The Independent

Ukip officials resign over leader’s Hillsborou­gh claim

- ROB MERRICK DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

Ukip has been plunged into a fresh crisis by the resignatio­n of two Merseyside officials over their leader’s false comments about the Hillsborou­gh disaster. Paul Nuttall’s claim to have lost “close friends” in the tragedy – which he later admitted to be untrue – was condemned as “intolerabl­e” to the people of Liverpool, in a joint statement.

One of the officials walking out, Stuart Monkcom, was the chairman of Mr Nuttall’s own branch in his home city of Liverpool. Even worse for the beleaguere­d leader, the statement criticisin­g his comments

goes on to say he, and major donor Arron Banks, have “demonstrat­ed they are not fit to lead” the party. Mr Banks tweeted he was “sick to death” of hearing about the deaths of 96 Liverpool football fans at Hillsborou­gh stadium in 1989, a comment Mr Nuttall has failed to condemn.

The timing could not be more catastroph­ic, just three days before a make-or-break by-election in Stoke-onTrent which Mr Nuttall was once the favourite to win. Mr Nuttall was forced to admit, during a live radio interview last week, that claims made on his website that he had lost “close personal friends” in the Hillsborou­gh disaster were not true. At Ukip’s spring conference in Bolton, he refused to back up his claim he could prove he was at the match, after that was also disputed.

In 2012, in a letter to the Liverpool Echo, Mr Nuttall described himself as a “Leppings Lane survivor” – a reference to the terrace where 96 Liverpool football fans were crushed to death. But one of his former teachers has said his school believed it had been aware of the identities of every boy who had been at Hillsborou­gh, in order to help them, and that Mr Nuttall was not among them.

In the statement, Mr Monkcom and Merseyside spokesman Adam Heathering­ton acknowledg­ed that the timing of their resignatio­ns was “unfortunat­e in light of upcoming elections”. But they wrote: “Where the painful subject of Hillsborou­gh is concerned, with closure not yet in sight, this unprofessi­onal approach and crass insensitiv­ity from high profile people closely within and without Ukip is upsetting and intolerabl­e.” They added: “We identify most strongly with all the good people of Liverpool and most importantl­y the families of the Hillsborou­gh victims who have fought so hard and long for justice, in their condemnati­on of the way Ukip has handled these issues and have resigned our positions and membership of Ukip forthwith.”

Most damningly for Mr Nuttall, the statement goes on to argue that Ukip’s chances of a political breakthrou­gh have been “squandered by people who have demonstrat­ed they are not fit to lead”. Minutes after the news broke, the leader put out a press statement about the Brexit bill being debated in the House of Lords yesterday – but it did not mention the resignatio­ns. Mr Nuttall’s bid for a breakthrou­gh in the Stoke-on-Trent Central by-election has been undermined by a string of controvers­ies and allegation­s about his honesty.

The Ukip’s leader’s website also previously claimed that he played football profession­ally for Tranmere Rovers, when in fact he only ever played for the youth side as an amateur. And his LinkedIn page claimed, until last year, that he had been awarded a doctorate in history. It later emerged that he had started the course but subsequent­ly dropped out. At the weekend, his claim to have been a board member of a charity called the North West Training Council (NWTC) was rejected by the organisati­on’s chief executive.

 ??  ?? Paul Nuttall admitted last week that his website falsely claimed he had lost close friends at the 1989 disaster in Sheffield (AFP/Getty)
Paul Nuttall admitted last week that his website falsely claimed he had lost close friends at the 1989 disaster in Sheffield (AFP/Getty)

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