The National - News

MR BREXIT QUITS UKIP OVER ITS ANTI-ISLAM OBSESSION

▶ Nigel Farage leaves party in chaos after it took up hate politics targeting Muslims and hiring the right-wing extremist Tommy Robinson as adviser

- THE NATIONAL

Nigel Farage, the leading Brexit campaigner, is quitting his Euroscepti­c party in protest at its Islam fixation and the recruitmen­t of a far-right extremist as a senior adviser.

Mr Farage, the former leader of the UK Independen­ce Party, said he was leaving after failing to persuade its executive to replace new leader Gerard Batten, who has promoted an anti-Muslim rabble-rouser to his top team.

Mr Batten appointed Tommy Robinson, the former leader of the far-right English Defence League, as an adviser despite party rules barring former League members from joining the party to avoid its outspoken British nationalis­m being labelled racist.

Under Mr Farage’s decade-long leadership, Ukip became a powerful if short-lived force that succeeded in its objective of winning the 2016 national referendum to leave the European Union. He quit as leader shortly afterwards.

The party has since slumped in the polls and the recruitmen­t of Robinson, a populist nationalis­t notorious for anti-Muslim sentiments, is being seen as an attempt by Ukip to tap into his fan base of young, disillusio­ned white working-class men.

“Gerard Batten realises he has to appeal to a broader base,” said Prof Matthew Feldman, the director of the UK-based Centre for Analysis of the Radical Right. “It’s opportunis­tic, but whether that gamble pays off is largely tied to Brexit.”

Mr Batten responded to Mr Farage’s announceme­nt by claiming that he left “Ukip in spirit” after the referendum.

The party is now organising a “Brexit Betrayal” rally on Sunday in London, where Robinson will be a key speaker, seeking to transfer his anti-Muslim street protests into a mainstream political campaign.

The party released a photo of its planning committee that showed a man convicted of an attempted kidnapping with a seat at the top table. Daniel Thomas was jailed for two years after he went armed with a knife to a man’s house in an apparent dispute over drugs.

Ukip said it was unaware of the man’s past and that he was there to act only as Robinson’s security.

“We are just a few days away from the most ill-judged political event I have ever been aware of in British politics,” Mr Farage wrote in a newspaper article announcing his decision to quit. “The very idea of Tommy Robinson being at the centre of the Brexit debate is too awful to contemplat­e.”

The march will be two days before Mrs May seeks parliament­ary approval for her Brexit deal. Mr Batten and Robinson will speak at the event.

Critics of Mr Farage accused him of hypocrisy, citing his unveiling of an anti-migrant poster that showed a queue of mostly non-white people with the slogan: “Breaking point: the EU has failed us all.”

The head of the Church of England also condemned Mr Farage after he claimed that sexual assaults by migrants were the “nuclear bomb” of the EU referendum campaign.

“The gall of the man takes some beating,” said a spokesman for anti-extremism group Hope Not Hate. “This is the beast that he helped to create.”

In his article, Mr Farage said that he was confronted by “several angry young men ... who all seemed to be obsessed with Islam and Tommy Robinson” while speaking at Ukip’s annual conference this year.

“I wondered at the time if I’d just given my last Ukip speech,” he said. “There is a huge space for a Brexit party in British politics, but it won’t be filled by Ukip.”

The success of the party in tapping into disaffecti­on with the EU, led to it taking the third highest number of votes in national elections in 2015.

The party had only two MPs but Mr Farage’s internatio­nal recognitio­n exceeded his party’s level of representa­tion.

He was the first British politician to meet Donald Trump after his election win and the US leader proposed him as an ambassador to the US.

Robinson – who has conviction­s for violence and fraud – has been shunned by convention­al parties because of his anti-Muslim rhetoric. But he has a large online following and has received financial backing from US donors.

The party executive had joined Mr Farage in opposing Robinson’s appointmen­t, but Mr Batten faced them down saying that the most recognisab­le face of the far-right had been “persecuted by the state” because of his anti-Muslim views.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Nigel Farage at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, last year, where other members shunned him
Bloomberg Nigel Farage at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, last year, where other members shunned him

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates