Woman arrested after drink thrown at Nigel Farage
Two people have been arrested after Nigel Farage had a drink thrown over him while launching his personal election campaign in Clacton.
The Reform UK leader was leaving a pub after carrying out media interviews when a woman appeared to launch a McDonald’s banana milkshake over his face and suit jacket.
Essex Police said a 25-year-old woman was arrested on suspicion of assault.
While making the arrest, the force said a man was also detained on suspicion of assaulting an emergency worker.
“Both individuals remain in custody for questioning,” a police spokesperson said.
The politician was walking out of the Moon and Starfish – a JD Wetherspoon pub run by prominent Brexiteer Tim Martin – to the Reform UK party bus at the time.
Mr Farage, who had milkshake thrown over him in Newcastle upon Tyne in 2019, appeared to make light of the incident later, posing with a tray of four banana milkshakes in the nearby seaside village of Jaywick.
The 60-year-old previously said he would not stand in the general election, before making a U-turn on Monday, when he announced his candidacy in the Essex seat.
Prior to the milkshake incident, Mr Farage said “you will no longer be ignored” as he spoke on the seafront in Clacton-on-Sea.
The constituency, which became the first seat in the UK to elect a UKIP MP in 2014, had a Conservative majority of 24,702 at the last general election in 2019 when Giles Watling was re-elected.
Mr Farage, formerly the leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) and the Brexit Party, told a crowd that “no longer will you be ignored”.
“I hope that having a national figure representing this constituency will put Clacton on the map,” said Mr Farage, who is also now Reform UK’s party leader.
“I will stand up and fight for you… send me to Parliament to be a bloody nuisance.”
Addressing the rally, Mr Farage said the Tories should “pay a big price” for betraying the promises of Brexit.
‘Altar of his vanity’
Mr Watling said he felt it was his job to “transform Clacton’s future” by using government funding he had secured.
Labour candidate Jovan Owusu-Nepaul said Britain was “crying out for change” as the party fought for every seat.
“The only way to bring about change is by voting the Tories out and electing a new Labour government,” he said.
The other candidates announced as standing in Clacton so far are:
- Matthew Bensilum, Liberal Democrats
- Natasha Osben, Green Party
Analysis
By Ben Schofield, BBC political correspondent, East of England
Even before Mr Farage’s “emergency” press conference on Monday, bookies had slashed the odds of Reform UK winning Clacton, which also includes the other seaside towns of Frinton-on-Sea and Walton-on-the-Naze as well as a rural, farming hinterland of smaller villages.
Without hearing the announcement, punters were apparently predicting that Mr Farage would change his mind about standing in a constituency, as well as the seat he would choose.
But what issues could Clacton’s next MP face?
It had one of the highest pro-Leave votes in the country in the Brexit referendum.
While parts of the constituency are relatively affluent, such as Frinton, it is also home to some of the UK’s most deprived areas and the local economy is heavily reliant on tourism, with almost one million people visiting Clacton Pier in 2022 for example.
Average weekly earnings of those living in the constituency were £593 in 2023, far behind the Eastern average of £706. A higher proportion of 16-64 year olds claim out-of-work benefits than the regional average – 4.9% in April 2024 compared to 3.1% across the East region.