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Is Farage Frit?
There is a tide in the affairs of men. Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune.
Should Farage throw his hat into the ring and run for a seat in parliament?
He'll never have a better chance.
What say you?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As much as I admire both of them, I don't believe that either TGL or Sir Winston would have lobbied for the UK to leave the EU in the way Mr Farage did. He and we were fortunate in that he had virtually only one political goal and he was not troubled by the burden of having a country to run. In many respects that was his greatest advantage.
I've said it before but the usual suspects are deaf to the reality that Nigel Farage was effectively a one-issue politician (whose lobbying was done without ever being elected to any body other than, ironically, the European parliament, where rightly or wrongly most of his fellow MEPs saw him as an eccentric and often impertinent nuisance. If political success is seeing the one thing you want finally happening, then yes he is a success. If you regard political success as being elected and seeing through that end result yourself then by that standard Farage is a complete failure. He was barred from the official Leave campaign as Cummings knew his association with it would most likely put undecided voters off.
If I spend the best part of my life supporting a particular football team and it finally wins the Premier League it doesn't make me a succesful footballer, only a happy fan.