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NIGEL Farage warned he will obliterate the Tories in the next General Election unless they deliver Brexit by Halloween.

He said his Brexit Party’s Euro election victory was a huge “wake-up call” to politicians who have failed to honour their promise to voters.

 Jubilant Nigel Farage celebrates with MEPs after he gave the Tories and Labour an EU election hammering
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Jubilant Nigel Farage celebrates with MEPs after he gave the Tories and Labour an EU election hammeringCredit: �2019 Gustavo Valiente / i-Images
 Nigel Farage celebrates victory with Ann Widdecombe as they spark panic over Brexit in the Tory leadership race
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Nigel Farage celebrates victory with Ann Widdecombe as they spark panic over Brexit in the Tory leadership raceCredit: AFP or licensors
 Boris Johnson and his girlfriend Carrie Symmonds leave his Oxfordshire home on Monday
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Boris Johnson and his girlfriend Carrie Symmonds leave his Oxfordshire home on MondayCredit: David Dyson

Farage said: “This clearly will put pressure on the Tories and pressure on the leadership candidates. Are they going to respond?

“If we don’t leave on the 31 October then I believe we can produce a result in the next General Election that will stun them.”

He threw down the gauntlet after his six-week old party won 29 MEP seats as voters abandoned both Tories and Labour to register fury at the stalled Brexit process.

His challenge triggered a swift reaction among the Tory leadership hopefuls — with the rivals scrambling to pledge Brexit by Halloween and in some cases edge towards No Deal.

Bookies’ favourite Boris Johnson said the public had delivered “a crushing rebuke” for the abject failure to deliver Brexit.

He added: “If we go on like this, we will be fired. Dismissed from the job of running the country.”

Fellow Brexiteer Dominic Raab said the message from voters was “unless we get on and actually leave the EU they will rightly kick us out at the next election”.

Environment Secretary Michael Gove echoed that sentiment, saying: “One message is clear from these results — we absolutely need to deliver Brexit. I led the campaign to take Britain out of the European Union and we must honour that referendum result.”

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EU Elections 2019: Final results of the European Parliament elections saw the new Brexit Party dominate the elections

NIGE'S WIN SPARKS PANIC

Andrea Leadsom, who resigned from the Cabinet over Theresa May’s doomed Brexit deal, said: “These results are truly terrible and demonstrate the damage that has been done to the Conservative Party and to the country in not leaving the European Union.

“It is now vital we now find a way to decisively leave the EU.”

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said the party risked a wipeout if it did not deliver.

He tweeted: “We knew it was coming but still a painful result.

"Existential risk to our party unless we now come together and get Brexit done.”

He also sparked furious backlash last night by warning that the Conservatives will commit “political suicide” if they go for a no-deal Brexit.
He told The Daily Telegraph “that would delight Nigel Farage and probably put Jeremy Corbyn in No10 by Christmas”.

Work and Pensions Secretary Esther McVey, a hardline Brexiteer, pushed for No Deal.

She said: “We must leave the EU on 31st October with a clean break, nothing else will wash now.”

But Heath Secretary Matt Hancock continued to stress the need for compromise, saying the Tories had to come up with a plan that can get through Parliament.

He said: “The brutal truth is plans that cannot command the confidence of parliament would risk a general election.

“We would be punished for our failure to deliver Brexit and under any leader this would risk Corbyn by Christmas.”

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Results across the country in full after Brexit Party victory

East of England (7 MEPs)

Brexit Party 38%, Lib Dems 23%, Greens 13%, Tories 10%, Labour 9%, Change UK 4%, Ukip 3%

Brexit Party 3 MEPs, Lib Dems 2, Greens 1, Tories 1

East Midlands (5 MEPs)

Brexit Party 38%, Lib Dems 17%, Labour 14%, Tories 11%, Greens 11%, Ukip 5%, Change UK 4%

Brexit Party 3 MEPs, Lib Dems 1, Labour 1

London (8 MEPs)

Lib Dems 27%, Labour 24, Brexit Party 18%, Greens 12%, Tories 8%, Change UK 5%, Ukip 2%

Lib Dems 3 MEPs, Labour 2, Brexit Party 2, Greens 1

North East (3 MEPs)

Brexit Party 39%, Labour 19%, Lib Dems 17%, Greens 8%, Tories 7%, Ukip 6%, Change UK 4%

Brexit Party 2 MEPs, Labour 1

North West (8 MEPs)

Brexit Party 31%, Labour 22%, Lib Dems 17%, Greens 13%, Tories 8%, Ukip 4%, Change UK 3%

Brexit Party 3 MEPs, Labour 2, Lib Dems 2, Greens 1

South East (10 MEPs)

Brexit Party 36%, Lib Dems 26%, Greens 14%, Tories 10%, Labour 7%, Change UK 4%, Ukip 2%

Brexit Party 4 MEPs, Lib Dems 3, Greens 1, Tories 1, Labour 1

South West (6 MEPs)

Brexit Party 37%, Lib Dems 23%, Greens 18%, Tories 9%, Labour 7% Ukip 3%, Change UK 3%

Brexit Party 3, Lib Dems 2, Greens 1

West Midlands (7 MEPs)

Brexit Party 38%, Labour 17%, Lib Dems 16%, Greens 11%, Tories 10%, Ukip 5%, Change UK 3%

Brexit Party 3 MEPs, Labour 1, Lib Dems 1, Greens 1, Tories 1

Yorkshire & Humber (6 MEPs)

Brexit Party 37%, Labour 16%, Lib Dems 16%, Greens 13%, Tories 7%, Ukip 4%, Yorkshire Party 4%, Change UK 2%

Brexit Party 3 MEPs, Labour 1, Lib Dems 1, Greens 1

Wales (4 MEPs)

Brexit Party 33%, Plaid Cymru 20%, Labour 15%, Lib Dems 14%, Tories 7%, Greens 6%, Ukip 3%

Brexit Party 2 MEPs, Plaid Cymru 1, Labour 1

Scotland (6 MEPs)

[Official results declared 11am, but nearly all votes are already counted]

SNP 38%, Brexit Party 15%, Lib Dems 14%, Tories 12%, Scottish Labour 9%, Greens 8%

SNP 3 MEPs, Brexit Party 1, Lib Dems 1, Tories 1 (Predicted)

Northern Ireland (3 MEPs)

Full results expected Tuesday afternoon

CORBYN FACES MUTINY

But despite the renewed pledges, Farage said voters simply cannot trust the Tories to get Britain out of the EU by the end of October.

He added: “Just because candidates are saying it doesn’t mean you have to believe them. I

"have to tell you I don’t. Why would you trust any of them?”

Farage also blasted Corbyn’s Labour for their Brexit betrayal, saying: “They’ve been mightily trounced by the Brexit Party.

“In some ways the Labour party today are in more trouble than the Conservative party.”

Farage also insisted his Brexit Party should be allowed to join any future talks in Brussels over Brexit.

BREXHIT LIST

Mrs May, who will remain PM until the Tories choose a new leader, stayed largely out of sight — although she did emerge from Chequers to go on a walk with husband Philip.

She also tweeted: “A very disappointing night for the Tories. I sincerely hope these results focus minds in Parliament.”

But leading Tory Brexiteer Steve Baker suggested the wound was self-inflicted.

He said: “It is a grave time for our party but I’m not surprised that the result is as bad as it is. You just can’t break promises like this and expect to go unpunished.”

The Sun Says: Wake-up call

THE Remainers have lost the plot.

Laughably, they claim that they somehow “won” the European elections.

All you need to do is combine the votes of a bunch of different parties, pretend the Tories don’t back Brexit and, hey presto, you’ve got a crushing victory.

It’s time for a reality check. The public have just made the Brexit Party the biggest party not just in Britain but in the entirety of the European Parliament.

The message from the electorate was frustration with the dog’s dinner that Britain’s two biggest parliamentary parties have made of Brexit. Nothing more, nothing less.

It wasn’t a demand to revoke Article 50 or for a second referendum. It wasn’t a sign people have changed their mind.

It was simply a damning verdict on the collective incompetence of Britain’s two establishment parties, and one that will almost certainly be repeated at a General Election if it happens soon.

Nigel Farage managed to build a brand new party out of the ashes of Ukip and turn it into a juggernaut, with one clear policy: to leave the EU.

By contrast, the Remainers in Change UK — or the Independent Group, or whatever they’re called these days — barely limped over the finish line.

What does that tell you?

Westminster has one last chance to honour the largest democratic vote in our history.

Or the two-party system is finished.

An opinion poll revealed more than half those who voted Tory in the General Election had switched to the Brexit Party.

And pollster John Curtice warned many of them will not switch back until the UK leaves the EU.

He said: “Now that Theresa May hasn’t delivered, it seems to me once bitten, twice shy.

“They will probably wish to see the UK leaving the European Union before many of them are willing to go back again.”

What do MEPs do, what powers do they have and how can it affect the votes?

MEPs are Members of the European Parliament - representatives who sit in Europe on our behalf.

Britain has 73 of those who represent 12 of the country's regions.

They join members from across the 28 other EU member states to form the European Parliament.

MEPs don't make EU law but they do have the right to vote on directives and regulations that can be adopted by the other countries.

They do vote on whether to pass laws or not - including on workers' rights, health and safety, climate change, health care and migration.

They essentially set the agenda in the EU.

The political parties from across the 28 countries form blocks with other like minded groups. Whichever group is the largest elects the European Parliament President.

MEPs also vote on the EU budget and influence how that money is spend.

They earn £7,957 a month - around the same as a British MP. MEPs also get a monthly allowance for expenses to cover their office, rent, phone or staff.

They can hold the European Commission to account and can force it to resign.

 Boris Johnson leaving his home today with girlfriend Carrie Symonds
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Boris Johnson leaving his home today with girlfriend Carrie Symonds
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