Nigel Farage met Donald Trump and urged him to back no-deal deal Brexit

Donald Trump (left) with Nigel Farage when they met met face-to-face to discuss why the President should back a no-deal Brexit earlier this month
PA/White House
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Nigel Farage urged Donald Trump to back a no-deal Brexit when they met in Washington earlier this month.

Former Ukip leader Mr Farage told the US leader to support the idea that Britain should walk away if a bad agreement was on offer.

Mr Farage likened the Brexit negotiations to President Trump's nuclear summit with North Korea in Vietnam last year.

"I was talking to him about Vietnam, where he had said that a bad deal was on the table so sometimes you have to walk. That was the exact quote from Trump." Mr Farage told The Telegraph.

The conversation took place at the Conservative Political Action Conference (Cpac) in Washington, an event involving conservative speakers.

A photograph of the meeting shows both men smiling to the camera with their thumbs raised.

Mr Farage added: "I said in the case of Vietnam that no deal was better than a bad deal and I gave my opinion that the same principle applied to Brexit.

"I think if you read the comments from his ambassador in London, I don't think it takes much reading between the lines.

"This American administration firmly believes in the nation state, not supranational structures and this administration are hugely keen on the defence, security and indeed business relationships that exist between our two countries.

"And I think it's fair to say they see Brexit as a great opportunity."

President Trump and Mr Farage became friends during his campaign when the former Ukip leader, dubbed "Mr Brexit", was greeted at a rally in Mississippi before the 2016 election.

The two were also pictured just after the election, at Trump tower in New York, where Mr Farage appeared to be spearheading a new relationship between the UK and US.

President Trump has spoken highly of Mr Farage in the past, stating that he would do "a great job" as British ambassador to the United States.

The president had urged Theresa May not to walk away from a deal with the European Union outside Chequers in July 2018 - though he has been critical of the Brexit deal, warning it will limit a US-UK free trade deal.

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