Lunch with the FT: Nigel Farage‘I am what I am,’ says the Ukip leader over six pints, a bottle of wine and two glasses of portCult Tory MP Jacob Rees-Mogg on Brexit, ‘Moggmania’ and why nanny’s always rightHe vowed to be rich by 40, PM by 70. Over oxheart, the fogeyish Brexiter talks about May’s mistakes and his chances of being a future PMEU chief Jean-Claude Juncker on the Brexit bill and the eroticism of powerOver carpaccio and veal, the politician tells Lionel Barber history will be harsh on the PM who took Britain out of the EUGina Miller, the woman who took Brexit to courtHer legal battle for MPs to vote on Article 50 triggered the wrath of the tabloids and death threats. Was it worth it? Daniel Hannan, the brains behind Brexit: what’s next for Britain?Over eggs in Brussels, the Conservative MEP and high priest of Euroscepticism talks about the ‘irrational pessimism’ in the worldDinner with the FT: George OsborneTipped to be Britain’s next prime minister, the ‘austerity chancellor’ saw his ambitions in tatters as the UK voted for Brexit. In a northern trattoria, he talks about life after Number 11
Lunch with the FT: Nigel Farage‘I am what I am,’ says the Ukip leader over six pints, a bottle of wine and two glasses of portCult Tory MP Jacob Rees-Mogg on Brexit, ‘Moggmania’ and why nanny’s always rightHe vowed to be rich by 40, PM by 70. Over oxheart, the fogeyish Brexiter talks about May’s mistakes and his chances of being a future PMEU chief Jean-Claude Juncker on the Brexit bill and the eroticism of powerOver carpaccio and veal, the politician tells Lionel Barber history will be harsh on the PM who took Britain out of the EUGina Miller, the woman who took Brexit to courtHer legal battle for MPs to vote on Article 50 triggered the wrath of the tabloids and death threats. Was it worth it? Daniel Hannan, the brains behind Brexit: what’s next for Britain?Over eggs in Brussels, the Conservative MEP and high priest of Euroscepticism talks about the ‘irrational pessimism’ in the worldDinner with the FT: George OsborneTipped to be Britain’s next prime minister, the ‘austerity chancellor’ saw his ambitions in tatters as the UK voted for Brexit. In a northern trattoria, he talks about life after Number 11