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Man, 28, is charged with using threatening behaviour towards Nigel Farage after objects thrown while Reform UK leader was campaigning on open-top bus

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Man, 28, is charged with using threatening behaviour towards Nigel Farage after objects thrown while Reform UK leader was campaigning on open-top bus

A man has been charged with using threatening behaviour towards Nigel Farage after objects were thrown at him on the General Election campaign trail.

The Reform UK leader was on top of a party battle bus in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, on Tuesday morning when a cup was thrown, narrowly missing him.

A man in a red hoodie could be seen shouting from a construction area below, before reaching into a bucket and throwing something else, which also missed.

On Wednesday, South Yorkshire Police said Josh Greally, 28, was charged with using threatening, abusive, insulting words and behaviour with intent to cause fear or provoke unlawful violence.

He has been released on bail to appear before Barnsley Magistrates’ Court on June 26.

Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage reacts after items are thrown at him on a campaign bus

Police arrested a man at the scene and have now charged Josh Greally with using threatening, abusive, insulting words and behaviour with intent to cause fear or provoke unlawful violence

Police arrested a man at the scene and have now charged Josh Greally with using threatening, abusive, insulting words and behaviour with intent to cause fear or provoke unlawful violence

Nigel Farage is pictured here talking to reporters in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, yesterday

Nigel Farage is pictured here talking to reporters in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, yesterday

Mr Farage, speaking while campaigning in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, said the incident was ‘pretty nasty’.

Politicians from other parties joined Mr Farage in condemning ‘violence’ towards general election candidates.

Home Secretary James Cleverly said: ‘There must be no place for violence and intimidation in our politics and these actions should be condemned by everyone.’

Stephanie Peacock, Labour’s parliamentary candidate for Barnsley South, said: ‘Intimidation has no place in our politics.

‘I condemn the violence we saw in Barnsley town centre today.’

It comes after Victoria Thomas Bowen, 25, was charged with assault by beating and criminal damage when a milkshake was thrown over Mr Farage as he left the Moon and Starfish Wetherspoons pub in Clacton-on-Sea in Essex on Tuesday last week.

A man has been charged after Nigel Farage's election campaign appearance in Barnsley

A man has been charged after Nigel Farage’s election campaign appearance in Barnsley

Politicians from other parties have joined Mr Farage in condemning 'violence' towards general election candidates

Politicians from other parties have joined Mr Farage in condemning ‘violence’ towards general election candidates

Supporters are seen demonstrating as Reform UK leader Nigel Farage spoke in Barnsley

Supporters are seen demonstrating as Reform UK leader Nigel Farage spoke in Barnsley

Victoria Thomas Bowen (pictured), 25, has been charged with assault by beating and criminal damage when a milkshake was thrown over Mr Farage earlier this month

Victoria Thomas Bowen (pictured), 25, has been charged with assault by beating and criminal damage when a milkshake was thrown over Mr Farage earlier this month

Victoria Thomas Bowen, 25, an OnlyFans model, has been charged with assault

Victoria Thomas Bowen, 25, an OnlyFans model, has been charged with assault 

The politician standing for election in Clacton in Essex was hit with the drink on June 4

The politician standing for election in Clacton in Essex was hit with the drink on June 4

Mr Farage was seen with the yellow drink splattered across his dark blue suit as he boarded his campaign bus.

Thomas Bowen is due to appear before Colchester Magistrates’ Court on July 2.

During a campaign walkabout in Newcastle in 2019, Mr Farage had a £5.25 Five Guys banana and salted caramel milkshake thrown at him.

Meanwhile, Mr Farage’s party has been accused of ‘taking the public for complete fools’ over the scale of its ‘unaffordable’ tax-cutting pledges.

He and Reform UK chairman Richard Tice said their manifesto would include a promise to increase the amount at which workers begin paying the basic rate of income tax to £20,000.

They insisted the pledge would lift 7million workers out of paying any income tax and hand most employees back £1,500.

At present, workers start paying the 20 per cent basic rate on earnings above £12,571.

Mr Tice and Mr Farage also pledged that the threshold for paying the higher rate of 40 per cent would be raised from £50,271 to £70,000.

The pair acknowledged that the pledge would cost around £40billion at a press conference unveiling it in Westminster.

They claimed it could largely be paid for by scrapping the interest paid to banks by the Bank of England (BoE), with Mr Tice claiming that taxpayers’ money was being used by the BoE ‘to enrich the City of London’ in an act of ‘gross negligence’.

Mr Farage was attacked earlier this month after emerging from a Wetherspoons pub

Mr Farage was attacked earlier this month after emerging from a Wetherspoons pub

He later that day joked about the incident, brandishing freshly-poured McDonald's milkshakes

He later that day joked about the incident, brandishing freshly-poured McDonald’s milkshakes

However, the party’s draft manifesto also states that it wants to scrap VAT on energy bills, slash fuel duty by 20p a litre and cut stamp duty to zero per cent on properties worth up to £750,000.

There are also pledges to reduce corporation tax to 15 per cent from 25 per cent, increase the Inheritance Tax threshold to £2million and raise the amount small businesses start paying VAT on turnover from £90,000 to £150,000.

Mr Farage and Mr Tice dismissed suggestions the package was ‘Trussonomics on steroids’ – a reference to former Prime Minister Liz Truss, whose tax-slashing mini-budget triggered economic turmoil in September 2022.

Asked about comments by the Tories’ Miriam Cates, who branded the package ‘unaffordable’ and a ‘fantasy’, Mr Farage said: ‘There’s a growing level of economic opinion that says we can afford it.

‘So with respect, I would ask Miriam Cates to have another look.’

Mr Tice added: ‘The draft [manifesto] we’ve had out there… actually, it does set out the costs, how you pay for it and where you invest it.’ Suggesting cutting waste in the public sector would also help fund the pledges, he said: ‘We’ve got to cut waste in the back office and invest it in the front office, on the frontline.

‘That’s what you do in business, that’s how you become more productive, that’s how you succeed and grow.’

But Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, told the Daily Mail: ‘It has been suggested by Reform UK that very big personal tax cuts could be paid for by reducing the interest paid on reserves – commercial banks’ deposits – held at the Bank of England.

Richard Tice (left) has joined Reform UK leader Nigel Farage in calling for tax cuts

Richard Tice (left) has joined Reform UK leader Nigel Farage in calling for tax cuts

The Conservatives' former Home Secretary Suella Braverman has suggested support

The Conservatives’ former Home Secretary Suella Braverman has suggested support

The Conservatives' Miriam Cates branded Reform UK's package 'unaffordable' and a 'fantasy'

The Conservatives’ Miriam Cates branded Reform UK’s package ‘unaffordable’ and a ‘fantasy’

‘It might well be possible to raise some money in this way, but it is unlikely to even approach the £40billion annually that has been suggested – much less than half of that sum.

‘As ever, there is no simple free lunch: This would operate in much the same way as a tax on banks.

‘The amount raised would also fluctuate over time, falling as the Bank of England base rate falls.

‘The many tens of billions of pounds of tax cuts proposed would, therefore, need to be funded by definite tax increases or spending cuts elsewhere before long.

‘We saw the consequences of very big unfunded tax cuts in September 2022.’

Former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said: ‘The truth is, Reform knows they’re never going to get into Government so they can say anything they like.

‘They know it’s not deliverable. It’s la la land politics.

‘Don’t get me wrong, I think we need to do more to reduce taxation. But a wishlist like this just wouldn’t happen. They’re taking the public for complete fools.’

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, who was deputy chair of the Public Accounts Committee before Parliament was dissolved, added: ‘These Reform policies are completely barking. It’s just absolute nonsense.’

Mr Farage also dismissed comments from former Home Secretary Suella Braverman that there was not much difference between the Tories and Reform and that the latter party should welcome Mr Farage back into the Conservative fold.

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, has warned against what he called 'very big unfunded tax cuts'

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, has warned against what he called ‘very big unfunded tax cuts’

Former Conservative Party leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith dismissed Reform UK's proposals as 'not deliverable', adding: 'It's la la land politics'

Former Conservative Party leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith dismissed Reform UK’s proposals as ‘not deliverable’, adding: ‘It’s la la land politics’

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, deputy chair of the Public Accounts Committee before Parliament was dissolved, said: 'These Reform policies are completely barking'

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, deputy chair of the Public Accounts Committee before Parliament was dissolved, said: ‘These Reform policies are completely barking’

He said: ‘I had my cup of tea ready for the 5.30am news on the BBC this morning, and I actually spat quite a lot of it down my dressing gown when I heard her saying that.’

He added that he would invite her to join Reform if it wins seats at the election, adding: ‘Once we’ve established the electoral beachhead for Reform, in the House of Commons, then of course I will say to Suella Braverman and Robert Jenrick “come and join our party, we’d love to have you”.’

He also said: ‘What they’ve done, allowing nearly two and a half million people to settle in the country in the last two years, is most certainly not our policy.

‘So I do like her, I do admire her, but I’m afraid at the moment all marriage plans are off.’

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