The main feature of the Brexit Party’s official website shows a ten-point explainer demolishing the Boris Johnson Brexit deal which the party now backs.
I'm just wondering if anybody at the Brexit Party HQ is regretting their decision to make the main feature of their website a 10 point demolition of the Boris Johnson deal that Nigel Farage has today backed? It's all still live on the site, obviously https://t.co/Rvdr15eVBW pic.twitter.com/vwt7pvPisG
— Martin Belam (@MartinBelam) November 11, 2019
The highlighted link to “Boris’ deal” shows a number of points explaining that “the prime minister’s deal is not a proper Brexit” and is “far removed from what 17.4m of us voted for in 2016.
On Monday morning Nigel Farage backtracked on claims to stand a candidate in every seat in the country, deciding instead to stand down candidates in seats where the Conservative Party already look set to win.
It is an attempt to ensure that Johnson’s deal can get through parliament. However, the party’s website currently asks: “Can any Brexiteer inclined to support this Treaty honestly say that it amounts to a proper Brexit?”
It was pointed out by Guardian writer Martin Belam, who said: “I’m just wondering if anybody at the Brexit Party HQ is regretting their decision to make the main feature of their website a 10 point demolition of the Boris Johnson deal that Nigel Farage has today backed? It’s all still live on the site, obviously.”
"Can any Brexiteer inclined to support this Treaty honestly say that it amounts to a proper Brexit?" pic.twitter.com/HBQEtcjxmT
— Martin Belam (@MartinBelam) November 11, 2019
READ MORE: Dumped Brexit Party candidate concerned about ‘lost’ £100 entry feeREAD MORE: Nigel Farage ‘bottles it’ as he agrees not to contest 317 seats held by the ToriesREAD MORE: ‘Lord Farage’ – Twitter mocks Brexit Party peerage offer 48 hours before leader drops candidatesA reply to the tweet pointed out the party’s Google ad campaign is also taking apart the PM’s deal, claiming “we need a clean-break” and “Boris’ deal is not Brexit”.
Another Twitter user wrote back: “There are now two dozen versions of what #Brexit means, each one through the miracle of technology targeted to a constituency near you.”