Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage (L) and Brexit Party Chairman Richard Tice in central London on June 7, 2019 | Tolga Akmen/AFP via Getty Images Nigel Farage attended dinner with right-wing conspiracists The Brexit Party says it does not ‘vet other people’s guest lists.’

LONDON — Nigel Farage enjoyed a lavish dinner with fringe right-wing figures who have previously spread racist and conspiracist material online.

The Brexit Party leader attended a £180-a-head fundraiser on June 20 for Turning Point U.K., the British branch of the pro-Donald Trump youth group, a video uploaded to YouTube shows.

Farage was at a table with millionaire hotelier John Mappin — who has shared anti-vaccine conspiracy theories and false information about Jewish financier George Soros — and artist Amanda Eliasch — who said Enoch Powell had been "sadly proven right" in his "Rivers of Blood" speech by the 2017 Manchester Arena bombing and has made anti-Islam comments.

Turning Point U.K., which is an offshoot of American group Turning Point U.S.A., was launched in Britain earlier this year by Breitbart contributor Charlie Kirk. The movement describes itself as "a grassroots organisation dedicated to educating students and other young people on the values of free markets, limited government and personal responsibility."

Mappin, a Scientologist who helped launch the group, can be seen sitting opposite Farage at the fundraiser last week in a YouTube video uploaded by Turning Point U.K.

The owner of the Camelot Castle Hotel in Cornwall, Mappin has shared conspiracies online about vaccines and Soros, and claims that senior figures in Hollywood and Washington are pedophiles.

Since the dinner last week he has shared a post on Facebook that claims falsely that vaccines explode inside the body “like a cluster bomb” and have boosted incidences of cancer, diabetes and autism.

He shared a meme two days after the event that suggested the “mainstream media” is preventing the “unawake masses” from learning about the “deep state” and “Soros." Theories about Soros controlling the media, banks and politics, which Mappin has shared in the past, are considered to be anti-Semitic by critics.

Mappin told POLITICO: "The truth of the matter is I am certainly not in any way shape or form intolerant. We appointed an orthodox Jew to be head of Turning Point U.K. and I myself had an Islamic wedding and my wife's family are partly Muslim. We work around the clock and fund human rights organizations all over the world that uphold religious freedom and I certainly have never judged somebody because of their race or their religion."

“We do not vet other people's guest lists” — A Brexit Party spokesman

He added: "This type of reporting has no place in a reputable publication. This is why the political media is losing their ratings."

Eliasch, meanwhile, shared a video of Enoch Powell's 1968 "Rivers of Blood" speech on race relations in the U.K. on Facebook after the Manchester Arena terror attack in 2017 and argued that “ethnic diversity is a huge problem.”

In the wake of the London Bridge terror attack she wrote a blog post saying Muslims live an “isolated indoctrinated life” that is “not compatible with ours,” according to BuzzFeed News. But she deleted the post after it was highlighted by the website.

She has shared theories posted by conspiracist David Icke, including one in which he claimed there is a “political system orchestrated, created and controlled to this day by the Rothschilds called Zionism. It is a tyrannical system which has no mercy on anyone who gets in its way.”

Eliasch refused to comment when contacted by POLITICO. She told BuzzFeed in May that she is not anti-Muslim, adding: "You've accused me of being anti-Islamicist [sic] when I have an Islamic driver who I absolutely adore. How dare you. I lived in Marrakech. How dare you do that.”

Farage and the Brexit Party were made aware of the online activities of Mappin and Eliasch when BuzzFeed News reported that he asked them for funding for his new political movement.

A Brexit Party spokesman said in response to a request for comment on Farage's attendance at the dinner: “We do not vet other people's guest lists.” Turning Point U.K. did not respond to a request for comment.

“Nigel Farage has gone to great lengths to try and present his new Brexit Party as more palatable than UKIP and other extreme right-wing parties. But the truth is it’s just a different paint job on the same old prejudice" — Jo Stevens, Labour MP, on behalf of the People's Vote campaign

Labour MP Jo Stevens, speaking on behalf of the People’s Vote campaign, which wants a second Brexit referendum, said: “Nigel Farage has gone to great lengths to try and present his new Brexit Party as more palatable than UKIP and other extreme right-wing parties. But the truth is it’s just a different paint job on the same old prejudice."

Stevens continued, “He claims to be a ‘man of the people’ but he’s nothing more than a snake-oil salesman in an expensive suit.”

In a 14-minute speech at the dinner, Farage railed against the education system, which he said was teaching young people a one-sided liberal view on issues like global warming, global corporatism and defense of Judeo-Christian culture.

"Whatever it may be, on all of these issues, our young people are being taught that one view is virtuous and right and the other view is evil," he told diners.

"And this is what we have to fight. And this is why I am so pleased, Charlie Kirk, that you have bought TPUK to this country. It’s vital.”