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Moment SEVEN hecklers are booted out of chaotic Reform victory speech – as Nigel Farage yells ‘boring’ and jokes ‘this is good preparation for the Commons’

Nigel Farage’s speech was interrupted by seven hecklers today as he responded by shouting ‘boring’ after winning a UK parliamentary seat at his eighth attempt.

Reform UK’s leader was attempting to give a press conference in Westminster this afternoon when he was repeatedly interrupted by people in the audience.

Mr Farage arrived at the event to the sound of dance music and a standing ovation from supporters, with the Reform UK logo and ‘Britain Needs Reform’ on the wall.

But then a heckler started interrupting amid calls from the audience for them to be removed. The man was quickly escorted out before more shouting was heard as Mr Farage, who was elected as the MP for Clacton overnight, stood behind a podium.

The further hecklers were also then removed one by one as the press conference descended into chaos and Mr Farage repeatedly shouted ‘boring’ in response.

Nigel Farage is heckled during at a Reform UK press conference in London this afternoon

Nigel Farage is heckled during at a Reform UK press conference in London this afternoon

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

Nigel Farage reacts as a protester interrupts his press conference in London this afternoon

Nigel Farage reacts as a protester interrupts his press conference in London this afternoon

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage reacts as a protester interrupts his speech in London today

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage reacts as a protester interrupts his speech in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

Mr Farage also accused one of the hecklers who interrupted him of being ‘steaming’ and shouted ‘boring!’ nine times as a second heckler started speaking.

Both members of the audience were escorted out of the venue. As one man started shouting at him, he responded: ‘Are you downwind a couple already?

‘You’ve had a bigger lunch than I have. Cor, he’s absolutely steaming isn’t he? That’s all right, there’s still plenty of beer left in the pub, mate.’

As a fourth heckler interrupted him, the Reform UK leader said: ‘You’ll do yourself a nasty mate. You’ll have a stroke if you carry on like this.’

Mr Farage, facing further heckling from a fifth person, joked: ‘This is good preparation for the House of Commons I suppose, isn’t it? It’s going to be very lively in there.’

As a woman shouted, Mr Farage added: ‘Oh do buck up really, please love, I’m so sorry.’ He shouted ‘bye darling’ as she was removed.

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today 

Reform MPs Richard Tice, Nigel Farage, Lee Anderson and Rupert Lowe in London today

Reform MPs Richard Tice, Nigel Farage, Lee Anderson and Rupert Lowe in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler is escorted out as Reform party leader Nigel Farage tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

Nigel Farage’s press conference in Westminster this afternoon is interrupted by hecklers 

Nigel Farage is heckled during at a Reform UK press conference in London this afternoon

Nigel Farage is heckled during at a Reform UK press conference in London this afternoon

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

A heckler interrupts Reform party leader Nigel Farage as he tries to speak in London today

Mr Farage added: ‘Any more for any more?’ After a pause, a man shouted: ‘Actually yes.’ Mr Farage added: ‘We haven’t organised this very well, have we?’

After the press conference had finished, his fellow Reform UK MP Lee Anderson called the hecklers ‘professional nuisances’, adding: ‘I think they need to get a job.’

Once the press conference could begin properly, Mr Farage also outlined his desire to make changes to the party.

He said: ‘Above all what we’re going to do from today is we’re going to professionalise the party, we’re going to democratise the party and those few bad apples that have crept in will be gone, will be long gone, and we will never have any of their type back in our organisation. You have a 100 per cent promise on that.’

Mr Farage then said Reform UK’s focus will be on going ‘after Labour votes’.

He added: ‘Old Labour was very, very patriotic. It believed in the country. It believed in its people. New Labour far less so.

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A heckler is led away during Nigel Farage’s press conference in Westminster this afternoon

Once the press conference could begin properly, Mr Farage also outlined his desire to make changes to the party

Hecklers interrupt Nigel Farage’s press conference in Westminster this afternoon

Nigel Farage is heckled during at a Reform UK press conference in London this afternoon

Nigel Farage is heckled during at a Reform UK press conference in London this afternoon

Nigel Farage’s press conference in Westminster this afternoon is interrupted by hecklers

A heckler is led away during Nigel Farage’s press conference in Westminster this afternoon

During the conference, multiple hecklers were removed from the room

Hecklers interrupt Nigel Farage’s press conference in Westminster this afternoon

Nigel Farage puts his head in his hand in Westminster today as the speech is interrupted 

A heckler is led away during Nigel Farage’s press conference in Westminster this afternoon

An exasperated Nigel Farage began his speech by calling the demonstrators 'boring'

Hecklers interrupt Nigel Farage’s press conference in Westminster this afternoon

‘And the journey that Lee Anderson has been on is a journey that at least a couple of million people have been on, and it’ll be many, many more by the time we’re finished, because no doubt, our priority now is to go after Labour votes. That is what we’re going to be doing.

Introducing Reform’s Ashfield MP Mr Anderson, Mr Farage said: ‘Lee Anderson took a brave decision. 

‘He decided to join Reform UK. He was much mocked and derided by colleagues who had similar political opinions to him but didn’t have the guts to do it. They’ve all lost their seats overnight.’

Mr Anderson then claimed he would be looking at Sir Keir Starmer’s Government in the Commons and thinking ‘what has our country come to’.

The Reform UK MP said the UK’s Prime Minister and his ‘motley crew absolutely scares me to death, I’m going to be sat on the green benches next week looking at them and thinking what has our country come to’.

Reform MPs Richard Tice, Nigel Farage, Lee Anderson and Rupert Lowe in London today

Reform MPs Richard Tice, Nigel Farage, Lee Anderson and Rupert Lowe in London today

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage with Richard Tice at the press conference in London today

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage with Richard Tice at the press conference in London today

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage arrives at the press conference in London today

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage arrives at the press conference in London today

Mr Farage then laughed and said ‘stitch-up merchants’ as he was asked a question by Channel 4 News.

The Reform UK leader has launched a series of attacks against the broadcaster after it reported that a canvasser for his party had used racist language.

Channel 4 then asked him about the leadership and direction of the party, to which he responded that he would stay at the helm but indicated that by the 2029 election ‘somebody younger and better-looking’ will have come along.

He said: ‘I think this was going to be the first step of a very, very big journey that this was a five… year plan.

‘I believe with structure, funding, professionalism, we can be in a very, very serious position to contest the 2029 general election.

‘I suspect by then somebody younger and better-looking will come along and when they do I will recognise it. I will go on leading (the party)… until such a time when somebody else comes along.’

Leader of Reform UK, Nigel Farage and Chairman of Reform UK, Richard Tice, in London today

Leader of Reform UK, Nigel Farage and Chairman of Reform UK, Richard Tice, in London today 

Reform MPs Richard Tice, Nigel Farage, Lee Anderson and Rupert Lowe in London today

Reform MPs Richard Tice, Nigel Farage, Lee Anderson and Rupert Lowe in London today

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage pauses as he speaks to the media in London today

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage pauses as he speaks to the media in London today

Mr Farage also said he is ‘launching criminal legal action’ against Colin Bloom of Vetting.Com as he vowed to ‘professionalise’ Reform UK.

Facing a question about the racism row engulfing the party, its leader again blamed the firm it contracted to vet candidates.

He also said: ‘I made it clear that Ukip would be a non-racist, non-sectarian party, and in the end it was.

‘I will jolly well make sure, starting today, that we do not want people with desperately unpleasant views. We will not tolerate people with these views. They will be gone.

‘And we’ll have the funding after this, we’ll have the support coming in to be able to absolutely professionalise the party. This will never happen again.’

Speaking further about the issue, Mr Farage said that vetting candidates is ‘easy’ and that most racism in British politics is in the Labour Party.

Reform MP for Ashfield, Lee Anderson, speaks to the media during a press conference today

Reform MP for Ashfield, Lee Anderson, speaks to the media during a press conference today

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage with Richard Tice at the press conference in London today

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage with Richard Tice at the press conference in London today

Asked how he would vet Reform candidates properly going forward, including for racism, he said: ‘Very easy. You go back through their social media records, you obviously do police checks and things like that, no, it’s not difficult to do it and the message has to be clear and simple.

‘We don’t want anyone like that involved with us. Indeed I mean the racism problem in the Labour Party was enormous, but to Keir Starmer’s credit actually he did quite a lot by getting rid of Jeremy Corbyn, who ironically has been re-elected.

‘There’s an awful lot we can do. There is plenty of racism in British politics, it’s mostly in the Labour Party.’

Asked whether he would give up his broadcasting career and still planned to go and support Donald Trump in his US presidential election campaign, Mr Farage said: ‘I haven’t got a clue. I haven’t thought any of this through yet.

‘We’ve been so busy focused on running to the line of July the 4th that we have a lot to think about. But you known what you say I’m a very busy man – you want to get a job done ask a busy man to do it, they somehow always find the time.’

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage reacts as a protester interrupts his speech in London today

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage reacts as a protester interrupts his speech in London today

Reform MP for Ashfield, Lee Anderson, speaks to the media during a press conference today

Reform MP for Ashfield, Lee Anderson, speaks to the media during a press conference today

Mr Farage also said he was not going into Westminster to ‘behave terribly’ but would challenge conventions after being elected as an MP for the first time.

Asked how he would democratise Reform UK, which now has four MPs, and shake up Westminster from the inside as a ‘disruptor’, he said he did not know whether his party would have the ‘power to change the systems’ and that being a ‘disruptor’ can be considered negative but could be ‘a very positive context because it sparks a very, very different debate’.

‘But we’re not going in to behave terribly or anything like that, but certainly going in to challenge conventions and certainly going in believing that the broad church that is the Conservative Party that currently has no religion, simply won’t be able to provide any sort of challenge at all.

‘And we may be be fewer in number but we’re absolutely united in what we believe in and what we stand for.’

He also said Reform UK’s constitution would ‘get put fully to the conference’.

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage pauses as he speaks to the media in London today

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage pauses as he speaks to the media in London today

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage speaks to the media in London this afternoon

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage speaks to the media in London this afternoon

In the early hours of today, Mr Farage was declared MP for Clacton shortly after Mr Anderson became the party’s first MP of the night with victory in Ashfield.

Reform’s party chairman Richard Tice won Boston and Skegness, while former Southampton FC chairman Rupert Lowe won Great Yarmouth – both from the Tories.

Some 4.1million people voted for Reform, giving it a 14 per cent share – with its candidates coming second in 89 seats, many in Labour-won areas of northern England and Wales.

Earlier, Mr Farage said Reform was ‘coming for Labour’, while Mr Tice described Reform as filling a ‘vacuum’ in right-wing politics in Britain.

Meanwhile Mr Tice blasted the ‘injustice’ of the first-past-the-post electoral system, after the Liberal Democrats gained 71 seats with 3.5million votes. This meant the Lib Dems had 67 more seats than Reform despite having about 500,000 fewer votes.

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage speaks to the media in London this afternoon

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage speaks to the media in London this afternoon

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage speaks to the media in London this afternoon

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage speaks to the media in London this afternoon

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage speaks to the media in London this afternoon

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage speaks to the media in London this afternoon

Mr Tice won Boston and Skegness, beating the Conservatives to secure his party’s fourth seat of the night. He told BBC Radio 4’s Today that ‘we have given the opportunity to millions of people… to vote with their heart and what they believe in’.

Mr Tice predicted that demands for electoral change would ‘grow and grow’, adding: ‘There’s a huge vacuum on the right of British politics that we are filling.’

After winning in Clacton, Mr Farage said there was now a ‘massive gap on the centre-right of British politics and my job is to fill it’.

He said he wants to ‘build a mass national movement over the course of next few years’ with the aim of challenging the 2029 general election.

And Mr Farage said it is not just the Tories he is taking on, and ‘we’re coming for Labour , be in no doubt about that’.

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‘This is just the first step of something that is going to stun all of you,’ he said.

Nigel Farage celebrates with his girlfriend Laure Ferrari after he won in Clacton-on-Sea, Essex

Nigel Farage celebrates with his girlfriend Laure Ferrari after he won in Clacton-on-Sea, Essex 

Nigel Farage celebrates after winning his first seat in parliament in Clacton-on-Sea early today

Nigel Farage celebrates after winning his first seat in parliament in Clacton-on-Sea early today

Mr Farage overturned a 25,000 Conservative majority to take the Essex seaside town by more than 8,000 votes, while Reform beat the Tories to finish second in a string of constituencies.

It was the eighth attempt by Mr Farage to win a Westminster seat after years of trying.

While Reform UK was formed in 2018, Mr Farage has sought to become an MP multiple times without success.

He was a member of the European Parliament for 20 years, during which time he campaigned fiercely for the UK to leave the EU.

Mr Farage said: ‘I think what Reform UK has achieved in just a few short weeks is extraordinary. We are going to come second in hundreds of constituencies.

‘My plan is to build a mass national movement over the course of next few years as hopefully be big enough to challenge the General Election properly in 2029. There ‘s no enthusiasm for Labour or Starmer whatsoever… this Labour Government will be in trouble very very quickly and we will now be targeting Labour votes. We’re coming for Labour, be in no doubt about that.’

This was the eighth attempt by Mr Farage to win a Westminster seat after years of trying

This was the eighth attempt by Mr Farage to win a Westminster seat after years of trying

Mr Farage won the seat with 21,225 votes compared to the Tories’ 12,820. Labour finished third on 7,448.

Mr Farage said in a speech at the election count: ‘It’s not just disappointment with the Conservative party, there is a massive gap on the centre-right of British politics and my job is to fill it,’

He told reporters Reform will be a ‘non-racist, non-sectarian’ party and this election is the ‘beginning of the end’ for the Tory party.

‘This is just the first step, I set out with a goal to win millions of votes, to get a bridgehead in Parliament and that’s what we’ve done so I’m very pleased,’ he added.

He said the Reform party would move forward ‘very rapidly’.

He said: ‘I’ve got to professionalise it, I’ve got to democratise it, I’ve got to get rid of a few idiots that found it too easy to get on board. They will all go, they will all go, this will be a non-racist, non-sectarian party. Absolutely and I give my word on that.’

Reform UK's Richard Tice is elected in Boston and Skegness overnight

Reform UK’s Richard Tice is elected in Boston and Skegness overnight

Shortly after, the party also took the seat of Great Yarmouth from the Tories. And Mr Tice won Boston and Skegness.

Just after 2am it was confirmed that Reform’s candidate in Ashfield, Mr Anderson, comfortably held on to the seat.

The Tories, who won it in 2019 under Boris Johnson, finished in fourth with just 3,271 votes.

Mr Anderson, who defected to Reform from the Tories in March, got 17,062, with Labour finishing second on 11,553.

He said: ‘I said a few weeks back that there was going to be a reckoning on election night, and Ashfield, which is the capital of common sense, they’re part of that reckoning.

‘This wonderful place which I call my home is now going to have a say in how this country is shaped in the future.

Reform MP Lee Anderson is announced as winner at the general election count in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, overnight

Reform MP Lee Anderson is announced as winner at the general election count in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, overnight

‘I want my country back and Ashfield can play their part in that.’

However, the party failed to win in Barnsley North and South, in which the exit poll predicted it would be victorious.

The official 10pm exit poll projected the insurgent party’s seat haul could hit 13 – a shock tally that sent shockwaves through Conservative headquarters. That was later revised down to four.

But in a sign of the scale of the revolt caused by Mr Farage’s party, it came second in Blyth and Ashington, finishing on 10,857 votes and pushing the Tories into third on 6,121.

It came second in Sunderland Central with 10,779 votes to the Tories’ 5,731, and in Houghton and Sunderland South by 11,668 votes to 5,514.

In Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West, Reform beat the Tories with 7,815 votes compared to 4,228, while in Washington and Gateshead South it finished second with 10,769 votes to the Tories’ 4,654. Labour won all these seats.

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