Steven Woolfe Excluded From Ukip Leadership Contest As Party Thrown Into Chaos

Steven Woolfe Excluded From Ukip Leadership Contest
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Steven Woolfe has been excluded from the Ukip leadership contest, throwing the party into turmoil.

The MEP and party migration spokesman had been seen as the frontrunner to replace Nigel Farage.

However the party’s National Executive Committee today ruled he could not stand because he submitted leadership nomination papers 17 minutes after Sunday’s midday deadline.

Woolfe was seen as the preferred candidate of Farage and Ukip donor Arron Banks.

Following the decision, Woolfe said the NEC had “proven it is not fit for purpose” and was “neither effective nor professional in the way it governs the party”.

In a statement, the NEC said: “By a clear majority of NEC members Steven Woolfe MEP’s application was considered to be ineligible as a result of a late submission and as such he did not meet the eligibility criteria. His membership of the Party was not in question.”

Woolfe had blamed “technical difficulties” for his application not being processed in time.

The candidates in the race will now be:

  • Cllr Bill Etheridge MEP
  • Diane James MEP
  • Elizabeth Jones
  • Jonathan Arnott MEP
  • Cllr Lisa Duffy
  • Philip Broughton

Three members of the NEC have resigned in protest at the decision to exclude Woolfe.

Councillor Victoria Ayling, Raymond Finch MEP and Michael McGough have called for an extraordinary general meeting of the party in order to hold a vote of no confidence in the NEC.

“As members of the Ukip’s NEC we have been privy to the increasingly alarming behaviour of many on that board, leading us to conclude that the party’s executive committee is no longer fit for purpose,” they said in a statement.

“Rather than aim to represent the membership who appointed them, a growing number of members of the NEC are placing personal ambitions, loyalties and jealousies at the heart of their decision-making. We have witnessed an escalating megalomania that is detrimental to the functioning of the party.

“It has not reached the stage where the party’s national executive has essentially usurped full governance of the party and is collectively in pursuit of oligarchy, self-promotion and cronyism.”

“We have witnessed an escalating megalomania”

- Resigning Ukip NEC members

In a statement, Woolfe said:

“I am extremely disappointed by the UKIP NEC decision to exclude me from the party’s leadership election.

“Having been a committed member of UKIP, standing for the party in multiple elections, acting as a spokesman at the highest level, I wanted to take this opportunity to stand for Leader to inject my ideas, plans and passion into the party.

“Over the course of this leadership election, the NEC has proven it is not fit for purpose and it confirmed many member’s fears that it is neither effective nor professional in the way it governs the party.

“The NEC panel have even accepted that they were wrong to raise questions of my membership of the party, as I have been a full member since 2011. They did not identify my payments in the UKIP records until I showed them my own bank statements. After providing evidence of the payments and donations I have made to the party, they were satisfied this was not an issue.

“They have failed to accept that there were serious issues with the application system despite providing evidence that attempts of submission were made before the deadline. The NEC deny this is the fault of the UKIP system.

”Furthermore, highly confidential information about me held in party documents has been leaked to the press and the NEC has not sought to investigate this gross breach of privacy.

“The NEC’s treatment of Nathan Gill over the past two weeks has also been totally unacceptable.

“Nathan is a decent and honest man, who has been in the party longer than many NEC members. He, as the leader of UKIP in Wales, led the party to victories for seven Welsh assembly members in May. His dedication to the party knows no bounds. Wales voted to leave the EU and it deserves a Eurosceptic voice in Brussels to represent the people, as the renegotiation moves ahead.

“If I were on the ballot, I would have fought to reform the internal structure of UKIP including the NEC. UKIP must professionalise and it cannot do that with an unfit NEC.

“Over the course of the past two weeks, my office and I have received thousands of messages of support from members.

‘To every single one of them and all of those who have helped to support my campaign, I say a huge thank you.

“Although I am out of the contest I wish the other candidates well and hope they can show UKIP has a positive, inclusive, patriotic vision for Britain.”

On Monday, The Huffington Post UK revealed Woolfe failed to declare a criminal conviction for drink driving when he stood as a Police and Crime Commissioner in 2012.

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