Nearly 10,000 supporters are expected to attend the Republican presidential nominee's election rally on Wednesday night. Farage, known as an anti-immigration politician and pro-Brexit campaigner, intends to address the crowd, according to a spokesman.
Trump described the successful Brexit endeavor as a "great victory," saying that the referendum result was similar to the outcome of his own populist campaign in the primaries. Trump, who referred to himself last week as "Mr Brexit," said that his goal is to mobilize a similar demographic, those disillusioned with what he labeled the globalist elites.
"The Republican activists and managers here are keen to hear…how we managed to get 2.5 million people who don't normally vote at all to go down to the polling station," the UKIP MEP told the Daily Telegraph.
"If the Trump camp reaches out to those same people who have been disadvantaged by corporatism, undercutting wages, a lot of strong similarities to the United Kingdom, then it does not matter what the polls say, what the liberal media say. In the end, elections are won by numbers."
They will soon be calling me MR. BREXIT!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 18, 2016
Farage stressed that he does not endorse Donald Trump, as it would be inappropriate for a foreigner to intervene in another country's election, referring to Barack Obama's attempts to get UK citizens to vote to Remain.
"I'm not going to tell people who to vote for," Farage said in an interview, "All I'm saying is that I wouldn't vote for Hillary Clinton if she paid me!"