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Nigel Farage and Nick Clegg set for second TV debate Nigel Farage ready for 'ding-dong' in Nick Clegg TV debate
(35 minutes later)
Nick Clegg and Nigel Farage are preparing to take part in a TV debate on the UK's membership of the European Union. UKIP's Nigel Farage has predicted Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg will attack his comments about admiring President Putin when they clash in a second TV debate.
Mr Farage said there were big questions to be answered from the first debate and said he was sure "there will be a ding-dong" over his views on Mr Putin.
Mr Clegg has called Mr Farage's view of Russia's president "utterly grotesque".
The Lib Dem leader wants the UK to stay in the EU, Mr Farage wants the UK to leave. It is on BBC Two at 19:00 BST.
The BBC event, which follows another debate hosted by LBC Radio last week, comes ahead of May's European Parliament elections.The BBC event, which follows another debate hosted by LBC Radio last week, comes ahead of May's European Parliament elections.
Lib Dem leader Mr Clegg wants the UK to remain in the EU, while Mr Farage, leader of the UK Independence Party, is campaigning for a withdrawal. The clash, hosted by David Dimbleby, has strict rules:
The debate is on BBC Two at 19:00 BST. As he left home on Wednesday morning, Mr Farage told waiting reporters he was "looking forward" to the debate: "This is great - UKIP, mocked and derided, our arguments written off as being mad and extreme - and here we are on national television having a debate.
"The last time this happened, a big BBC debate, was 40 years ago. The only thing that is the same is David Dimbleby - everything else has changed."
A row between Mr Clegg and Mr Farage over the UKIP leader's comments on Vladimir Putin has escalated ahead of the debate.A row between Mr Clegg and Mr Farage over the UKIP leader's comments on Vladimir Putin has escalated ahead of the debate.
In recent days, Mr Clegg has called Mr Farage's description of the Russian president as the foreign leader he most admires "utterly grotesque". In the first debate Mr Farage suggested the EU had "blood on its hands" for encouraging Ukrainians to rise up against their former pro-Russian government.
But Mr Farage has said he was referring to Mr Putin as a political "operator". In a GQ magazine interview released this week Mr Farage named President Putin as the world leader he most admired, for his role in the Syria crisis last year, "as an operator, but not as a human being".
Immigration Mr Clegg responded by telling a news conference he thought those views were "utterly grotesque", saying President Putin was the "chief sponsor and protector of one of the most brutal dictators on the face of the planet".
The BBC debate, hosted by David Dimbleby in central London, will last for an hour. The audience has been selected to be representative of the population as a whole. Last week's debate saw Mr Farage and Mr Clegg clash over the issue of immigration and the possible effect on the UK economy of leaving the EU.
Last week's debate saw Mr Farage and Mr Clegg clash over the issue of immigration and the possible impact on the UK economy of leaving the EU.
Mr Clegg said: "We are better off in Europe - richer, stronger, safer - and that's why I will fight to keep us in, for the sake of jobs, for the sake of our clout in the world, for the sake of Britain."Mr Clegg said: "We are better off in Europe - richer, stronger, safer - and that's why I will fight to keep us in, for the sake of jobs, for the sake of our clout in the world, for the sake of Britain."
But Mr Farage replied: "This debate is between a tired status quo defending a crumbling EU that frankly isn't working any more, and a fresh approach that says let's be friendly with Europe, let's trade with Europe, but let's not be governed by their institutions."But Mr Farage replied: "This debate is between a tired status quo defending a crumbling EU that frankly isn't working any more, and a fresh approach that says let's be friendly with Europe, let's trade with Europe, but let's not be governed by their institutions."
He also suggested the EU had "blood on its hands" for encouraging Ukrainians to rise up against their former pro-Russian government.
Tensions between the Russia and the West have risen following the overthrow of pro-Kremlin Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych in February, after months of street protests.
Russia's subsequent move to annex Crimea has triggered a crisis in relations.
* You can watch the whole debate live on the BBC News website, with rolling video and text coverage of the key points, reaction and analysis. There is a BBC News Channel special programme from 18:30 BST to 21:00 BST.* You can watch the whole debate live on the BBC News website, with rolling video and text coverage of the key points, reaction and analysis. There is a BBC News Channel special programme from 18:30 BST to 21:00 BST.