I'm not giving up politics entirely - I'm just giving up leadership of a political party.
— Nigel Farage
I've always been the outsider. I've always been regarded as some extraordinarily dangerous figure. I'm none of those things! I'm just a middle-class boy from Kent who likes cricket and who happened to have a strong view about a supernational government from Brussels.
We shouldn't measure everything in terms of GDP figures or economics. There is something called quality of life.
Will I ever forgive the British media for what they've done to me? No.
We, as a party, are colour-blind.
I believe that the ability to talk to people and have them feeling engaged rather than patronised isn't something you can learn. It's a bit like being able to sing or play cricket. You can either do it, or you can't.
If you poke the Russian bear with a stick ,he will respond.
No one did more singlehandedly to smash the BNP in Britain than me.
I've got to see the Brexit process through. we won the war, but we must win the peace.
The people who get up earliest in the morning have the highest propensity to vote UKIP. I'm being absolutely serious about that.
My opponents are the people who gave up our borders.
I don't listen to music. I don't watch television, I don't read.
Hopefully, through all aspects of life, you learn from things you've got right, things you've got wrong, but I'm not one for looking back. I'm looking ahead; you've got to.
I suppose, being in politics, it wasn't a job - it was almost a calling. It dominated my life, so I do think that probably a lot of people around me have paid quite a big price for that.
I'm the catalyst for the downfall of the Blairites, the Clintonites, the Bushites, and all these dreadful people who work hand in glove with Goldman Sachs and everybody else, have made themselves rich, and ruined our countries. I couldn't be happier.
For seven years, I had a business relationship in Milan, Milano. Dealing with Italians, just, let me tell you... Are we the same? Good lord, no! That's why Europe's fun - it's fun because it's different. A political project that seeks to make it all the same - it's ghastly.
The great skill of investment is to know when the right time is to get out. Getting in's easy.
I can't think of a single example of two mature democracies going to war with each other in the 20th century. It's where there was an absence of democracy and a breakdown of democracy that we finish up with these wars.
Normally, when New York catches a cold, London sneezes.
My vision is to put this country and the British people first and for us to divorce ourselves from political union and re-engage with the rest of the world.
I have made comments in favour of British people getting jobs over and above those from southern eastern Europe.
We used to fight for democracy. Democracy used to matter. We now treat it with contempt. We have turned our backs on values that we built up over hundreds of years, for the benefit of politicians in Europe. To me, that is heartbreaking.
I judge everybody on the Farage Test. Number one, would I employ them? Number two, would I go for a drink with them?
If you take away people's identity and their ability through the ballot box to determine their future, don't be surprised if they turn to extremes or violence or anything else.
Building walls is entirely sensible. We don't need to do it. We have got the English Channel.
When you get back control of your country, you get proper democracy. You get back proper debate.
There are millions out there who aren't getting an even break. They're being done down.
There are two completely different Britains. There's London, and there's the rest of Britain. Attitudes are very different.
I can distinctly remember being the only boy in my class whose parents had separated.
I don't look back at anything. I look forwards.
However imperfect Donald Trump may be, -and, my goodness, he is - his mother was Scottish; he owns Turnberry. He spends a lot of time in our country - he loves our country, what we stand for, and our culture.
There is a debate in Ukip as to how strong we should be on the immigration issue. I personally think we should own it.
I love Europe! France is wonderful. It should be. We've subsidised it for 40 years.
Perhaps our own opposition to even the level of European integration we have now, let alone any more, is well known.
I'd love to tell you that everyone who voted Brexit felt like me about the country, about the Union Jack and the cricket team. But I don't think that there's as much romanticism in it, perhaps, as people think.
We can't completely isolate ourselves from international terrorism and the problem the world faces.
We have good and bad archbishops.
I think the employer should be much freer to make decisions on who she or he employs.
UKIP believe that immigration can be an extremely positive thing. But it has to be controlled.
Potentially, I would be very interested in being a shock jock, though Ofcom might be tricky. Some of the American stuff is appalling, wild stuff, crazy conspiracy theories.
We've been very lucky to have UKIP in the U.K. If we hadn't been here, the BNP would be doing very well.
I just say it as I see it, behave as I do. If people don't like it, they can take a running jump.
There is no Left and Right any more. Left and Right is irrelevant... We need big change. We've got to get back control of our country.
There are little games that go on in politics.
When I'm finished with politics, I'll have a richer life. I'd like to go to the theatre.
Whatever my faults, I have some principles.
All marriages, all relationships have huge ups and downs.
That Obama creature - loathsome individual - he couldn't stand our country.
I've stood down as UKIP leader. I'm not responsible for these people anymore.
I like to think I've changed the centre of gravity on lots of national debates.