Nigel Farage Skips US Conservative Conference in UK Under Truss

Former UK politician Nigel Farage will not attend the US Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) event being hosted in the UK by ex-Prime Minister Liz Truss.
Nigel Farage, the prominent British politician and former leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP), has decided to skip a major conference of US conservatives that is being brought to the UK by former Prime Minister Liz Truss. The Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) event, a fixture of the American right-wing political landscape, will be held in the UK in July, with Truss chosen to lead the gathering.
According to a source close to Farage's Reform UK party, the group will be "steering well clear" of the CPAC event. This decision comes as no surprise, given Farage's history of criticism towards Truss and her ill-fated tenure as prime minister, which was marked by an economic crisis that sent shockwaves through the UK.
Truss's selection to lead the CPAC event in the UK has also raised eyebrows among senior Conservative Party members, many of whom are expected to follow Farage's lead and avoid the conference. The former prime minister's brief and turbulent time in office, which saw her economic policies crash the British economy, has left her with limited political capital and influence within the party.
{{IMAGE_PLACEHOLDER}}The decision by Farage and other prominent Tories to distance themselves from the CPAC event in the UK underscores the continued political divisions and fallout from Truss's disastrous premiership. As the UK grapples with the aftermath of her policies, the former prime minister's involvement in hosting a high-profile US conservative conference on British soil has been met with skepticism and resistance from within her own political ranks.
The CPAC event in the UK is seen by some as an attempt by American conservatives to expand their influence and tap into the populist, right-wing sentiment that has gained traction in parts of the UK. However, the absence of figures like Farage and other senior Tories suggests that the conference may struggle to gain the level of support and legitimacy that its organizers had hoped for.
{{IMAGE_PLACEHOLDER}}As the UK navigates the political landscape in the aftermath of Truss's tenure, the decision by Farage and others to snub the CPAC event in the country highlights the continuing challenges and divisions within the British political sphere. The former prime minister's involvement in the conference has only served to further complicate an already turbulent and uncertain political climate.
Source: The Guardian


