Ukip
urges Brits to withdraw their money from Spanish banks
Nigel
Farage has urged British expatriates in Spain to pull their money out
of the country’s banks.
23
March, 2013
The
UK Independence Party leader said that the European Union had
“crossed a line” by trying to extract funds from savers under the
terms of the abandoned Cypriot bail-out.
Mr
Farage said: “Even I didn’t think that they would stoop to
actually stealing money from people’s bank accounts.
“There
is going to be a big flight of money and that flight of money won’t
just be from Cyprus, it will be from the other eurozone countries,
too. There are 750,000 British people who own properties, or who
live, many of them in retirement, down in Spain.
“Now
that we see the EU are prepared to resort to anything to keep alive
their failing euro project, our advice to expats living down in the
Mediterranean must be, 'Get your money out of there while you’ve
still got a chance’.”
Mr
Farage urged George Osborne, the Chancellor, to rule out any such
levy on British savers.
In
a wide-ranging speech yesterday, Mr Farage also said that no
immigrant should be able to claim benefits until they have lived,
obeyed the law, worked and paid taxes in the UK for five years.
He
also said that Ukip would not form a pact with the Conservative Party
under Mr Cameron’s leadership.
Mr
Farage added that his party was drawing in support from all voters,
not just Conservative supporters.
“Please
don’t just think that it is just tired Conservatives that are
coming to Ukip,” he said.
Ukip
has enjoyed a surge in popularity after coming second in the
Eastleigh by-election ahead of the Conservative Party.
He
admitted that some of the party’s new voters were eager to “stick
two fingers up to the establishment”. But he added that a vote for
Ukip is “far more powerful than a protest vote”.
Mr
Farage insisted his party could win votes from across the political
spectrum as their success in Eastleigh had been about more than
protest votes. He added there has been a "wholesale rejection of
the career political class".
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