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Hillary Clinton hits back at Nigel Farage Comments made at Trump Rally

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on Thursday proclaimed himself the new “Mister Brexit”, one day after appearing at a US campaign rally with Nigel Farage, an ultra-rightist politician who headed the campaign in the United Kingdom for that country to leave the European Union.

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She continued, “Farage has called for a bar on the children of legal immigrants from public schools and health services, has said women are, and I quote, “worth less” than men and supports scrapping laws that prevent employers from discriminating based on race”.

Mr Farage said that the majority of the crowd he addressed had never voted before and these “are the same people who made Brexit happen”.

But Mr Farage, who told supporters of Mr Trump he would not vote for Ms Clinton if he was paid, told Breitbart London her comments showed she was “running scared”.

“That’s who Donald Trump wants by his side when he’s addressing an audience of American voters”.

In a speech in Reno, Nevada about the so-called “Alt Right” movement, Clinton accused Farage of sexism and misogyny. Farage urged them to get their “walking boots on” and drum up support for Republican presidential nominee.

Mr Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, claimed Mrs Clinton, the former Secretary of State, had run a “vast criminal enterprise” out of the US State department.

“She sounds rather like Bob Geldof and can’t accept Brexit”, he said.

He criticised Barack Obama for publicly backing the Remain campaign during the European Union referendum campaign, before adding: ‘So I could not possibly tell you how you should vote in this election’.

In June, right after the United Kingdom upset the conventional wisdom and narrowly voted in favor of Brexit, Ballotpedia examined whether the anti-establishment sentiment that helped fuel Farage’s effort could impact the USA presidential election and work to Trump’s benefit. “Against all odds. That was some job that he did, against all odds”.

Mrs Clinton said Mr Trump’s “disregard for the values that make our country great is profoundly dangerous”.

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Clinton said: “It takes a lot of nerve to ask people he’s ignored and mistreated for decades, ‘What do you have to lose?’ The answer is everything”.

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump right greets United Kingdom Independence Party leader Nigel Farage