sulk with your party’s MPs? And busy sucking up to extreme right-wingers in the US?
Farage (fidgeting with the microphone attached to the pinstriped lapel of his jacket): I don’t have to suffer your impertinence. Is it your time of the month or something, luvvie?
Interviewer: Now you’re being personal. But you still haven’t explained to me what are your qualities for being prime minister?
Farage (shrugging): Rich men like to give me money. And money makes the world go round. We need more rich people in this country.
Interviewer: Most people in this country are not rich. What are you going to do for them?
Farage: Fill a few potholes, run flags up lampposts, stop all this green nonsense, drill and frack until the last drops of oil have been sucked out of the earth, leave our children to sort out the mess. Stop wasting money on the NHS, prevent all those foreigners from coming here.
Interviewer: So all the usual grievance, hate, division and negativity, then.
Farage: Why change a winning formula.
Interviewer: One reason Britain faces so many problems is that your Brexit has been a disaster and is estimated to have cost the country between £180-£240 billion in lost revenue. Why should we believe a word you say?
Farage: Not my Brexit – it was Boris Johnson’s, and he didn’t do it properly. But Brexit did give us back our sovereignty.
Interviewer: Never quite sure what sovereignty means. Can you spend it down the shops? Now let’s move to the NHS. You have been very hostile about the NHS and suggested that we should have an American-style insurance system – yet in the US people sometimes have to sell their homes to pay their medical bills. Is that what you want for Britain?
Farage: The NHS under me will remain free at the point of delivery.
Interviewer: So it won’t cost you anything to enter hospital – you’ll just get a whopping bill as you leave. Is that what free at the point of delivery means?
Farage (exposing his Union Jack-covered ankles as he stands, while hoicking up his mustard-coloured corduroy trousers): I don’t have time for your woke whinging. I’ve gone a plane to catch.
Interviewer: Did you pay for your own ticket?
Farage: None of your business.
Interviewer: Don’t go yet. I want to know why you are up to your knees in money from oil, why you hate the planet so much, who exactly paid for your £850,000 home in Clacton, why the former leader of Reform UK in Wales was sentenced to ten years in prison after admitting taking bribes for pro-Russia interviews and speeches, why you keep making up stories about how awful life is in London, and why you won’t congratulate Labour for cutting down small boat crossings, why you are fighting the local elections on national issues, and why your party is now filling up with ex-Tories?
Nigel Farage storms out in the company of his elite crew of milkshake repelling bodyguards. The interviewer offers a wan smile to the camera.
“I guess we’ll never know,” she says. “Oh, damn. I forgot to ask him if Reform UK should really be called the I’m-Not-A-Racist-But party. Trouble is, most of them are.”










