Chris Mason: Farage attempts to seize back the agenda after finance row
•Chris Mason: Farage attempts to seize back the agenda after finance rowImage source, PA MediaByChris MasonPolitical editorPublished15 minutes agoNigel Farage has long had a capacity for political thea...
•He has repeatedly insisted he didn't need to disclose what were, he says, personal gifts from before he returned to politics.The weekly, sometimes daily, diet of Reform news conferences at Westminster...
•Many others pointed to the rules demanding such disclosures from benefits received in the 12 months before being elected – and an inquiry began.And the headlines kept coming – not least the Sunday Tim...
هذا الخبر من BBC News. خبر يقدم أدوات ذكاء اصطناعي للتلخيص والترجمة والاستماع.
Chris Mason: Farage attempts to seize back the agenda after finance rowImage source, PA MediaByChris MasonPolitical editorPublished15 minutes agoNigel Farage has long had a capacity for political theatre – and here he goes again.Having tantalised Westminster with a teasing social media post about his "future in public life", he took to Reform's stage, in front of Reform's camera and without journalists in the room, to set out how he would again try to seize the limelight and the initiative.His address held onto its headline until the last few sentences: he will resign as an MP and then refight the seat of Clacton in Essex that has held for the last two years.So why is he doing this?In recent weeks, and indeed days, Nigel Farage has been under the cosh.Headline after headline about his relationships with rich folk willing to give him money and his lack of willingness to disclose and register this, later exposed by journalists, meant his back was against the wall. He has repeatedly insisted he didn't need to disclose what were, he says, personal gifts from before he returned to politics.The weekly, sometimes daily, diet of Reform news conferences at Westminster had dried up.The Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards had opened an inquiry into the £5m gift Farage had received from the Thailand-based British crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne but decided not to declare.Farage insisted he didn't need to, because it was a personal gift. Many others pointed to the rules demanding such disclosures from benefits received in the 12 months before being elected – and an inquiry began.And the headlines kept coming – not least the Sunday Times investigation, published at the weekend, external, into the support given to Farage by George Cottrell, a man previously convicted and jailed for fraud in the US.A key thing to understand here is the inquiry by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, Daniel Greenberg, had the potential to lead to a...المصدر: BBC News | Source: BBC News
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