- Sputnik International
World
Get the latest news from around the world, live coverage, off-beat stories, features and analysis.

Pro-EU Group Hijacks Brexit Party Website After Farage Forgets to Register URL

© AP Photo / Rui VieiraBritish MEP Nigel Farage speaks during the launch of the Brexit Party's European election campaign, Coventry, England, Friday, April 12, 2019.
British MEP Nigel Farage speaks during the launch of the Brexit Party's European election campaign, Coventry, England, Friday, April 12, 2019. - Sputnik International
Subscribe
The url presents visitors with a large banner reading 'It's Time to Stop Farage', and a brief manifesto of sorts.

Anti-Brexit campaigners have registered thebrexitparty.com — a website domain Nigel Farage intended to use for the new party.

The Brexit party was launched 20th January by former UKIP economics spokesperson Catherine Blaiklock, and registered with the UK Electoral Commission the next month — it can run candidates in any English, Scottish, Welsh and European Union elections as a result. However, its members evidently forgot to register a corresponding web address, and anti-Brexit Led By Donkeys seized the opportunity to ridicule the new venture. The group has a history of Led By Donkeys using political billboards to taunt the former UKIP leader.

thebrexitparty.com landing page
thebrexitparty.com landing page - Sputnik International
thebrexitparty.com landing page
"Nigel Farage wants to register a huge victory in the European elections, but he can't even register his own website. Seven times he's failed to get elected to Westminster. But he did get himself a seat in the European Parliament because at the time hardly any of us cared. Well we do now. Nobody is more responsible than Farage for the diminished state of our nation. Now he's seeking to exploit the turmoil he himself created to get re-elected to Brussels on the 23rd May. Register to vote by May 7th to stop him. Farage has unintentionally given birth to the biggest, most passionate pro-European movement this continent has ever seen. This is our moment. This is your vote. Use it," the website statement reads.

The website also invites visitors to support the group by paying a £25 annual fee. The stunt is especially embarrassing for Farage, who quit UKIP in December 2018, as in March — when he took over as leader of the new initiative — he claimed the party was "virtual" and just "a website".

Tarnishing the Brand

Farage claims the endeavour is attracting sizeable support and has raised £750,000 in small donations over April alone.

He's also pledged to not let controversial figures "tarnish the brand" — although the ‘Brexit Party' has already run into some issues in that regard. Farage became leader in March after founder Blaiklock resigned, following widespread media criticism for posting messages some believed to be Islamophobic on social media — she also retweeted messages by controversial right-wing political figures such as Tommy Robinson, former BNP spokesperson Mark Collett and US talk show host Joe Walsh. During her brief spell as chief of the "virtual party", Blaiklock alleged the party raised £1 million in donations, and over 200 people approached her offering to stand for the party at the May 2019 European Parliament elections if the UK has not left the European Union by then. However, Private Eye has suggested many individuals who actually opposed Brexit had applied online as "candidates, activists or donors with false details" to waste the party's time.

Still, at time of writing The Brexit Party boasts nine MEPs — Tim Aker, Jonathan Bullock, David Coburn, Bill Etheridge, Nigel Farage, Nathan Gill, Julia Reid, Paul Nuttall and Diane James. All originally elected as UKIP candidates, they quit the party in protest over Gerard Batten's leadership, and continue to sit in the Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy group.

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала