Nigel Farage has insisted he was not flouting coronavirus rules by travelling more than 100 miles during the coronavirus lockdown to film a rant about migrants.
The Brexit Party leader travelled from his Kent home to a beach in Pett in East Sussex before heading to Hastings, despite members of the public being told to stay at home.
The video, continuing his regular complaints about migrants, was later emailed out to supporters to claim ‘the media aren’t reporting this’.
He failed to spot a single migrant while on the South East England beach.
The video also appeared on the Brexiteer’s Twitter account, with users criticising his apparent flouting of the rules.
James Felton replied: ‘I’m not sure popping out to do a racism counts as exercise’.
‘Crikey! The illegal immigrants are so sneaky these days….’ noted James Archer. ‘All that videoing and you can’t even see one, that’s how bad it’s got.’
‘How can I remain relevant asks the most irrelevant man in Britain,’ wrote Pau Singj.
‘Haven’t you noticed that there’s a crisis Nigel?’ tweeted Helen Salmon. ‘Many of the workers in the NHS and in care homes are from immigrant backgrounds. Your racism disgusts me.’
https://twitter.com/Nigel_Farage/status/1255237021385318401?s=20
‘Pick some fruit, Nigel!’ wrote another. ‘One more Brit Picker one less illegal immigrant! Go on, do it for Ingerland!’
But Farage insisted he is a ‘key worker’ allowed to travel around during the UK coronavirus lockdown because he is also a ‘broadcaster’ providing a ‘public service’.
A spokesman for the Brexiteer told the Daily Mirror: ‘Nigel was working as a broadcaster. His interviews taken as part of the report were later used on LBC Radio.’
Asked if it was an ‘essential journey’, asked told a reporter: ‘Is it your job to enforce the law? I have told you the justification.’
Have your say
Send your letters for publication to The New European by emailing letters@theneweuropean.co.uk and pick up an edition each Thursday for more comment and analysis. Find your nearest stockist here or subscribe to a print or digital edition for just £13. You can also join our readers' Facebook group to keep the discussion and debate going with thousands of fellow pro-Europeans.