Tuesday 5 July 2016

Nigel Farage quits as UKIP leader


Britain’s main pro-Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage on Monday resigned as head of the far-right, anti- immigrant UK Independence Party (UKIP) saying he “couldn’t possibly achieve more”, just two weeks after Britons voted to leave the European Union (EU). Mr. Farage (52) said he felt he had done all he could to achieve a vote for the United Kingdom to leave the EU in a referendum on June 23 and now he
wanted “his life back.”“I now feel that I’ve done my bit”“I now feel that I’ve done my bit, that I couldn’t possibly achieve more,” said Mr. Farage, who was elected as a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for the party in 1999. “I feel it’s right that I should now stand aside as leader of UKIP,” he told reporters at a press conference here. “I have never been and never wanted to be a career politician,” he added.

Grassroots campaign

Mr. Farage, who had led a separate grassroots campaign to convince voters of a ‘Brexit’, had made numerous speeches in the wake of the result to declare June 23 Britain’s “Independence Day.”

He said he now wanted a cross party team to negotiate U.K.’s exit from Brussels but he said the most important thing was that the team knew how to win the best deal. “An absolute priority is to bring in business people,” he added. He has had two stints as leader of the Eurosceptic party since 2006.

Britain on June 23 voted to leave the 28-member economic bloc in a historic referendum, in which 52 per cent voted to Leave while 48 per cent sided with the Remain camp.

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