In the race to replace Theresa May, who last week announced that she would step down as British Prime Minister, the issue of whether to back a once unthinkable "no-deal" Brexit - like Farage does - is now dominant. At least eight Conservative members of Parliament have publicly declared they will compete for the top job.
Boris Johnson, a Conservative Party MP and the front-runner to become the next prime minister, called the European elections a "crushing rebuke." Writing in his weekly column in the Daily Telegraph, he said: "The message from these results is clear. If we go on like this, we will be fired: dismissed from the job of running the country."
The Conservative Party came in fifth place, winning a paltry 9 per cent of the vote. Their dismal showing could see the party shying away from pushing for an early general election, over fears that they could see a similar wipeout.
May tweeted that "very disappointing" results showed the "importance of finding a Brexit deal, and I sincerely hope these results focus minds in Parliament."
If Farage's triumph in these elections pushes the Conservative Party onto his turf, it wouldn't be the first time.
The poll-topping performance in the 2014 European elections of the right wing, anti-Europe Ukip - then led by Farage - is thought to be one of the reasons then Prime Minister David Cameron called for the referendum that sent Britain down the whole rocky road of Brexit to begin with.
Today, Farage said that if Britain doesn't leave on October 31, the current deadline, then his party would repeat its success in a general election.
"We will contest all 650 seats across the country at the next general election. I will not stop until the job is done," he tweeted.
The opposition Labour Party faced renewed calls to unambiguously back a second Brexit referendum following their poor showing in the elections. They came in third place behind the Liberal Democrats, who saw a surge in support especially in areas that backed "remain" in the 2016 referendum. It did not go unnoticed that the Liberal Democrats topped the poll in Islington, the London constituency of the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.
Emily Thornberry, a senior Labour Party politician, told the BBC that Labour wasn't clear enough on its position on Brexit and that it needed to learn lessons. Voters, she said, backed parties whose policy "could be summed up in one word or three words".
Jo Swinson, the deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats, whose slogan was "Bollocks to Brexit," said that the results showed that the "growing liberal movement that can stand up to the forces of nationalism and populism" is winning.
It was a bad election for Tommy Robinson, an anti-Islam campaigner who stood as an independent. Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, received only 2.2 per cent of the vote. He reportedly slipped out of the election count early.
ChangeUK, a newly-formed pro-EU party whose candidates included Rachel Johnson, sister of Boris Johnson, performed badly, as did the nationalist Ukip.
Until recently, Britain was not scheduled to take part in the European elections, the second-largest exercise in democracy in the world. But Britain was forced to field candidates after it failed to leave the bloc on March 29 as scheduled.