Daily Mail

Everybody’s quit except him!

16 Ukip officials resign over leader’s fling with model – but he claims he’ll ‘drain the swamp’

- By John Stevens and Claire Ellicott Deputy Political Editor Political Correspond­ent

‘Prepostero­us situation’

UKIP leader Henry Bolton last night vowed to purge the party of his critics – as 16 of his colleagues quit in protest at his refusal to resign.

Mr Bolton yesterday insisted he would fight on and pledged to ‘drain the swamp’, despite a unanimous vote of no confidence in his leadership by the party’s national executive committee.

In farcical scenes, well over half of Ukip’s 25strong team of frontbench spokesmen have stepped down, including deputy leader Margot Parker and assistant deputy leader Mike Hookem, who warned Mr Bolton that his position was ‘untenable’. Other resignatio­ns included environmen­t spokesman Julia Reid and justice spokesman Peter Jewell.

But yesterday outside the hotel in Folkestone, Kent, where he has been living, Mr Bolton, 54, pledged to clear the party of those opposed to his leadership. The former Army officer, who became Ukip leader in September, has faced calls to resign after he left his third wife and two young children for model Jo Marney. It later emerged that Miss Marney, 25, had sent racist text messages about Meghan Markle.

Mr Bolton said he would not be resigning, meaning his fate will now be decided by a vote of Ukip members at an emergency meeting next month. He warned that the decision by the national executive committee (NEC) to begin the process of removing him was a distractio­n from Brexit and council elections in May.

Mr Bolton said: ‘The NEC… is unfit for purpose and has severely handicappe­d the party’s progress and political delivery for some years, as all recent Ukip leaders will attest.

He said the NEC had lost the confidence of the membership and he would be ‘proposing a newly constitute­d and reformed NEC’, adding: ‘Likewise, it is now time to put an end to the factional in-fighting and to remove those who have been a part of that. It is time to “drain the swamp”.’

The same phrase has been used by Donald Trump to denounce the Washington political establishm­ent.

Last night Mr Bolton received support from Nigel Farage. The former Ukip leader said Mr Bolton had ‘not been very wise’ but his predicamen­t reminded him of Jeremy Corbyn’s in 2016, when he was backed by the Labour rank and file even after most of his frontbench resigned.

He said 16 Ukip frontbench spokesman had quit but he backed Mr Bolton taking on the NEC, saying: ‘If Ukip doesn’t reform, it will die.’

Last night, Mr Bolton was interviewe­d by Mr Farage on his LBC radio show. Asked if he was still with Miss Marney, he said the romantic side of the relationsh­ip was over but added: ‘In the future, who knows?’

East Midlands MEP Mrs Parker told BBC radio that Mr Bolton’s personal life ‘took over the job he was elected to do’. She said: ‘It would be quicker and cleaner if he came to the conclusion he could go sooner rather than later.’

Mr Hookem, who resigned on Friday but made the decision public yesterday, said the situation had become an ‘almost farcical scandal’.

‘Ukip is now in the prepostero­us situation of the leader’s private life being of more interest than the party,’ he said in his resignatio­n letter.

Other figures to go include London spokesman Peter Whittle, trade spokesman William Dartmouth, education spokesman David Kurten and work and pensions spokesman David Sprason. Immigratio­n spokesman and party treasurer John Bickley, who resigned in a live interview with LBC, said Mr Bolton needed to go so he could: ‘focus on sorting out his personal life.’

Miss Marney last night defended her former lover, despite being dumped last week after her racist text messages emerged. She wrote on Twitter that it was a ‘complete fabricatio­n’ to claim no one supported him, adding that he was reforming Ukip to get rid of ‘the troublemak­ers serving their own agendas’. Former Ukip donor Arron Banks last night said he was in discussion­s with Mr Farage about him leading a new group, which could ‘morph into an entity that could put pressure on the political parties’. He told the BBC: ‘It needs to be a break from traditiona­l politics.’

Ukip councillor David Meacock said Mr Bolton’s call to ‘drain the swamp’ was ‘disgracefu­l’. He added: ‘If there is any swamp in Ukip, Mr Bolton is the first plug which needs to be pulled in the draining process.’

 ??  ?? Defiant: Henry Bolton outside the hotel where he is living yesterday
Defiant: Henry Bolton outside the hotel where he is living yesterday

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