Nigel Farage today berated Theresa May for banning Donald Trump from meeting him during the state visit next week.
The Brexit Party leader raged that he knew for ‘absolute fact’ that the US president had been asked to avoid him.
He told MailOnline the PM was putting ‘Conservative Party unity’ above the ‘national interest’ by blocking him despite his close relationship with Mr Trump.
The furious rebuke came after Mr Trump praised Mr Farage and Boris Johnson as a ‘big powers’ and ‘friends’ at an impromptu press call in Washington yesterday.
He said he might meet up with the paid during his three-day visit. But Mr Farage said he now did not expect the encouter to happen.
Claiming the government had urged Mr Trump not to see him, Mr Farage said: ‘I have been told that from Washington on very very good source.
‘Ask Downing Street to deny it.
‘You would have thought given our security relationship, our defence relationship, our trade relationship that if this county has somebody who is a friend of the US president and without doubt the closest connected of anybody in this country that this could be used as a resource.
‘And yet the Conservative Party’s unity comes first. She is putting the Conservative Party’s wellbeing above the national interest in this case – it is a simple as that.
‘He has got a difficult balance. The Queen is normally the head of this, he loves the Queen. It is a difficult situation for him.’
Nigel Farage (pictured celebrating his EU elections win this week) told MailOnlinethe government had stopped Donald Trump from meeting him
Mr Farage was famously the first senior UK politician to meet Mr Trump after he was elected as president – posing together by the golden elevator in his New York penthouse
Speaking to reporters on the White House lawn yesterday, Mr Trump said he ‘may’ hold talks with Mr Farage and Mr johnson during his three-day trip.
‘Nigel Farage is a friend of mine. Boris is a friend of mine,’ Mr Trump said.
‘They are two very good guys, very interesting people.
‘Nigel has had a big victory, he has picked up 32 per cent of the vote starting from nothing (in EU elections).
‘I think they are big powers over there, I think they have done a good job.’
In a separate interview with the Sun Online, Mr Farage said Mr Johnson and Mr Trump had ‘got to know and like each other’.
Asked whether Mr Trump would openly endorse him, he added: ‘I don’t think he will directly intervene, I think he will be wary.
‘But you never know with Donald Trump!’
Tory leadership favourite Mr Johnson’s team have so far stayed tight-lipped about the apparent endorsement from Mr Trump, saying only that he has not received an invite to meet the president.
MPs today warned that Donald Trump’s praise for Boris Johnson could backfire in the Tory leadership contest as he is a ‘Marmite’ figure.
One senior Tory MP insisted they were right to be wary about Mr Trump.
‘I really don’t mind him,’ the MP told MailOnline. ‘But he’s Marmite, isn’t he. You either like him or you don’t.
‘It’s not going to do him any good in the current circumstances. It looks like what it is.’
Mr Johnson is the front runner to take Mrs May’s job this summer after she finally resigned admitting she had failed to deliver Brexit.
But the contest is becoming increasingly chaotic after former chief whip Mark Harper became the twelfth candidate to throw his hat into the ring.
There are also deepning divisions between Tory factions over how to handle Brexit, with Jeremy Hunt and other hopefuls warning that trying to force No Deal would be political ‘suicide’. Mr Johnson, by contrast, has said the UK should leave the bloc by the end of October with or without a deal.
Speaking to reporters on the White House lawn yesterday, Donald Trump said he ‘may’ hold talks with Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage during his three-day trip to the UK
The US president heaped praise on the two politicians as ‘big powers’ – saying Mr Farage’s Brexit Party had won a ‘big victory’ in the EU elections last week
Nigel Farage, who was also praised by Mr Trump, said he would be ‘happy to’ get together with the president, although there are no formal plans in place.
It is understood Mr Johnson has not yet been invited to a meeting.
Asked if he was supporting Mr Johnson and Mr Farage, Mr Trump said: ‘They are friends of mine but I haven’t thought about supporting them… I have a lot of respect for both of those men.
It is understood that Mr Johnson – the front runner in the race to take over from Mrs May as PM – has not yet been invited to a meeting.
But a government source said: ‘If you’re the US president and you want to see someone, you find a way to make it happen.’
On his previous visit to the UK last July, Mr Trump embarrassed Mrs May by hailing the qualities of Mr Johnson, who had just resigned as foreign secretary.
The president said Mr Johnson was ‘a very talented guy’ who would make a ‘great prime minister’.
He said at the time: ‘I was very saddened to see he was leaving government and I hope he goes back in at some point. I think he is a great representative for your country.’
Mr Farage was famously the first senior UK politician to meet Mr Trump after he was elected as president – posing together by the golden elevator in his New York penthouse.
There were claims that Mr Trump wanted the MEP to be made the UK ambassador to the US, although the idea was dismissed by the UK government.
Any meetings would have to be slotted into a packed schedule for the Trumps as they are given the full red carpet treatment.
Royal gun salutes will fire at the Tower of London and in Green Park to honour the US President and First Lady Melania Trump.
The Queen, 93, is hosting no fewer than four official events in tribute to Mr Trump, and Prince Charles and the Duke of York will be heavily involved too.
The President will also have lunch with Mrs May at Downing Street in one of her final ceremonial duties as Prime Minister.
Mr Trump is bringing four of his five children with him, including son Barron, 12, and his daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner.
After Air Force One touches down on the Monday, the Trumps will be welcomed at Buckingham Palace by the Queen, Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall – in a nod to Camilla’s ever-growing importance in royal circles.
The President will receive a ceremonial welcome in the Buckingham Palace garden, and he and Charles will inspect a guard of honour formed of Nijmegen Company Grenadier Guards.
Lunch on the Monday will be at Buckingham Palace, hosted by the Queen and with the Duke of Sussex, after which they will tour a special exhibition in the Picture Gallery showcasing items of historical significance to the United States from the Royal Collection.
Afterwards, the President and Mrs Trump, accompanied by Prince Andrew, will visit Westminster Abbey, where the President will lay a wreath at the Grave of the Unknown Warrior, before a short tour of the abbey.
Afternoon tea will be at Clarence House, with Camilla and Melania present – the first time the heir to the throne has hosted a US president in a personal capacity.
The full state banquet – which is being snubbed by Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, Speaker John Bercow and Liberal Democrats leader Vince Cable – is on the Monday evening, with speeches by the Queen and the President.
On Tuesday morning, the party moves to St James’s Palace for a breakfast meeting with senior UK and US business leaders, co-hosted by Mrs May and Mr Trump and attended by Prince Andrew.
Following talks at 10 Downing Street, Mrs May will then host lunch before the two leaders hold a joint press conference.
Then in the evening, the President and First Lady will host a return dinner at Winfield House, the official residence of the US Ambassador, at which Charles and Camilla will attend on behalf of the Queen.
On the final day, June 5, the senior royals led by the Queen will gather in Portsmouth for a full military commemoration of the D-Day landings which took place 75 years ago on June 6.
The pageant – attended by 300 veterans of the Normandy campaign – will include a fly-past of 25 modern and historical aircraft.