SO many people went to the Guildhall on Thursday to hear UKIP leader Nigel Farage speak that organisers had to hastily arrange overspill seating in another room.

Mr Farage and his fellow speakers, Lord Willoughby de Broke and the former MP Neil Hamilton, addressed the two audiences.

Mr Farage told them Britain was “run by a bunch of college kids” who didn’t have the guts to stand up and fight for the country’s interests.

He wanted a common market, but as a simple trade deal, not creating an open border to immigration or “crushing” small businesses with new legislation.

On the domestic front, Mr Farage called for a big prison-building programme, and he was cheered when he said that Scottish and Welsh MPs should not be allowed to vote on the English education system.

Lord Willoughby talked about life as a Eurosceptic in the House of Lords, and called for more trade with the Commonwealth to lessen our reliance on Europe.

Mr Hamilton pointed out that former Salisbury citizen Sir Edward Heath had played the key role in getting Britain into Europe.

He declared: “Without a war we have handed control over the substantial part of Europe to the Germans.”

And he castigated the current Conservative leadership for failing to take actions to match its Eurosceptic rhetoric.

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