Nick Clegg accuses Nigel Farage of 'conning' the public at live debate

 
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Nick Clegg accused Nigel Farage of "conning" the British public as they traded blows in a second televised debate on Europe.

The Deputy Prime Minister said the Ukip leader's claim that the country could have the benefits of membership without the costs was "too good to be true".

But Mr Farage insisted Mr Clegg was part of a "career political class" who were in cahoots with big business and wanted to maintain the status quo.

Mr Clegg said: "If it sounds too good to be true then it probably is.

"It is a dangerous con, because the modern world has changed. Our economies are intertwined with each other."

Mr Farage said Britain found itself today in a "political union, we find ourselves with most of our laws being made somewhere else".

The Ukip leader said there was a "settled majority" of the public that did not want to be part of a political union, but they were being blocked by a "career political class and their friends in big business".

Asked how Britain could face up to international challenges, such as Russia's annexation of Crimea, without being part of the EU, Mr Farage said: "By not becoming a political union with an expansionist policy with an aim to militarise as quickly as they can, indeed Baroness Cathy Ashton, the British commissioner, is pushing very hard for a European airforce and for a series of drones.

"And, if you look at what's happened with the Ukraine we've had a message that's been sent out for 10 years, and this is not just the EU, David Cameron, Nick Clegg, and I'm afraid and Ed Miliband too, have all been saying to the Ukraine 'look, why don't you come and join the European Union? While you are at it, why don't you join Nato too?'.

"And this is something that has been seen by Putin to be a deeply provocative act. We have given false hope to those western Ukrainians. And did you see them with their EU flags and their banners?

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"They actually toppled a democratically elected leader. Yes, I know Ukraine's corrupt, I know it wasn't perfect, but they toppled a leader and I do not want to be part of an emerging, expansionist EU foreign policy. I think it will be a danger to peace."

Mr Farage said Mr Clegg was "absolutely hell-bent" on getting involved militarily in the war in Syria.

He added: "These aren't simple black and white issues and just to assume that if you support the rebels you are supporting the good guys, frankly flies in the face of history and we should not be intervening."

Referring to a furore earlier this week when it emerged he had named Russian President Vladimir Putin as the world leader he most admired, Mr Farage attempted to deny making the comments but was challenged by the claims by host David Dimbleby and conceded he had said it in relation to the premier as an "operator" over Syria.

He added: "I think if Putin had not pointed out that the use of Sarin gas had not necessarily come from the Assad regime, if he hadn't done that, I suspect the backbench rebels would not have defeated you Nick in stopping us from going to war.

"You wanted us to go to war again. I'm pleased that your backbenchers stopped you. Putin, I don't like the man but he contributed to that debate."

Mr Clegg said the Ukip leader had treated the suffering of millions of Syrians at the hand of Bashar Assad's brutal regime like a game.

He said: "This isn't some sort of pub bar discussion, this is a serious issue about how we stop the slaughter, the displacement of millions of people, women and children being sexually abused, terrible violence on an unimaginable scale and all Nigel Farage can say is that he [Putin] has played it brilliantly."

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