But the main parties, including the Tories and Labour, have refused to field candidates in the ballot and dismissed the by-election as an attempt to deflect attention from a row over Mr Farage’s finances. It means that Mr Farage’s main rival looks set to be comedy candidate Count Binface.
Writing in the Daily Express, the Reform boss, who denies wrongdoing over his financial arrangements, said other parties were “running scared” of the vote.
He accused Labour, the media and “the whole establishment” of doing “everything they can to destroy me, my family, the party, our donors and the millions who support us”.
Mr Farage said: “In our democracy, who should decide who gets to sit as an MP or form a government?
“Should it be the voters of seats such as Clacton? Or should it be the British establishment, through its political agents, media mouthpieces and parliamentary committees?”
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Mr Farage was being investigated by the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner over whether he should have registered a £5 million gift from cryptocurrency tycoon Christopher Harborne, which he said was needed to fund the security he required as a result of multiple threats against him.
He is also facing questions over support provided by his friend George Cottrell, a convicted fraudster known as “Posh George”.
New MPs are required to register any gifts worth more than £300 they received in the previous 12 months unless it does not relate to their political activities.
