Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has the contents of a drink cup thrown in face on Monday. (Ben Stansall / AFP)
- Right-wing politician Nigel Farage had a drink thrown in his face on Tuesday, his first full day of campaigning.
- Farage this week announced he would run in the UK’s 4 July elections.
- Police arrested a 23-year-old woman.
Nigel Farage, new leader of Britain’s right-wing Reform Party and thorn in the side of the governing Conservatives, was doused with a soft drink on Tuesday during his first full day of campaigning for a seat in parliament in the 4 July election.
On Monday, Farage produced the biggest shock of the campaign so far by announcing he would head Reform and run in the election, a major blow to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, whose Conservative Party trails Labour badly in surveys.
Farage is best known for having helped lead a successful campaign in 2016 for Britain to leave the European Union, and his popularity has put pressure on a succession of Conservative prime ministers to take tougher positions on immigration.
Shortly after launching his campaign for election in the seat of Clacton-on-Sea, southeast England, Farage was approached by a woman who threw a large cup of soft drink over him as he left a pub, footage posted on social media showed.
He appeared unharmed as he was led away by security.
Richard Tice, the chairman of Reform, called the attacker a “juvenile moron”, saying his party would not be bullied off the campaign trail and the incident would help it win hundreds of thousands more votes.
Local police said they had arrested a 23-year-old woman on suspicion of assault.
Interior minister James Cleverly condemned the incident as unacceptable.
A former commodities trader who is often pictured with a cigarette and pint of beer in hand, Farage has for three decades been the figurehead of euroscepticism in Britain, and is no stranger to controversy.
Charismatic and divisive, he has in the past made comments that his political opponents have called racist. During the Brexit campaign, Farage appeared in front of a poster showing lines of migrants under the slogan “Breaking Point”; last month he said Muslims did not share British values.
He was previously doused in milkshake in 2019 while campaigning for the Brexit Party, Reform’s predecessor, in Newcastle before a European Parliament election.
On that occasion, his attacker was ordered to pay for his suit to be cleaned after pleading guilty to common assault and criminal damage.
Discussion about this post