Election gift for Boris Johnson: U.K. Brexit Party stands down in Conservative seats
The move increases the chances Johnson will remain prime minister
U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson won the most significant boost of his election campaign to date, after Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage said he would not contest 317 seats where the Conservative Party won in 2017.
In a move that sent sterling soaring by increasing the chances Johnson will remain prime minister, Farage said Brexit was in peril, so he would stand down candidates in Conservative-held seats but contest most of the rest, including some where the Conservatives had ambitions of ousting Labour.
"The Brexit Party will not contest the 317 seats the Conservatives won at the last election," Farage said. A week ago, he had promised to field 600 candidates unless Johnson went for a "no-deal" Brexit.
"But what we will do is concentrate our total effort into all of the seats that are held by the Labour Party, who have completely broken their manifesto in 2017," he said. "We will also take on the rest of the 'remainer' parties."
The Brexit Party's threat to Johnson was one of the most unpredictable elements of the election: Farage has transformed U.K. politics over the past decade by poaching Conservative voters to force a succession of prime ministers toward ever tougher positions on Europe.
But in what amounts to a non-aggression pledge and an endorsement of sorts from the man cast by supporters as the godfather of Brexit, Farage spared Johnson the prospect of a right-wing challenge in almost half of the 650 constituencies.
Farage will still run in seats held by the opposition Labour Party, opening up the possibility he could yet be a kingmaker with just a few seats in a hung Parliament.
Although the Conservatives are hoping to seize traditional Labour seats in northern England that are heavily pro-Brexit, analysts had said Farage posed a bigger threat to the Conservatives than to Labour.
Backing for Johnson's approach
Johnson welcomed Farage's move, which rivals said made the Conservatives in effect an ally of Farage's hard-Brexit party.
Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said the Brexit Party's move meant U.S. President Donald Trump got his wish for an alliance between Johnson and Farage. In an interview with LBC radio on Oct. 31, Trump urged the right-wing leaders to unite for the general election and deliver Brexit.
One week ago Donald Trump told Nigel Farage to make a pact with Boris Johnson.<br><br>Today, Trump got his wish.<br><br>This Trump alliance is Thatcherism on steroids and could send £500 million a week from our NHS to big drugs companies. It must be stopped.
—@jeremycorbyn
Sara Hobolt, a professor who specializes in polling at the London School of Economics, said: "If I was Boris Johnson, I would be pretty pleased by this." Sterling leapt as much as one per cent against the U.S. dollar and rose to a six-month high against the euro.
Farage began the campaign last week by warning Johnson that he could snatch away a Conservative victory by fielding 600 candidates. But he came under intense pressure from financial backers who feared that Farage might scupper Brexit altogether.
After weeks of complaining about Johnson's Brexit deal, he reversed course on Monday, saying a video showing Johnson pledging not to extend the post-Brexit transition period beyond the end of 2020 had changed his mind.
"I thought to myself overnight that actually sounds a bit more like the Brexit that we voted for," said Farage, 55.
"It is not easy, but how do we hold Boris to his promises? That is the key whether this strategy actually works."
It was a rare compromise for a man who has made a career out of forcing the hand of Conservative prime ministers.
The perceived electoral threat to the Conservatives from the United Kingdom Independence Party that Farage used to lead was one of the main reasons why then-prime minister David Cameron decided in 2013 to promise the Brexit referendum.
Shunned by the political establishment, Farage, backed by eurosceptic financiers, helped sell Brexit to millions of voters in England and Wales who felt ignored by Conservative and Labour alike.
Farage said he had tried for months to build a leave alliance:
"I have genuinely tried for months to put about the idea that 'country before party' at a moment like this is the right thing to do. But that effectively has come to nought."