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Nigel Farage resigns: Douglas Carswell brands Ukip leader ‘electorally disastrous’ after resignation

'I now feel that I’ve done my bit, that I couldn’t possibly achieve more'

Ashley Cowburn
Political Correspondent
Monday 04 July 2016 05:06 EDT
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Nigel Farage resigns as leader of UKIP

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Nigel Farage has resigned as the leader of the UK Independence Party just a week and a half after Britons voted to leave the European Union, saying he “couldn’t possibly achieve more”.

At a speech in London, Mr Farage, who was elected as an MEP for the party in 1999, said he had never wanted to be a career politician and was standing down. He has had two stints as leader of the Eurosceptic party since 2006.

“I now feel that I’ve done my bit, that I couldn’t possibly achieve more,” he said. “I won’t be changing my mind again, I assure you.”

The party’s only MP in the Commons, Douglas Carswell, reacted to Mr Farage’s announcement by sharing a smiling emoji with sunglasses on Twitter – a likely reflection of the bitter relationship between Mr Carswell and Mr Farage.

When asked about Mr Farage’s often criticised rhetoric on immigration, Mr Carswell told the BBC: “We went too far, and I criticised it when we went too far ... and it's not just morally wrong, it's electorally disastrous.

"This is a decent, generous country. People have a legitimate right of feel a sense of anger with their politicians but the answer to that is not to play on people's fears and anger but to promise the hope of something better."

Mr Farage added at his speech in London: “I have decided to stand aside as leader of Ukip. The victory for the Leave side in the referendum means that my political ambition has been achieved. I came into this business because I wanted us to a self-governing nation, not to become a career politician.

“Ukip is in a good position and will continue, with my full support to attract a significant vote. Whilst we will now leave the European Union the terms of our withdrawal are unclear. If there is too much backsliding by the Government and with the Labour Party detached from many of its voters then Ukip’s best days may yet to come”, he added.

The Ukip leader has often courted controversy in his political career and as leader of Ukip. During the EU referendum campaign he refused to apologise for a widely condemned “Breaking Point” poster showing a vast queue of refugees stretching into the distance on the Slovenian border.

Caroline Lucas responded to the resignation by saying Mr Farage “will be remembered for that disgusting poster and using suffering of refugees for political gain”. The Green MP added: “Farage’s legacy: toxic rhetoric on immigration, migrants feel unsafe. A divided UK and a stronger Establishment”.

During the 2015 general election he sparked outrage by suggesting a policy of rejecting migrants with HIV from coming into the UK, saying Britain should “put their own people first”.

Just last week Mr Farage suggested his party’s only MP could be removed from the party. Speaking about the MP on LBC radio, Mr Farage said: “What would he know?”

“We find somebody inside our party who doesn't agree with anything the party stands for, it's a very odd state of affairs.”

His comments came after Mr Carswell attacked the former party leader over his controversial "Breaking Point" posters.

Mr Farage had previously announced his resignation in May 2015, after he failed to win a seat in the Commons – only to change his mind days later.

Ukip's only MP could be sacked by Monday, says party leader Nigel Farage

In his speech on Monday he added: “Tough though it's been at times, it's all certainly been worth it. I came into politics from business because I believed that this nation should be self-governing. I have never been and I have never wanted to be a career politician.

“My aim in being in politics was to get Britain out of the European Union. That is what we voted for in that referendum, and that is why I now feel that I've done my bit, that I couldn't possibly achieve more than we managed to get in that referendum.

Ukip's only MP could be sacked by Monday, says party leader Nigel Farage

“So I feel it's right that I should now stand aside as leader of Ukip. I will continue to support the party, I will support the new leader, I will watch the renegotiation process in Brussels like a hawk and perhaps comment in the European Parliament from time to time.

“I'm also very keen to help the independence movements that are springing up in other parts of the European Union, because I'm certain of one thing – you haven't seen the last country that wants to leave the EU.

"It has been a huge chunk of my life, doing this, and it's not easy perhaps when you feel a degree of ownership of something to let it go. But has come at a cost to me and perhaps to those around me. During the referendum campaign, I said I want my country back. What I'm saying today is I want my life back, and it begins right now.”

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