POLL: Is Farage right to demand the BBC include him in leaders' debate? YOUR VERDICT
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The BBC are hosting a debate next week between the leaders of the Conservatives, Lib Dems, Labour and SNP
After beating the Conservative Party in the polls, Nigel Farage declared Reform UK the "official opposition" in the general election.
As the opposition party, he is now demanding to be included in the BBC leaders' television debate and a head-to-head with the leader of the Labour Party, Sir Keir Starmer.
Speaking at a press conference this afternoon, Farage said he wanted to challenge the Labour leader on immigration.
The Reform UK leader said: "The BBC will be having a leaders’ debate, a four-way leaders’ debate, with the leader of the Liberal Democrats, the Conservatives, Labour and the SNP.
POLL: Is Farage right to demand the BBC include him in leaders' debate? YOUR VERDICT
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"That takes place next week and I think we can demand that right now the BBC put us into that debate.
“I would also very much like to do a debate head-to-head with Keir Starmer and the reason is very simple.
"We think that this should be the immigration election because whether we are talking about rents, whether we are talking about housing availability... there is no aspect of our national life that is not touched by the massive population crisis this country now faces.”
Farage said that he believes "nothing will change under Labour" and things "may even get a little bit worse," as he pointed to immigration not being one of Sir Keir's top priorities.
Farage said he would like to go head-to-head with Keir Starmer over immigration
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He questioned: "Why, if you are going out looking for the working people of Britain to vote for you, have you not put this in your top six priorities?"
Farage announced himself the opposition in the election after a YouGov poll showed Reform had jumped to 19 per cent while the Tories dropped behind to 18 per cent.
In the exclusive poll for GB News membership readers, an overwhelming majority (96 per cent) of the 1,177 voters thought Farage was right to demand the BBC include him in the leaders' debate, while just four per cent thought he wasn't.