Nigel Farage Says Ukip Would Prop Up A Minority Tory Government

Farage Outlines Vision Of UK's Political Future
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In a terrifying insight into the future, Nigel Farage has said Ukip would prop up a minority Conservative government if the Tories agreed to a swift and fair referendum on Britain's membership of the European Union.

The Ukip leader accused David Cameron of trying to kick the national vote, planned for 2017 if the Tories win outright next May, "into the long grass".

But the eurosceptic party would agree to a confidence and supply arrangement - where it backs or abstains on budget and legislative programme votes - with a minority Conservative government in return for a quick and full referendum.

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The future deputy PM?

Farage told BBC1's Sunday Politics: "The price would be a full, free and fair referendum on our continued membership of the European Union, the opportunity to get our country back, and for that to happen quickly."

Such an arrangement would require Ukip to hold enough parliamentary seats to make a material difference in the division lobbies.

But Farage predicted that Ukip would continue to send shock waves through the Westminster establishment.

Story continues after slideshow...

10 Policies You Had Forgotten Ukip Had Made
Taxi drivers must wear uniforms(01 of10)
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For those who see a black cab with an illuminated sign saying 'TAXI' on it - and aren't sure whether it's a taxi - Ukip had you covered. When Andrew Neill put this to Farage on The Daily Politics in January, saying: "You favour a compulsory dress code for taxi drivers". Farage said: "Do we?" The policy didn't actually make it into the 16-page manifesto but was mooted by a "discussion group" that fed into Ukip policies, then policy chief David Campbell Bannerman told HuffPost UK. (credit:Anthony Devlin/PA Archive)
Ban the burkha! (Well, in some places)(02 of10)
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In the section about 'Restoring Britishness', the manifesto pledged to "tackle Islamic extremism" by banning the wearing of the burkha or veiled niqab in public buildings and "certain private" ones. "Ukip opposes multiculturalism and political correctness - aiming to create a single British culture embracing all religions and cultures," it said. (credit:Anthony Devlin/PA Archive)
Shield our children from Al Gore's 'propaganda' (03 of10)
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Eurosceptics and climate change sceptics appear to go hand in hand - Ukip say they wanted to abolish the Climate Change Act and ban Al Gore's Oscar-winning documentary An Inconvenient Truth from our schools, calling it "global warming propaganda". It also pledged to stop funding the UN panel on climate change and fund the Met Office "according to forecast accuracy". But they did have a green side... (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Get us all to drive electric cars(04 of10)
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The manifesto said it would "incentivise and support" the use of electric road vehicles. (credit:John Walton/PA Archive)
A 'proper' Treason Act(05 of10)
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Yeah, that's right - a "proper" one. Suck it, traitors. The act would be to prosecute British citizens found guilty of attacks on "the British people or armed forces". Beyond that, there isn't much detail. (credit:Alastair Grant/PA Wire)
Boot camps for young offenders(06 of10)
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Young people consistently in trouble with the law were to be sent to "boot camp" to stop them "spiraling into a life crime". Ominously, that is all the manifesto has to say on the subject. It also pledged to double the number of prison places, presumably in case the camps didn't work. (credit:Jeff Moore/Jeff Moore)
Safeguard British measurements(07 of10)
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Farage wasn't Ukip leader at the time of the 2010 general election but we detect his fingerprints on this. His party pledged to "safeguard" imperial measurements like the pint and the mile from being "undermined" by Brussels. So, Farage won't have to order "half a litre of ale," (or worse, lager) any time soon. (credit:Steve Parsons/PA Wire)
Triple the size of the border staff(08 of10)
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The Border Agency needed to be tripled in size to around 30,000 employees, in order to enforce Ukip's proposed new requirement that every non-UK citizen's entry and exit to the country be recorded. (credit:Steve Parsons/PA Wire)
Return to grants for students(09 of10)
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University students are an unlikely target demographic for the eurosceptic party. Nonetheless, they said they would return to the old student grant system and scrap students loans which are leaving them in "heavy debt" If only those thousands of students who voted for the Lib Dems had known... (credit:Johnny Green/PA Wire)
'English-only' days at parliament(10 of10)
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Bloody Scots, coming down here, taking up their duly elected places in the House of Commons. On "English-only" days, the MPs from Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland would be required to go home and perform the devolved duties of the regional assemblies - whose existing members they would replace. (credit:Steve Parsons/PA Wire)

The next by-election battle, which will be fought in Rochester and Strood, could lead to either David Cameron and Ed Miliband being ousted if their parties are given a further drubbing, he claimed.

Pressed on who he would prefer to be prime minister after the general election, Farage told the programme: "Ask me that after the Rochester by-election because I think there is a possibility that one or both of those leaders may not be leading their parties in to the next general election."

Douglas Carswell, Ukip's first elected MP, has insisted the party is on course for victory in the Kent seat being fought by fellow Tory defector Mark Reckless, adding the win would "fundamentally" change British politics.

Recent polling has put the eurosceptics nine points ahead and Carswell said it "felt a little bit like Clacton".

He told BBC1's Andrew Marr Show: "I think things are looking OK there. If we can win there then I think things are looking fundamentally different."

Carswell said he hoped more of his former colleagues would join him in switching allegiances but insisted the party was "not the Conservative party in exile".

The Clacton victor likened his former party to failed music store HMV and claimed the Conservatives were now "defunct".

"The way the Tory party is retailing politics is like the way HMV retailed music. It's a defunct retail model," he said.

But Boris Johnson said fighting Ukip was like "fighting doppelgangers" and said he struggled to find any areas to disagree with his former colleague on.

Ukip has surged to 25% in the polls and some experts have claimed the soaring level of support would secure the party an astonishing 128 MPs in a general election.

Carswell refused to be drawn on speculation about the number of seats the party could win.

"Let's keep a sense of perspective. We have won a single seat. There are 300-and-something to go to get a majority."

He added: "I don't like bravado talk and I'm not going to use it."

The Conservatives and Labour were left reeling after Ukip dealt both sides major blows when voters went to the polls in two by-elections on Thursday.

Carswell became the first elected MP for the eurosceptics after taking Clacton with a handsome majority of 12,404 and the party was just 617 votes shy of victory in Heywood and Middleton.

Labour leader Ed Miliband is attempting to counter the threat posed by Ukip by promising reforms that would mean migrants have to "earn the right" to state benefits.

Deputy leader Harriet Harman insisted there was no "wobble" in the Labour ranks and denied a leadership change would be required despite concerns about how voters view the party and huge Ukip gains in Heywood and Middleton.

In a staggering study for the Mail on Sunday fresh off the back of the anti-Brussels party's by-election victory in Clacton, Nigel Farage won the support of one in four voters.

The Survation poll put Labour and the Tories both on 31% while the Liberal Democrats are on 8% and experts suggest that the ratings would give Labour 253 MPs, Conservatives 187, Ukip 128, Lib Dems 11 and other parties, such as the SNP, 71.

John Curtice, professor of politics at Strathclyde University, told the Mail on Sunday: "Today's poll suggests Ukip's support has increased much more in the south of England outside London than it has elsewhere in the UK - by a staggering 34 points.

"If that level was recorded throughout the South, Ukip could win as many as 128 seats, with no less than 102 of them coming from the Conservatives, whose vote in the region is down 14 points."

Private polling analysis seen by The Sunday Times, however, puts the party on course to win a more circumspect maximum of 25 MPs, although the number is still far higher than previous predictions.