Oeddech chi'n golygu garage?
David Rees: Diolchaf i'r Aelod am ildio, ac rwy'n gwerthfawrogi'r hyn y mae newydd ei ddweud am safbwynt UKIP. A ydych chi felly mor hynod siomedig â minnau bod eich cyn-arweinydd, Nigel Farage, ddim ond wedi mynd i un o 42 o gyfarfodydd y pwyllgor oedd yn ymdrin â physgodfeydd?
Lord Rooker: ...of a report relating to referendum night, when the use by hedge funds of secret, unpublished exit polling created hundreds of millions of pounds of profit, aided and abetted by the lies told by Farage about what he knew about the exit polls and the result? The use of secret exit polls to make money on election nights is a really serious issue that was not raised in the House’s Select...
Ken Skates: ...o bobl. Rydym ni wedi helpu i dyfu’r safle hwnnw ac rydym ni’n fodlon ymladd nerth ein deng ewin i amddiffyn y bobl hynny sy'n cael eu cyflogi yno; wnawn ni ddim cefnu arnyn nhw. O ran Nigel Farage, a’i biffian chwerthin ar y teledu wrth y posibilrwydd y gallai pobl—miloedd o bobl—golli eu swyddi, dyna ymddygiad swancyn breintiedig sydd, mae arnaf ofn, yn hollol anymwybodol o...
Nicola Sturgeon: ...this time for the red carpet to be rolled out. Meetings are one thing, perhaps, but red carpet treatment is another. I do not think that there can be anybody—perhaps with the exception of Nigel Farage and his ilk—who has not been appalled. I do not think that there can be any decent person across the UK, across Europe or across the world—including the vast majority of people in...
Carwyn Jones: .... Nid dim ond y nifer gwirioneddol sy'n bwysig; mae'r ganran yn bwysig. Unwaith eto mae'n gwneud y pwynt pe byddai ef wedi bod yng ngofal hyn byddai popeth wedi'i wneud. Wel, dywedodd Nigel Farage y byddai gennym ni fargen â'r Unol Daleithiau o fewn 48 awr. Iawn, roedd yn dweud hynny â'i dafod yn ei foch—wel, gallech chi byth ddweud gydag ef os oedd ei dafod yn ei foch. Mewn dadl roedd...
David Davies: ...that political party. Members of that party have earned the right to be there. It is ridiculous that the Duke of Wellington is able to interfere in legislation that affects this country, but Nigel Farage, who was the leader of a major political party that has had a major impact on this country, is not invited to sit in the House of Lords. He has a far greater moral right to be there than...
Willie Rennie: ...to be told repeatedly that we would be better off under independence, but now we find that we would be stumping up billions of pounds for the UK for years after independence. It is just like Nigel Farage promised. We will end up in the same situation with the SNP: the future of the NHS would be undermined by the weakness of the Scottish finances in an independent Scotland. To be clear: to...
Sam Gyimah: .... If free speech is to work, the same standards should be applied to all ideas, rather than believing that certain ideas should not be held because they are unpopular or unfashionable. Nigel Farage should be as welcome on campus as Jon Lansman, for example. I also think that protest has a place. We want active debate, but we also want active and peaceful protest. However, protest becomes...
Lord Adonis: ...right wing of the Conservative Party, which is calling for our abolition because we are not acting as the unquestioning registry office of the views of Mr Paul Dacre, Mr Jacob Rees-Mogg, Mr Nigel Farage and, indeed, the noble Lord, Lord Forsyth. I am strongly in favour of House of Lords reform. I have consistently voted in favour of an elected second Chamber; if the present crisis leads to...
Hefin David: .... Daeth Sam yn ffrind i mi, ymwelais ag ef yn yr ysbyty, a gwelaf ei golli. Credaf fod dewrder Sam yn rhywbeth y gallwn ddysgu llawer o wersi ohono. Ni wnaf anghofio'r tro y daeth Sam â Nigel Farage i Gelli-gaer yn ystod etholiad y Cynulliad 2016, a thynnodd lun ohonof fi yn ysgwyd llaw gyda Nigel Farage hyd yn oed, sy'n mynd o gwmpas yn rhywle ar y rhyngrwyd. Credaf y byddai Sam yn...
Lord Wallace of Saltaire: ...of us think that that describes the Government’s current position. Indeed, I took part in a radio discussion on Sunday morning with someone whom I imagine is quite a good friend of his—Nigel Farage—who agreed with me that the Government’s current negotiations with the European Union are a total mess. That is the relatively widespread set of opinions from a range of different views...
Baroness Hayter of Kentish Town: ...who favour a particular outcome; otherwise, it will be seen simply as a device to stop Brexit rather than a serious poll on the terms negotiated. At the moment, with just one exception—Nigel Farage—only one side is campaigning for a new referendum. Therefore, that is how I fear it will be seen. We will abstain on the amendment. But more than that, I ask colleagues across the House to...
Tom Brake: ...look at the literature circulated during the campaign, they will see that it was about spending Britain’s cash in Britain, it was often about immigration, it was about posters such as Nigel Farage’s poster scaring people with that picture of all those refugees. He did not have a massive poster saying, “What do we want? To come out of the customs union. When do we want it? Now.” Of...
Jon Trickett: ..., AIQ, whose purpose seems to have been to harvest data from social media in order to target Leave messaging to British voters. By a strange coincidence, the Leave.EU campaign—led by Messrs Farage and Banks, among others—used the very same small Canadian firm. Incidentally, at least two other bodies, which have been mentioned briefly today, received donations from Vote Leave. One is...
Ben Bradshaw: ...the Foreign Secretary to task the agencies to investigate the United Kingdom Independence party—this is much more serious. We already know that there are close political ties here involving Farage, who has been named as a person of interest in the Mueller investigation; that Aaron Banks is also under investigation by the Electoral Commission; and that of course Jim Mellon, the co-founder...
Heidi Alexander: ...go and live in another European country allowed me to live my dreams. It gave me opportunities, and I do not want the next generation to be denied those opportunities. Anyone listening to Nigel Farage would think that the EU was the preoccupation of the middle classes—it is not. I think that we need to stay in a customs union and in the single market to maintain a close relationship with...
Phil Wilson: ...warfare—trying, for example, to influence democratic elections. From funding populist movements, such as Marine Le Pen’s Front National, now called National Rally, is it any wonder Nigel Farage sees Putin as one of his favourite leaders? I endorse the Prime Minister’s actions today, but the Salisbury incident is about more than just spies. The use of a chemical weapon on the streets...
Lord Patten of Barnes: ...room; the person who in many respects is more responsible for us being here and having this debate than anybody else: the regularly occasional leader of the United Kingdom Independence Party, Mr Farage. When Mr Farage talks about taking back control and when some of our tabloid newspapers talk about it, they do not mean Parliament having that control—they mean them; they mean a populist...
Carwyn Jones: Nid wyf i yma i ateb dros unrhyw un arall, ddim mwy, rwy'n siŵr, nag y mae ef yma i esbonio sut y mae Nigel Farage yn credu bod cytundeb masnach gyda'r Unol Daleithiau yn bosibl mewn 48 awr, sef yr hyn a ddywedodd ddoe. Mae hwn yn fater difrifol iawn. Mae gennym ni bobl sydd wedi cael eu heffeithio'n ofnadwy, mae gennym ni swyddog heddlu sydd wedi cael ei effeithio'n ofnadwy. Yn ffodus,...
Willie Rennie: ...the case, but he needs to make it to people such as Boris Johnson, who, during the EU referendum, made the case that 80,000 Turks would come over the border and flood the United Kingdom. Nigel Farage stood in front of the Brexit breaking point poster and said that all those immigrants would come into this country. Jackson Carlaw needs to make the case to those people and persuade them that...