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Tuesday 12 November 2019 9:55 am  |  Updated:  Tuesday 12 November 2019 9:56 am

General Election 2019: Farage calls on Conservatives to stand aside for Brexit Party

By: Catherine Neilan

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HARTLEPOOL, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 11: Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage is interviewed as he holds a press visit to wartime memorials on Hartlepool Headland during a visit to the town with the Brexit Party general election campaign tour on November 11, 2019 in Hartlepool, England. Nigel Farage has announced that his party will not stand in 317 seats won by the Conservative Party in 2017. Britain goes to the polls on December 12 to vote in a pre-Christmas general election. (Photo by Ian Forsyth/Getty Images)

Fresh from his apparently “unilateral” decision that The Brexit Party candidates would not contest seats won by Tories in 2017, Nigel Farage is now demanding a reciprocal arrangement.

The arch-Eurosceptic has urged Conservative candidates in some Labour-held seats to step aside for his own party.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast this morning, he said: “I’ve just gifted the Conservative party nearly two dozen seats and I did it because I believe in Leave.

“Now if they believed in leave what they would do is stand aside in some seats in Labour areas where the Conservative party has not won for 100 years and will never win.

“I think what you’re seeing from this reaction is for the Conservative party it is about them as a party, not about delivering Brexit.”

Assuming Boris Johnson returns to Downing Street as Prime Minister, Farage said The Brexit Party candidates would “hold him to account”.

“Too often over the years, recent years, the Conservatives have made promises and then backtracked on them. So that’s our plan, we need to win some of those Labour seats.”

Farage also rubbished any suggestions that US President Donald Trump had a hand in yesterday’s surprise move, saying the pair had not spoken since the LBC interview.

“He has no influence over my decision at all,” Farage said.

“My decision is made, number one, to stop a second referendum, to prevent Liberal Democrats winning seats in the south and the south-west, and number two, because Boris Johnson has indicated we’re now going for a free-trade deal, not political linkage.”

Main image: Getty

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On this day: Brits vote in referendum that changes everything

UK flag and EU flag waving side by side, symbolizing Brexit referendum discussions and future political relations.

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