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Neil Hamilton (politician)

Mostyn Neil Hamilton (born 9 March 1949) is a British former barrister and politician who has been leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) since 2020. He was the Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Tatton from 1983 to 1997 and a UKIP Member of the Senedd (MS) for Mid and West Wales from 2016 to 2021.

Neil Hamilton
Official portrait, 2016
Leader of the UK Independence Party
Assumed office
12 September 2020[a]
DeputyRebecca Jane
Preceded byFreddy Vachha
Leader of UKIP Wales
Assumed office
26 September 2016
Leader
Preceded byNathan Gill
Leader of the UK Independence Party in the Senedd
In office
7 November 2019 – 29 April 2021
Preceded byGareth Bennett
Succeeded byOffice abolished
In office
11 May 2016 – 17 May 2018
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byCaroline Jones
Deputy Chair of the UK Independence Party
In office
4 August 2014 – 24 February 2016
Serving with Suzanne Evans
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byThe Earl of Dartmouth
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Corporate Affairs
In office
14 April 1992 – 25 October 1994
Prime MinisterJohn Major
Preceded byJohn Redwood
Succeeded byJonathan Evans
Member of Parliament
for Tatton
In office
9 June 1983 – 8 April 1997
Preceded byConstituency created
Succeeded byMartin Bell
Member of the Senedd
for Mid and West Wales
In office
5 May 2016 – 29 April 2021
Preceded byWilliam Powell
Succeeded byJane Dodds
Personal details
Born
Mostyn Neil Hamilton

(1949-03-09) 9 March 1949 (age 75)
Bedwellty, Caerphilly, Wales
Political partyUK Independence Party (2002–present)
Conservative (1964–2002)
Spouse
(m. 1983)
Residence(s)London, England
Wiltshire, England
Alma materAberystwyth University (BScEcon, MScEcon)
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (LL.M)[1]
ProfessionBarrister
WebsiteOfficial website

Hamilton was elected to the House of Commons in the 1983 general election. He was appointed Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Corporate Affairs by Prime Minister John Major in 1992.

In 1994, The Guardian alleged that Hamilton had taken cash payments in exchange for asking questions in Parliament. Hamilton sued The Guardian for libel, but settled on the day of the trial. The Guardian published a headline branding him "A Liar and a Cheat". The cash-for-questions affair enquiry in 1997 found that Hamilton had taken bribes. He subsequently lost a libel case on the matter. Hamilton became widely associated with sleaze,[2] and was forced to resign his ministerial role. He was defeated by an independent candidate, Martin Bell, in the 1997 general election.

He left the Conservative Party in 2002 and joined UKIP. In 2011, he returned to politics and was elected to the National Executive Committee of UKIP. Following his election to the National Assembly for Wales, he was UKIP Assembly Group Leader from 2016 to 2018 and again from 2019 to 2021. He became leader of UKIP Wales in 2016. In September 2020, Hamilton was named acting leader of UKIP, following the suspension from the party of the previous leader, Freddy Vachha. Hamilton was defeated at the 2021 Senedd election. In October 2021, Hamilton was elected UKIP leader.[3]

Early life edit

Hamilton was born in Fleur-de-Lis, a Gwent pit village near Blackwood, Wales. In 1960 he moved to Ammanford.[4] His father was a chief engineer for the National Coal Board. His grandfathers were coal miners. He grew up in Ammanford in Carmarthenshire and joined the Conservative Party in 1964, at the age of 15.

Education edit

Hamilton attended Amman Valley Grammar School in Ammanford. He received a BScEcon degree in economics and politics from the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth in 1970, and an MScEcon degree in economics and politics in 1975.[5] While at Aberystwyth, he was active in the Federation of Conservative Students; he was a member between 1968 and 1974. In 1973, as a representative of the Federation of Conservative Students, Hamilton attended a conference of the neo-fascist Italian Social Movement (MSI).[6] Hamilton went on to study at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge,[7] where he attained a postgraduate law degree.[1]

Student activity and early political career edit

At the 1970 Conservative Party conference, Hamilton called for mass privatisation. The following year, he opposed the plan for Britain to join the European Communities. In 1972, after several years' membership, Hamilton was elected to the executive council of the Conservative Monday Club. He left the Club in 1973, and stood as chairman of the Federation of Conservative Students against David Davis, but lost. In the early 1970s, Hamilton was the founder of the Eldon League, a right-wing social organisation given to having picnics and dinners 'and having a good time'.[8] He appointed himself its "Grand Imperial Prior" and called for the abolition of the internal combustion engine and plastic.[9] Hamilton stood as the Conservative parliamentary candidate in the February 1974 general election in Abertillery[10] and in the 1979 general election in Bradford North,[11] but failed on both occasions.

Teaching edit

Hamilton was a teacher at St John's College in Southsea between 1973 and 1976. In his spare time he studied for his bar practice exam. He also taught constitutional law at Hatfield Polytechnic between September 1978 and July 1982.

Legal career edit

From September 1979, Hamilton practised as a barrister. He specialised in taxation, trust and property law. However, after he lost his parliamentary seat in 1997, he vowed never to return to "that constipated profession".[12] In April 2001, Hamilton said, "If I am bankrupt [which he was the following month],[13] I won't be able to return to the bar but even if I was able to do so, I couldn't contain myself from saying what I thought to some of the judges."[14] Hamilton was also European and Parliamentary Affairs Director of the Institute of Directors during this time.[when?][15]

Political career edit

Parliamentary career edit

On 12 March 1983, Hamilton was selected as the Conservative candidate for the newly created Tatton constituency. Three months later, at the 1983 general election Hamilton was elected to Parliament as MP for Tatton. On entering the Commons, Hamilton was appointed as an officer of the backbench committee on Trade and Industry under the chairmanship of Michael Grylls.[15]

Leaded petrol edit

In 1984, against party policy, Hamilton opposed the abandonment of leaded petrol in Britain. He argued there was no evidence that leaded petrol was damaging the environment, or health, and that jobs would be lost in his constituency if leaded petrol was banned.[16]

Western Goals Institute edit

Hamilton resumed his activities as a supporter of pressure groups, including the Western Goals Institute, led by ex-Young Monday Club Chairman, Andrew V. R. Smith and attracting the support of other parliamentarians such as Sir Patrick Wall, Bill Walker, Nicholas Winterton and the Revd. Martin Smyth. He was on their parliamentary advisory board.[17] The Western Goals Institute achieved notoriety by inviting Jean-Marie Le Pen (leader of the French National Front) and Alessandra Mussolini (Benito Mussolini's granddaughter, a Deputy sitting for the Italian neo-fascist MSI) to address fringe meetings at the 1992 Conservative Party conference. The Party Chairman Sir Norman Fowler was outraged, and said the Conservative Party was not related to the Western Goals Institute. In the event the meetings were cancelled, as neither Le Pen nor Mussolini could come to Britain.[18]

Hamilton also lent his support to the No Turning Back Group organised by his friend Michael Brown MP. Other MPs active in the No Turning Back Group included Michael Portillo, Peter Lilley, Alan Duncan and Gerald Howarth.[19]

Ian Greer Associates edit

In 1985, he began working for Ian Greer Associates, lobbying on behalf of US Tobacco.[20] Hamilton, together with Michael Brown, became an enthusiastic supporter of US Tobacco's product Skoal Bandits, a tea-bag type of pouch of tobacco designed for chewing. The product was believed to cause serious risk of oral cancer, particularly for minors, and the government was inclined to ban its import. Hamilton said he supported the introduction of Skoal Bandits on libertarian grounds, and lobbied ministers (including Edwina Currie and David Mellor) to allow its introduction. The House of Commons Select Committee on Standards investigation stated: "Mr. Hamilton and Mr. Brown had a number of contacts with Ministers and officials as part of their campaign to influence Government policy on Skoal Bandits" and said that there was "no evidence ... that any appropriate declaration was made".[21] Hamilton was obliged to concede he had been wrong to make no reference to the payment "when I went on those meetings with Ministers".[citation needed]

Strategy Network International edit

In June 1990, Hamilton was recruited by the right-wing Monday Club activist Derek Laud to work for Strategy Network International, a firm specifically created to lobby against anti-apartheid movements and economic sanctions and for apartheid South Africa's 'transitional government' of Namibia set up in defiance of UN Resolution 435 on Namibian independence. Derek Laud was an ex-Monday Club activist and protégé of Hamilton's friend Michael Brown, who offered Hamilton a fee of £8,000 per year. Hamilton failed to register the paid-for consultancy. Hamilton took free trips to South Africa in the company of Brown.[22]

Thatcher leadership contest edit

Thatcher appointed Hamilton a whip in July 1990. In November 1990, Michael Heseltine initiated a leadership challenge to Margaret Thatcher. Hamilton was told by the Chief Whip to stay neutral, but says he ignored this instruction. "I naturally ignored this advice and fed all my intelligence into her campaign." He also said that he made the fateful suggestion that she interview each cabinet member individually, believing they would lack the resolve to tell her to her face that she must go. "Unfortunately, I had miscalculated."[23] Hamilton strongly encouraged Thatcher to persist. At a meeting where Peter Lilley argued that Thatcher could not survive, Hamilton subjected him to a barrage of "sarcasm and heckling".[24] On 21 November 1990, Hamilton and like-minded colleagues met Thatcher at Downing Street. Thatcher did subsequently resign, and in the next round of the election Hamilton voted for John Major.[25]

Minister in Major Government edit

From 1992 to 1994, Hamilton was the Minister for Deregulation and Corporate Affairs in John Major's government. He came under pressure to step down after the resignation of another minister, Tim Smith, on 19 October 1994, after Smith had admitted to taking money in the cash-for-questions affair. Facing the same allegations,[26] Hamilton denied them and issued proceedings for libel, but he resigned on 26 October at the insistence of John Major.[27]

Approach to the Maastricht Treaty edit

Denmark rejected the Maastricht Treaty on 2 June 1992.[28] Like some other Conservative ministers, Hamilton had also opposed the treaty and was a member of the Eurosceptic "No Turning Back" group.[29] Despite this, Hamilton remained, for a time, loyal to the Major government which endorsed the treaty. Hamilton urged his colleagues not to resign over the Treaty and other issues.[citation needed]

No longer a minister at the time of the 1995 Conservative Party leadership election, Hamilton did not support Major. Initially a supporter of Michael Portillo, when Portillo did not contest the leadership Hamilton voted instead for John Redwood. Hamilton also sent condolences to Portillo in 2001, when he failed to win that year's leadership election.[30]

Loss of Tatton edit

Prior to the 1997 general election, Hamilton determined to try to retain his parliamentary seat. His majority at the 1992 general election had been almost 16,000 votes. In 1997, Tatton was the fourth safest Conservative seat in Britain. Hamilton was under investigation by the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner as part of the cash for questions enquiry and some party members thought he should stand down after the collapse of his case against The Guardian.[31] Disquiet in the local association became public, but the majority gave him the benefit of the doubt.[citation needed][32] Hamilton resisted the pressure from senior Conservatives and Conservative Central Office to stand down. Jeremy Paxman states that Conservative Central Office "begged him not to stand, but in a gesture of overweening arrogance, he refused to go quietly."[33] On 8 April 1997, Hamilton was chosen as the Conservative candidate for Tatton (182 for, 35 against, 100 abstained). The Observer commissioned ICM polls in the constituencies of the three Conservative candidates tainted by scandal and seeking re-election: Hamilton, Allan Stewart and Piers Merchant. Both Stewart and Merchant were found to have support consistent with their party's standing, but in Tatton "there was massive hostility to Hamilton".[34]

When Martin Bell, the BBC war correspondent, announced he would stand as an independent candidate in Tatton, the Labour and Liberal Democrat candidates for the area stood down in order to give Bell a clear run against Hamilton. Bell defeated Hamilton, winning by a majority of over 11,000 votes with a swing of 48%. Although Hamilton vowed to return to parliament, this defeat marked the end of his political career in the Conservative Party. In March 1999, George Osborne was selected by the Tatton Conservative Association to be their candidate for the following general election.

William Hague's leadership edit

Following Hamilton's ejection from Tatton and the Conservative defeat in the 1997 election, the new party leader, William Hague, sought to distance the Conservative Party from the disgraced Hamilton and asked Hamilton to stay away from the party conference.[35]

UK Independence Party edit

In September 2011, Hamilton attended the annual conference of the UK Independence Party (UKIP). The party's leader Nigel Farage pledged to support him in the election for the National Executive Committee.[36] Hamilton was elected to the committee on 1 November 2011.[37] He later become deputy chairman of the party.[38] Hamilton was demoted from his role as campaign director in April 2014.[39] In the May 2014 local elections, he stood as a UKIP candidate in the St Mary's Park ward of Wandsworth London Borough Council and finished 8th of the 9 candidates with 396 votes.[40]

In the elections for the National Assembly for Wales on 5 May 2016, he was elected as a Member of the National Assembly for Wales for the Mid and West Wales Region, one of seven UKIP candidates to win a seat through the Regional List system.[41] On 10 May 2016, UKIP's AMs voted him their leader in the Welsh Assembly, defeating Nathan Gill. The UKIP leader, Nigel Farage, criticised the move as an "unjust act of deep ingratitude".[42] Hamilton dismissed Farage's criticism as "irrelevant",[43] accused him of "throwing toys out of pram"[44] and referred to him as "the MEP for the South East of England".[45] In leaked emails, he was accused by UKIP's biggest donor, Arron Banks, of being a "corrupt old Tory".[46] Nathan Gill subsequently left the UKIP group in the assembly to sit as an independent,[47] resulting in Neil Hamilton becoming UKIP's Leader in Wales in September 2016.[48] Hamilton was ousted as leader of UKIP in the National Assembly on 17 May 2018 and was replaced by Caroline Jones.[49]

In August 2018, UKIP leader Gerard Batten MEP announced that there would be a membership ballot for the leadership of UKIP in Wales. The eventual winner would become the UKIP Assembly Group Leader and ultimately the party's main spokesperson for Wales. Hamilton, Jones and another UKIP Assembly Member in Wales, Gareth Bennett, stood in the election, which was won by Bennett. Hamilton said he could "happily" work with Mr Bennett, but Jones said she had "a lot of thinking to do". Batten said he expected his Welsh Assembly members to now "work together for UKIP's cause and get on with the job."[50]

Following his maiden speech in the Welsh Assembly, he was accused of making sexist remarks towards female politicians after referring to Kirsty Williams and Leanne Wood as "concubines" in a "harem".[51]

Hamilton caused further controversy during a debate on the effects of Brexit in Wales. When Eluned Morgan claimed that the economic consequences of Brexit would be hardest for those who could least afford it, Hamilton remarked that "suicide's an option". He was instructed by the presiding officer to apologise for the remark. Hamilton initially refused, saying, "What is there to apologise for?" and "What was unparliamentary about the remark?" He did eventually apologise, saying, "I apologise for whatever remark I am supposed to have made."[52]

In April 2018, Hamilton said that "the idea that Enoch Powell was some kind of uniquely racist villain is absolute nonsense". Commenting on Powell's 'Rivers of Blood' speech about mass immigration, Hamilton said that Powell was wrong about predicting racial violence, but had been "proved right by events" in terms of social change that was "never desired by the majority of the British people". Hamilton said that Powell "changed politics by articulating the fears and resentments of millions and millions of people who are being ignored by the establishment". In response, the leader of Plaid Cymru, Leanne Wood, accused Hamilton of "keeping Powell's racist rhetoric going". Labour AM Hefin David described Hamilton's comments as "outrageous".[53]

In April 2019, Hamilton was the UKIP candidate in the by-election for Newport West. He came third behind the Labour and Conservative candidates with 2,023 votes (8.6%).[54]

Hamilton was the only MS not to live in Wales.[55] By 2021 he was UKIP's only representative at any level above local government.

On 12 September 2020, he was appointed acting leader, replacing Freddy Vachha.[56]

In the 2021 Senedd election Hamilton moved to the South Wales East region. He criticised BBC Wales for excluding UKIP from the main leaders' debates, with Hamilton instead being invited to a separate debate alongside Reform UK and the Wales Green Party.[57] Hamilton contested the constituency of Islwyn but came sixth with just 507 votes.[58] He was also top of the UKIP list for that region but was not appointed as an additional member either.[59] Meanwhile the party lost all its other Senedd seats.[60]

After a period as acting leader, Hamilton was elected as leader in October 2021, receiving 498 out of 631 votes cast (78.9%) against challenger John Poynton.[61]

Legal cases edit

BBC libel case (1984–1986) edit

On 30 January 1984, a Panorama programme, "Maggie's Militant Tendency", was broadcast. The programme made a number of allegations regarding Hamilton's past and more recent activities. These included his attending and giving a fraternal speech in 1972 to the Movimento Sociale Italiano (MSI) an Italian neo-fascist party led by one of Benito Mussolini's ex-ministers, Giorgio Almirante,[62] Hamilton's membership of the Eldon League, and his involvement with the Powellite faction of the Monday Club and the far-right activist, George Kennedy Young, the former Deputy Director of MI6 and Chairman of the Society for Individual Freedom. The programme also made the claim that Hamilton gave a Nazi salute in Berlin while "messing around" on a parliamentary visit in August 1983. A Nazi salute is a criminal offence in the Federal Republic of Germany.[63] In October 1986, Hamilton and his fellow MP Gerald Howarth (one of his closest friends), sued the BBC for libel along with Phil Pedley, a former chairman of the National Young Conservatives, who had appeared on the programme.[64] The Guardian newspaper highlighted Hamilton's admission in The Sunday Times in an article he wrote after the court case that he did give "a little salute with two fingers to his nose to give the impression of a toothbrush moustache."[64]

The prosecution was financed by Sir James Goldsmith[65] and Taki, The Spectator columnist. David Davis, then a director of Tate and Lyle, persuaded that company to donate a sum to the cause. Lord Harris of High Cross (who helped to finance Hamilton's failed libel action against Mohammed Al-Fayed 13 years later), also raised approximately £100,000.[66]

During the case, Hamilton said he saw himself as being "the Mike Yarwood of the Federation of Conservative Students"[67] and that he frequently did impressions of public figures such as Frankie Howerd, Harold Wilson, Edward Heath, Charles De Gaulle and Enoch Powell. Hamilton said he had coloured himself black in 1982 to look like Idi Amin and dressed as Canon James Owen on a boat on the River Cam.[68] He said he would have twenty character witnesses: "My main character witness was going to be Norman St John Stevas."[69] In a Sunday Times article, Hamilton denied there was any malicious intent behind the salute. He also pointed out that one person present at the incident, Julian Lewis, was a Jew and that a "number of his relatives were killed by the Nazis during the war".[69]

BBC collapse edit

In mid-trial and without cross-examining Hamilton, the BBC capitulated on 21 October 1986. The Director-General, Alasdair Milne, stated he was instructed to do so by the Governors of the BBC. The corporation was directed to pay the men's legal costs. Hamilton and Howarth were awarded £20,000 each and in the next edition of Panorama, on 27 October, the BBC made an unreserved apology.[70] The settlement of the case raised serious concerns regarding political pressure and the intimidation of witnesses. Before the BBC defence lawyers had an opportunity to interrogate Hamilton, the Board of Governors met during the trial and instructed the BBC Board of Management to settle the case: "the BBC executives at this meeting expressed serious doubts about the decision. It was pointed out the BBC had not even begun to put its case".[71]

The National Young Conservatives hinted at a stitch-up at the BBC. The chairman, Richard Fuller, told the Eastern Area Young Conservatives: "I find it strange that they have apparently decided to settle now, when things appeared to be going well."[72] Attention focussed on the actions of Malcolm McAlpine, a cousin of Alistair McAlpine, the treasurer of the Conservative Party: "He denied yesterday that he had promised Mr Hamilton that he could 'deliver' the governors behind a settlement".[72]

Witness allegations edit

In the immediate aftermath of the BBC settlement, allegations of witness intimidation abounded. A BBC internal memorandum to the Board of Management claimed some 17 witnesses had been intimidated into changing their testimony.[73] A BBC source stated:

"Nearly all the defence witnesses have had a quiet word in their ears. Only two or three people connected with Tory politics who would have given vital evidence for us now stick to their testimony. Some previously expressed disgust at incidents they had witnessed. Now they claim to have witnessed nothing."[74]

Howarth and Hamilton said the case against Pedley would not be dropped and Pedley said he would not be joining the BBC decision. The Financial Times reported, "A solicitor for Mr Hamilton and Mr Howarth said later that their linked libel action against Mr Philip Pedley... would continue. Mr Pedley indicated that he intends to continue the case."[75]

The media began to focus on the remaining unsettled case. The Guardian reported that "The spotlight had swivelled to Phil Pedley, the Tory defendant who remained adamant he would fight on alone, backed by independent funds and, he claims, a wide range of Conservative supporters."[76] Pedley did not name the supporters but the then chairman of the Young Conservatives, Richard Fuller, pledged financial support to the fight and in a meeting with Jeffrey Archer, Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party, Fuller resisted Archer's demand to back down.[77]

Labour accused Conservative Central Office of organising a cover-up over claims that Hamilton had given a Nazi salute on a visit to Berlin and sought to question the then party chairman, Norman Tebbit.[78] Dale Campbell-Savours claimed he had evidence in the form of a letter from Pedley to the former Party Chairman, John Selwyn Gummer, demonstrating Conservative Central Office (CCO) had contacted witnesses.[79] Tebbit confirmed one witness had been in touch with CCO. "I am aware that one potential witness sought advice from Central Office but was told that no advice could be given..." Tebbit accused Campbell-Savours of making his accusations behind the cloak of parliamentary privilege and left the chamber to make his reply.

"My staff are appalled and disgusted. They are filled with contempt for a man who can make these sort of accusations of a criminal offence against a member of staff, who, Mr Campbell-Savours knows damn well, is not guilty of it."[80]

On 25 October, the press reported new evidence of inappropriate witness contact.[81] Later that day, Hamilton announced that he was dropping the action against Pedley. However, Pedley reaffirmed that he "had no intention of withdrawing from the case."[82] Hamilton's announcement failed to quell demands for an enquiry and Campbell-Savours denounced Tebbit's tactic of making his statements outside the House of Commons chamber, accusing him of "a deliberate ploy to avoid placing himself in contempt by misleading the House in a personal statement". He invited Tebbit to make a statement in the House.

"If he refuses, then the country will know that a conspiracy of silence is being engineered by senior figures to hide the truth."[83]

More information appeared in the press alleging witness interference, including the Hogan Memorandum, the internal BBC document listing the witnesses who had changed their account.[84] The Independent revealed the existence of a taped conversation of a Tory witness being "shaken rigid" by Central Office's suggestion that the Berlin events had not happened and "no other witness would substantiate or give evidence about those alleged incidents" and the witness was told no other witness would back his account. The witness said, "this was like a bad dream."[85] Campbell-Savours claimed this was proof of BBC nobbling and announced that he was sending his evidence to Sir Michael Havers, the Attorney General.[86] In the Commons, Campbell-Savours stated:

"Central Office set about an elaborate attempt to interfere directly with potential witnesses. Attempts were made to manage and rig statements by Mr. David Mitchell. I repeat what I have said previously, but additionally I am able to say today that there is a tape in existence that confirms the nature of the conspiracy to hide the truth, and which identifies persons. Today I have sent a transcript of that tape to the Attorney-General. I have to inform you, Mr. Speaker, that it is but one of two tapes. I await a transcript of the second tape."[87]

Statement contradictions edit

Press interest turned to Hamilton's past statements about the Berlin visit, over which Tory witnesses were alleged to have been pressured to say that they had not seen goose-stepping or Nazi-style salutes. Hamilton had given a categorical denial he had made a Nazi salute in Berlin to John Selwyn Gummer, the Party Chairman, in January 1984:

"Dear John... I make it absolutely clear that, whilst in Berlin, I did not do any goose-stepping nor did I at any time give Nazi salutes. Indeed, I have always thought the latter was a criminal offence in the Federal Republic."

But, writing in the Sunday Times, Hamilton admitted making "a little salute" in the Reichstag.[88] Hamilton's admission had the effect of reaffirming the testimony of the two witnesses who alleged he had given a Nazi salute in Berlin and exposing those witnesses who had reversed their position.[citation needed]

Dropping of libel action against the Young Conservatives edit

Hamilton and Howarth reversed their earlier position and dropped their libel action against Pedley. They said that extracting an apology from Pedley was not "worth the bother".[89] On 3 December 1986, Pedley refused the offered settlement terms and asked for a hearing in open court. Justice Simon Brown ruled that Hamilton and Howarth be debarred from alleging Pedley's words were libel and should pay Pedley's costs.[90]

Pedley made a statement from the steps to say he stood by his words in the Panorama programme and restated he had never said the MPs were Nazis, rather their behaviour was part of a pattern that would harm the Party and in the case of Hamilton's Berlin behaviour, the Final YC Report accused Hamilton of "batty eccentricity". On the more substantive allegations, Pedley said he reiterated the points made in the YC Report had been called into question.

"I consider I have the responsibility to vindicate the good work done by the members of that committee. Several have endured abuse and hate mail following publication of their names in the Young National Front paper Bulldog and other extremist papers. I hope this will now cease, together with set-ups and the surveillance and harassment of other witnesses; in my case by private security companies."[91]

In December 1986, Hamilton was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to David Mitchell.

Cash-for-questions edit

On 20 October 1994, The Guardian published an article which claimed that Hamilton and another MP, Tim Smith, had received money, in the form of cash in brown envelopes. It claimed the money was paid to the men by Mohamed Al-Fayed, the owner of Harrods. In return, the men were to ask questions on behalf of Al-Fayed in the House of Commons. Smith admitted his guilt and resigned immediately. Hamilton claimed innocence but was forced to resign five days later, on 25 October 1994.

Libel action against The Guardian edit

Hamilton brought legal action for libel against The Guardian. Hamilton joined Ian Greer, a parliamentary lobbyist, as a co-plaintiff. In the process, the Bill of Rights 1689 was amended by the Defamation Act 1996 to allow statements made in Parliament to be questioned in court.[92]

On 30 September 1996, the day before the start of the trial, Hamilton and Greer settled, citing a conflict of interest and lack of funds. The Guardian greeted the Hamilton collapse with the headline "A Liar and a Cheat". Alan Rusbridger, editor of The Guardian, said: "The decision by Neil Hamilton and Ian Greer must be one of the most astonishing legal cave-ins in the history of the law of libel" and called for the issues to be examined by Sir Gordon Downey, the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, and the Inland Revenue.[93] They each paid £7,500 towards the paper's legal costs. All the "cash-for-questions" evidence was sent to Sir Gordon Downey, the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards.[94] On 1 October 1996, Hamilton appeared on the evening television program, Newsnight, and engaged in a live debate with Alan Rusbridger, the editor of The Guardian.[95]

Enquiry edit

The "cash for questions" parliamentary enquiry took place in 1997, led by Downey. Hamilton vowed that if the "Downey report" found against him, he would resign.

Edwina Currie, a former health minister, gave evidence. She told the inquiry that, in May 1988, Hamilton had been unmoved by a set of photographs that depicted smoking-related cancers; that is, harm to young people which might be caused by a product (tobacco) that he promoted.[96] Hamilton argued the pictures were irrelevant. Both Hamilton and Michael Brown had received a £6,000 honorarium and hospitality from Skoal Bandits.[97] In December 1989, the sale of Skoal Bandit products was banned in the UK by the Secretary of State for Health, Kenneth Clarke.[98]

Downey reported that he found the evidence against Hamilton in the case of Al-Fayed "compelling". Hamilton received over £25,000 and had deliberately misled Michael Heseltine, then President of the Board of Trade, in October 1994, when he said he had no financial relationship with Ian Greer. In a phone conversation, Hamilton gave an absolute assurance to Heseltine that there was no such relationship, but he had received two payments from Greer in 1988 and 1989, totalling £10,000.[99] Hamilton had asked for payment in kind so the money would not be taxable. He also failed to register his stays at the Hôtel Ritz Paris and at Al-Fayed's castle in Scotland in 1989.[100]

On 3 July 1997, the enquiry found Hamilton guilty of taking "cash for questions". The Independent wrote: "Sir Gordon, contrary to Hamilton's confident expectations, had no compunction about concluding that he did indeed take cash in brown envelopes" and called on the new party leader to "expel the miscreants".[99] Hamilton, Smith (also found guilty), Brown and Michael Grylls were harshly criticised. If Hamilton and Smith had remained in parliament, Downey said he might have recommended long periods of suspension for both. Hamilton rejected these findings, whereas Smith, who had stood down, accepted them, apologised for his conduct, and retired from politics altogether.

Libel action against Al-Fayed edit

Hamilton also brought a legal action for libel against Mohamed Al-Fayed. On 16 January 1997, Al-Fayed appeared in an edition of the Dispatches documentary series on Channel 4.[101] He claimed that Hamilton had demanded and had accepted cash payments of up to £110,000,[102] Harrods' gift vouchers and a free holiday at the Hôtel Ritz Paris in 1987, in return for asking questions in Parliament on behalf of Harrods. While Hamilton did not deny the holiday, he continued to maintain that he was innocent of improper conduct.

On 31 July 1998, Hamilton's action was approved for a court listing. Funds for the action were donated by Lord Harris of High Cross, the Earl of Portsmouth and Taki, who raised £50,000.[103] Other contributors to the fund included Simon Heffer, Norris McWhirter, Peter Clarke, Lord Bell, Gyles Brandreth and Gerald Howarth (Hamilton's co-plaintiff in the BBC action). Some Conservative MPs (approximately 40 of the 165) also made contributions. In total, approximately £410,000 was raised.[104]

The jury trial commenced in November 1999. Hamilton and his wife were cross-examined by George Carman QC. Carman put to Hamilton that he had acted corruptly to demand and then take £10,000 from Mobil Oil in 1989 for tabling an amendment to a finance bill. At the time, Hamilton was a member of a Commons select committee on finance.[105] Al-Fayed said Hamilton had taken the money either in brown envelope cash payments or through Ian Greer. Hamilton said in his own evidence: "I have never received a penny from Mr Fayed; I have never asked."[106] His counsel, in the closing comments, argued that Al-Fayed's assertions had destroyed his client's reputation.[107]

On 21 December 1999, the jury unanimously decided in favour of Al-Fayed, declaring Hamilton corrupt.[108][2] A year later, Hamilton lost his appeal against the decision,[109] and was refused leave to appeal to the House of Lords on 2 April 2001.

Bankruptcy edit

On 22 May 2001, unable to pay his legal fees and with costs amounting to some £3m, Hamilton declared bankruptcy. He was discharged from bankruptcy in May 2004.

False rape accusation edit

On 10 August 2001, Hamilton and his wife, Christine, were arrested by police who were investigating an alleged rape. The Hamiltons said they could not have been present at the alleged rape scene because they were hosting a dinner party and produced alibis including one from Derek Laud.[110] The investigation against the couple was dropped when it became apparent that the accusations were entirely false. This event was recorded on film by Louis Theroux, who, at that time, was spending time with the Hamiltons for an episode of his documentary series When Louis Met....[111]

In June 2003, Nadine Milroy-Sloan, the woman responsible for the unfounded accusation, was sentenced to three years in jail for perverting the course of justice.[112] In February 2005, the publicist Max Clifford, who had acted for Milroy-Sloan, settled, paying Hamilton an undisclosed sum.[113]

In 2014, Milroy-Sloan, under her birth name Emily Checksfield, was jailed again for falsely claiming to police that her ex-partner had threatened to kill her with a Samurai sword.[114] The same year, Clifford was jailed for sexual assaults on under-age girls.[115] After Clifford died in prison in December 2017, he was described by Hamilton as a "monster".[116]

Television appearances edit

On 9 May 1997, Hamilton and his wife appeared on the current affairs satire quiz programme Have I Got News for You. The episode was recorded one week after Hamilton lost his seat. Angus Deayton, the presenter of the panel game, wore a white suit instead of his usual brown one. This was a humorous reference to Martin Bell, who wore just such a suit throughout the 1997 general election campaign. As a further taunt, at the end of the show, the Hamiltons were handed their "fee" in brown envelopes.[117] At one point Hamilton quipped: "I've found it's much better making political jokes than being one."[118]

On 30 March 2000, Hamilton appeared on Da Ali G Show on Channel 4, for a satirical comedic interview[119] when he was seen to be sharing what appeared to be a marijuana joint with the comedian Sacha Baron Cohen's "Ali G" character.[120]

In 2001 Hamilton appeared on When Louis Met..., a documentary by Louis Theroux, during which he described himself and his wife as "professional objects of curiosity".[121]

Since then, the Hamiltons have appeared in pantomimes, television chat shows, and programmes such as The Weakest Link, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? and Ready Steady Cook.[122] He appeared on a celebrity edition of Mastermind on Boxing Day 2004.[citation needed] He appeared on stage in The Rocky Horror Show wearing six-inch stiletto heels, a basque, suspenders and stockings, however he declined to appear on "Big Brother" or "Celebrity Wife Swap."[122]

In 2005, Hamilton appeared on the Johnny Vegas show 18 Stone of Idiot, where he danced in a perspex box whilst Vegas and a member of the public poured buckets of fish over his head.[123][124]

Due to his television appearances, The Guardian described him as "an all-purpose Z-list celebrity".[124]

Political ideology edit

Hamilton argued for the individual's right to smoke.[clarification needed] He was the only member in committee to oppose the Conservative government's bill to outlaw trafficking in human organs.[125] In April 1986, Hamilton was one of ten MPs to vote against the government on an EEC bill. Hamilton was a member of the "No Turning Back group", advocating Thatcherite policies.[citation needed]

In November 1989, Hamilton won the Spectator parliamentary wit of the year award. He jokingly remarked that when told of winning the award, he thought it was for being the "Twit of the year".[126]

Hamilton's comments are frequently controversial. During a debate about amputees he said that Frank Dobson "does not have a leg to stand on". (January 1987).[127] To Jeremy Corbyn, he suggested that "some of [his] IRA friends could be used to get rid of pensioners by shooting them"—also in 1987.[128]

Personal life edit

On 4 June 1983, five days before polling day in the 1983 general election, Hamilton married Mary Christine Holman, the secretary to Tory MP Michael Grylls,[129] in Cornwall. In September 2003, after having a residence in the Tatton constituency for twenty years, the Hamiltons moved to Hullavington, Wiltshire, where they purchased a home in October 2004. In 2006, they released a song coinciding with the World Cup, "England are Jolly Dee".[130]

In 1992, Hamilton suffered a broken nose when he defended Harvey Proctor during a homophobic attack in Proctor's shirtmaking shop. Two men were later imprisoned for the assault.[131]

Since 2008, he has been company secretary of Vixen Consultants Limited.[132] The trading name of Vixen Consultants is Christine Hamilton.[133]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Acting from 12 September 2020 to 18 October 2021.

References edit

  1. ^ a b ‘HAMILTON, (Mostyn) Neil’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2015; online edn, November 2015. Accessed 10 May 2016.
  2. ^ a b Sengupta, Kim (22 December 1999). "The Hamilton Affair: Fayed demolishes Hamilton in the sleaze trial of the century". The Independent. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022.
  3. ^ "UKIP: Ex-Conservative minister Neil Hamilton elected party leader". BBC News. 19 October 2021.
  4. ^ "About Neil".
  5. ^ Aber Connect: 6 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Mr M N Hamilton.
  6. ^ "Notes of the month: Parliamentary privilege". Socialist Review (180). SWP. November 1994. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
  7. ^ BBC News Election 97 (. Archived from the original on 1 July 2003. Retrieved 4 May 2007..) Accessed 23 May 2014.
  8. ^ Guy Rais, "Goose-step not backing Nazism says Tory MP", Daily Telegraph, 16 October 1986.
  9. ^ "Eldon League Wants To Abolish 20th Century". Logansport Pharos-Tribune. United Press International. 26 May 1985. p. 7.
  10. ^ UK General Election results February 1974 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine at politicalresources.net.
  11. ^ UK General Election results May 1979 11 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine at politicalresources.net.
  12. ^ Chris Moncrieff and Vik Iyer, "Hamilton's career came to crashing end over cash for questions scandal", The Irish Independent, 11 August 2001.
  13. ^ "Hamilton declared bankrupt", BBC News, 22 May 2001
    "Hamilton declared bankrupt", The Guardian, 22 May 2001.
  14. ^ "Register of Potential and Actual Peerage Cases in which the Debtor is a Member of the House of Commons including a Record of Returns Sent", Insolvency Law (Jordan Publishing), 22 April 2010.
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    - Select Committee on Standards and Privileges First Report iv. STRATEGY NETWORK INTERNATIONAL, Hansard.
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  43. ^ "Nathan Gill 'very disappointed' and Farage criticism 'irrelevant' - Neil Hamilton", ITV News, 10 May 2016.
  44. ^ "'Farage throwing toys out of pram', says Neil Hamilton", BBC News, 10 May 2016.
  45. ^ "UKIP's Farage attacks Hamilton's leadership victory", BBC News, 10 May 2016.
  46. ^ Tom Peck (17 August 2016). "Ukip's leader in Wales withdraws himself from his party in the Welsh Assembly". The Independent. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
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  57. ^ Chandler, Andy (21 April 2021). "Neil Hamilton brands BBC excluding UKIP from main leaders' debates "outrageous"". Herald Wales. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  58. ^ "Islwyn - Welsh Parliament constituency". BBC News. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  59. ^ "South Wales East". BBC News. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  60. ^ Greg Heffer. "Election results: Labour remains in power in Wales after winning working Senedd majority". Sky News. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
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  62. ^ "Parliament Debate on Recommendation to Strip Msi Leader of His Immunity", JTA, 24 May 1973.
  63. ^ Robert Kahn, Holocaust Denial and the Law: A Comparative Study, p. 15 (2004). ISBN 9781403964762.
  64. ^ a b Wilson, Jamie (22 December 1999). "Who will listen to his story now?". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 26 March 2010.
  65. ^ Marcel Berlins, "Price of backing a loser", The Guardian, 31 January 2000.
  66. ^ Sengupta, Kim (22 December 1999). "The Hamilton Affair: The cost – Right-wing donors united by their loathing of Fayed". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 20 May 2010.
  67. ^ Daily Telegraph, 17 October 1986.
  68. ^ The Daily Telegraph, October 1986.
  69. ^ a b Neil Hamilton, Sunday Times News in Focus feature, 26 October 1986.
  70. ^ The Times, 28 October 1986.
  71. ^ Simon Freeman and Henry Porter, "BBC to settle Tory libel case", Sunday Times, 19 October 1986.
  72. ^ a b Peter Fiddick and Dennis Barker, "BBC in crisis over libel case deal", The Guardian, 20 October 1986.
  73. ^ Hamilton and Howarth v. British Broadcasting Corporation, Hansard, HC Deb 31 October 1986 vol 103 c272W.
  74. ^ John Merritt, "Tories Nobble BBC Claim", The Daily Mirror, 20 October 1986
    Anne Spackman, "New evidence emerges in BBC Libel Case", The Independent, 25 October 1986.
  75. ^ David Thomas, Raymond Hughes and Michael Cassall, "MP urges resignations at BBC after libel settlement", Financial Times, 22 October 1986.
  76. ^ "Fighting on alone", The Guardian, 22 October 1986.
  77. ^ David Sapsted, "MP's get damages", The Times, 20 October 1986
    Dennis Barker and Peter Fiddick, "Young Tory in Archer Meeting", The Guardian, 21 October 1986.
  78. ^ PMQs, Hansard, HC Deb, 21 October 1986 vol 102 cc940-6
    Ivor Owen, "Labour calls for statement on alleged libel case interference", Financial Times, 22 October 1986
    John Pienaar, "Tebbit leaning on Tories over BBC", The Independent, 22 October 1986.
  79. ^ BBC (Court Case), Hansard, HC Deb 23 October 1986 vol 102 cc1307-10.
  80. ^ Anthony Bevins, "Top Tory named in BBC Row", The Independent, 24 October 1986
    Alan Travis, "Labour accuses Tories of Libel Pressure", The Guardian, 24 October 1986.
  81. ^ Anne Spackman, "New Evidence emerges in BBC libel case", The Independent, 25 October 1986.
  82. ^ David Hencke, "MP drops Young Tory libel action", The Guardian, 27 October 1986.
  83. ^ Anthony Bevans, "Tebbit challenged to make statement on BBC case", The Independent, 28 October 1986
    - Alan Travis, "Tory Squeeze Claim", The Guardian, 28 October 1986.
  84. ^ Alan Travis, "Tory Squeeze claim", The Guardian, 28 October 1986.
  85. ^ Anne Spackman and Anthony Bevins, "BBC witness shaken rigid", The Independent, 29 October 1986.
  86. ^ James Naughtie, "MP claims tape proof of BBC nobbling", The Guardian, 5 November 1986.
  87. ^ BBC Libel Action, Hansard, 4 November 1986.
  88. ^ Neil Hamilton News in Focus feature, Sunday Times, 26 October 1986
    David Leigh and Paul Lashmar, Nazi Salute storm refuses to die down", The Observer, 2 November 1986
    Paul Foot, "Spot the Goose", Daily Mirror, 3 November 1986.
  89. ^ The Times, 27 October 1986.
  90. ^ The Financial Times, 4 December 1986.
    High Court written judgement, 14 July 1987.
  91. ^ Pedley Prepared Court Statement, 3 December 1986
    - "A thoroughly moderate man", Time Out, 17 December 1986.
  92. ^ Robert Shrimsley, "Guardian Case MP seeks law change", Financial Times, 15 February 1996.
    Williams, Kevin (1997). "'Only Flattery is Safe': Political Speech and the Defamation Act 1996". Modern Law Review. 60 (3): 388–393. doi:10.1111/1468-2230.00087.
  93. ^ David Hencke, David Leigh and David Pallister, "A Liar and a Cheat", The Guardian, 1 October 1996.
  94. ^ "Timeline of Hamilton Cash for Questions Case". BBC News. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  95. ^ "Select Committee on Standards and Privileges First Report". UK Parliament. 20 February 2017. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
  96. ^ The Independent, 5 July 1997.
  97. ^ The Committee Office, House of Commons. "House of Commons – Standards and Privileges – First Report". Publications.parliament.uk. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
  98. ^ "Safety ban on Skoal Bandits", The Herald, 14 December 1989.
  99. ^ a b Donald McIntyre, "A clear response to the cash for questions MPs", The Independent, 4 July 1997.
  100. ^ "The sleaze report: Five men who fell below the standards that Parliament demands from an MP - Hamilton: cash and a stay at Ritz; Smith: accepted cash in return for lobbying; Grylls: Misled committee over dealings Bowden: Did not declare; Brown: Failed to register", The Independent, 4 July 1997.
  101. ^ "Appendix 33 – continued: Appendix 1 Channel 4 and Fourth Estate Press Releases", Select Committee on Standards and Privileges First Report, House of Commons, January 1997.
  102. ^ "Hamilton loses libel case", BBC News, 21 December 1999.
  103. ^ "The odd couple behind the odd couple", BBC News, 23 December 1999.
  104. ^ The Independent, 23 December 1999.
  105. ^ "The undoing of Neil Hamilton". BBC News. 22 December 1999. Retrieved 26 March 2010.
  106. ^ Matt Wells "'I lacked candour but I am not corrupt'", The Guardian, 11 December 1999.
  107. ^ "Hamilton's 'tragedy' was to help Al Fayed", The Guardian, 16 December 1999.
  108. ^ Wells, Matt; Wilson, Jamie; Pallister, David (22 December 1999). "A greedy, corrupt liar". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  109. ^ "Neil Hamilton loses libel appeal", The Guardian, 21 December 2000.
    - "Neil Hamilton loses libel appeal". BBC News. 21 December 2000. Retrieved 26 March 2010.
  110. ^ . 22 June 2022. Archived from the original on 22 June 2022. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  111. ^ "Theroux hits gold with Hamiltons". BBC News. 11 December 2001. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  112. ^ "Hamiltons relieved as accuser jailed". BBC News. 13 June 2003. Retrieved 26 May 2009.
    - "Nadine Milroy Sloan, Christine and Neil Hamilton, false accusation". Deabirkett.com. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
  113. ^ Boffey, Daniel (3 May 2014). "Hamiltons toast end of PR king Max Clifford's reign with champagne". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 May 2014.
  114. ^ Beth Robson (2 October 2014). "Army veteran speaks of prison ordeal at hands of Hamiltons' rape claim liar Emily Checksfield after she is jailed for more lies". kentonline.co.uk.
  115. ^ "Max Clifford jailed for eight years for sex assaults". bbc.co.uk. 2 May 2014.
  116. ^ "Max Clifford Was An Unscrupulous Monster, Says Neil Hamilton". lbc.co.uk. 11 December 2017.
  117. ^ "'Invincible' Christine at Neil's side", BBC News, 10 August 2001.
  118. ^ Have I Got News for You, season 13 episode 4. BBC. Broadcast 9 May 1997.
  119. ^ "Da Ali G Show S1E1". IMDb.
  120. ^ "Hamilton 'shared joint' with Ali G". BBC News. 18 January 2000.
  121. ^ "Informers and sex scandals". The Irish Times.
  122. ^ a b "The weird and wonderful world of former Tory MP Neil Hamilton". Evening Standard. 10 April 2012.
  123. ^ "Johnny Vegas: 18 Stone of Idiot". The Digital Fix. 2 November 2005. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  124. ^ a b "Neil Hamilton: disgraced MP to Z-list celebrity to political comeback". The Guardian. 10 May 2016. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  125. ^ Robert Barr (Associated Press), "London Kidneys-for-Cash Scandal Prompts Action to Ban Sale of Organs", Los Angeles Times, 16 July 1989.
  126. ^ Matthew Parris, "Iron Lady eyes up the men at her feet - Political sketch", The Times, 23 February 1990.
  127. ^ 3.32 pm (29 January 1987). "J. E. Hanger and Co. Ltd". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Commons. Retrieved 5 May 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  128. ^ "Elimination of poverty in old age etc". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Commons. 1 December 1987. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
  129. ^ Andrew Roth, "Sir Michael Grylls: Conservative MP exposed in cash-for-questions investigation" (obituary), The Guardian, 24 February 2001.
  130. ^ "Neil & Christine Hamilton's World Cup Song - "England are Jolly Dee!"". YouTube. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  131. ^ Abrams, Fran (1 March 1997). "Court Threat to Proctor Over Shop Accounts". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 9 May 2022. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  132. ^ Vixen Consultants Limited at Companies House. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  133. ^ Value Added Tax information for VIXEN CONSULTANTS LIMITED trading as CHRISTINE HAMILTON, vat-check.co.uk. Retrieved 8 December 2019.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Official twitter account
  • Guardian Special Report – Hamilton, Al Fayed Libel Case
  • on Hamilton
  • Socialist Review article on Hamilton, Nov 1994
  • – site claiming a conspiracy against Hamilton
Parliament of the United Kingdom
New constituency Member of Parliament
for Tatton

19831997
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Corporate Affairs
1992–1994
Succeeded by
Senedd
Preceded by Member of the Senedd for Mid and West Wales
20162021
Succeeded by
Party political offices
New office Leader of the UK Independence Party in the Senedd
2016–2018
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of UKIP Wales
2016–present
Incumbent
Preceded by Leader of the UK Independence Party in the Senedd
2019–2021
Position abolished
Preceded by Leader of the UK Independence Party
Acting

2020–present
Incumbent

neil, hamilton, politician, mostyn, neil, hamilton, born, march, 1949, british, former, barrister, politician, been, leader, independence, party, ukip, since, 2020, conservative, member, parliament, tatton, from, 1983, 1997, ukip, member, senedd, west, wales, . Mostyn Neil Hamilton born 9 March 1949 is a British former barrister and politician who has been leader of the UK Independence Party UKIP since 2020 He was the Conservative Member of Parliament MP for Tatton from 1983 to 1997 and a UKIP Member of the Senedd MS for Mid and West Wales from 2016 to 2021 Neil HamiltonOfficial portrait 2016Leader of the UK Independence PartyIncumbentAssumed office 12 September 2020 a DeputyRebecca JanePreceded byFreddy VachhaLeader of UKIP WalesIncumbentAssumed office 26 September 2016LeaderList Diane JamesNigel Farage acting Paul NuttallSteve Crowther acting Henry BoltonGerard BattenPiers Wauchope acting Richard BrainePat Mountain acting Freddy VachhaHimselfPreceded byNathan GillLeader of the UK Independence Party in the SeneddIn office 7 November 2019 29 April 2021Preceded byGareth BennettSucceeded byOffice abolishedIn office 11 May 2016 17 May 2018Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byCaroline JonesDeputy Chair of the UK Independence PartyIn office 4 August 2014 24 February 2016Serving with Suzanne EvansPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byThe Earl of DartmouthParliamentary Under Secretary of State for Corporate AffairsIn office 14 April 1992 25 October 1994Prime MinisterJohn MajorPreceded byJohn RedwoodSucceeded byJonathan EvansMember of Parliamentfor TattonIn office 9 June 1983 8 April 1997Preceded byConstituency createdSucceeded byMartin BellMember of the Senedd for Mid and West WalesIn office 5 May 2016 29 April 2021Preceded byWilliam PowellSucceeded byJane DoddsPersonal detailsBornMostyn Neil Hamilton 1949 03 09 9 March 1949 age 75 Bedwellty Caerphilly WalesPolitical partyUK Independence Party 2002 present Conservative 1964 2002 SpouseChristine Holman m 1983 wbr Residence s London EnglandWiltshire EnglandAlma materAberystwyth University BScEcon MScEcon Corpus Christi College Cambridge LL M 1 ProfessionBarristerWebsiteOfficial website Hamilton was elected to the House of Commons in the 1983 general election He was appointed Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Corporate Affairs by Prime Minister John Major in 1992 In 1994 The Guardian alleged that Hamilton had taken cash payments in exchange for asking questions in Parliament Hamilton sued The Guardian for libel but settled on the day of the trial The Guardian published a headline branding him A Liar and a Cheat The cash for questions affair enquiry in 1997 found that Hamilton had taken bribes He subsequently lost a libel case on the matter Hamilton became widely associated with sleaze 2 and was forced to resign his ministerial role He was defeated by an independent candidate Martin Bell in the 1997 general election He left the Conservative Party in 2002 and joined UKIP In 2011 he returned to politics and was elected to the National Executive Committee of UKIP Following his election to the National Assembly for Wales he was UKIP Assembly Group Leader from 2016 to 2018 and again from 2019 to 2021 He became leader of UKIP Wales in 2016 In September 2020 Hamilton was named acting leader of UKIP following the suspension from the party of the previous leader Freddy Vachha Hamilton was defeated at the 2021 Senedd election In October 2021 Hamilton was elected UKIP leader 3 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Education 1 2 Student activity and early political career 1 3 Teaching 1 4 Legal career 2 Political career 2 1 Parliamentary career 2 1 1 Leaded petrol 2 1 2 Western Goals Institute 2 1 3 Ian Greer Associates 2 1 4 Strategy Network International 2 1 5 Thatcher leadership contest 2 1 6 Minister in Major Government 2 2 Approach to the Maastricht Treaty 2 3 Loss of Tatton 2 4 William Hague s leadership 2 5 UK Independence Party 3 Legal cases 3 1 BBC libel case 1984 1986 3 1 1 BBC collapse 3 1 2 Witness allegations 3 1 3 Statement contradictions 3 1 4 Dropping of libel action against the Young Conservatives 3 2 Cash for questions 3 2 1 Libel action against The Guardian 3 2 2 Enquiry 3 2 3 Libel action against Al Fayed 4 Bankruptcy 5 False rape accusation 6 Television appearances 7 Political ideology 8 Personal life 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEarly life editHamilton was born in Fleur de Lis a Gwent pit village near Blackwood Wales In 1960 he moved to Ammanford 4 His father was a chief engineer for the National Coal Board His grandfathers were coal miners He grew up in Ammanford in Carmarthenshire and joined the Conservative Party in 1964 at the age of 15 Education edit Hamilton attended Amman Valley Grammar School in Ammanford He received a BScEcon degree in economics and politics from the University College of Wales Aberystwyth in 1970 and an MScEcon degree in economics and politics in 1975 5 While at Aberystwyth he was active in the Federation of Conservative Students he was a member between 1968 and 1974 In 1973 as a representative of the Federation of Conservative Students Hamilton attended a conference of the neo fascist Italian Social Movement MSI 6 Hamilton went on to study at Corpus Christi College Cambridge 7 where he attained a postgraduate law degree 1 Student activity and early political career edit At the 1970 Conservative Party conference Hamilton called for mass privatisation The following year he opposed the plan for Britain to join the European Communities In 1972 after several years membership Hamilton was elected to the executive council of the Conservative Monday Club He left the Club in 1973 and stood as chairman of the Federation of Conservative Students against David Davis but lost In the early 1970s Hamilton was the founder of the Eldon League a right wing social organisation given to having picnics and dinners and having a good time 8 He appointed himself its Grand Imperial Prior and called for the abolition of the internal combustion engine and plastic 9 Hamilton stood as the Conservative parliamentary candidate in the February 1974 general election in Abertillery 10 and in the 1979 general election in Bradford North 11 but failed on both occasions Teaching edit Hamilton was a teacher at St John s College in Southsea between 1973 and 1976 In his spare time he studied for his bar practice exam He also taught constitutional law at Hatfield Polytechnic between September 1978 and July 1982 Legal career edit From September 1979 Hamilton practised as a barrister He specialised in taxation trust and property law However after he lost his parliamentary seat in 1997 he vowed never to return to that constipated profession 12 In April 2001 Hamilton said If I am bankrupt which he was the following month 13 I won t be able to return to the bar but even if I was able to do so I couldn t contain myself from saying what I thought to some of the judges 14 Hamilton was also European and Parliamentary Affairs Director of the Institute of Directors during this time when 15 Political career editParliamentary career edit On 12 March 1983 Hamilton was selected as the Conservative candidate for the newly created Tatton constituency Three months later at the 1983 general election Hamilton was elected to Parliament as MP for Tatton On entering the Commons Hamilton was appointed as an officer of the backbench committee on Trade and Industry under the chairmanship of Michael Grylls 15 Leaded petrol edit In 1984 against party policy Hamilton opposed the abandonment of leaded petrol in Britain He argued there was no evidence that leaded petrol was damaging the environment or health and that jobs would be lost in his constituency if leaded petrol was banned 16 Western Goals Institute edit Hamilton resumed his activities as a supporter of pressure groups including the Western Goals Institute led by ex Young Monday Club Chairman Andrew V R Smith and attracting the support of other parliamentarians such as Sir Patrick Wall Bill Walker Nicholas Winterton and the Revd Martin Smyth He was on their parliamentary advisory board 17 The Western Goals Institute achieved notoriety by inviting Jean Marie Le Pen leader of the French National Front and Alessandra Mussolini Benito Mussolini s granddaughter a Deputy sitting for the Italian neo fascist MSI to address fringe meetings at the 1992 Conservative Party conference The Party Chairman Sir Norman Fowler was outraged and said the Conservative Party was not related to the Western Goals Institute In the event the meetings were cancelled as neither Le Pen nor Mussolini could come to Britain 18 Hamilton also lent his support to the No Turning Back Group organised by his friend Michael Brown MP Other MPs active in the No Turning Back Group included Michael Portillo Peter Lilley Alan Duncan and Gerald Howarth 19 Ian Greer Associates edit In 1985 he began working for Ian Greer Associates lobbying on behalf of US Tobacco 20 Hamilton together with Michael Brown became an enthusiastic supporter of US Tobacco s product Skoal Bandits a tea bag type of pouch of tobacco designed for chewing The product was believed to cause serious risk of oral cancer particularly for minors and the government was inclined to ban its import Hamilton said he supported the introduction of Skoal Bandits on libertarian grounds and lobbied ministers including Edwina Currie and David Mellor to allow its introduction The House of Commons Select Committee on Standards investigation stated Mr Hamilton and Mr Brown had a number of contacts with Ministers and officials as part of their campaign to influence Government policy on Skoal Bandits and said that there was no evidence that any appropriate declaration was made 21 Hamilton was obliged to concede he had been wrong to make no reference to the payment when I went on those meetings with Ministers citation needed Strategy Network International edit In June 1990 Hamilton was recruited by the right wing Monday Club activist Derek Laud to work for Strategy Network International a firm specifically created to lobby against anti apartheid movements and economic sanctions and for apartheid South Africa s transitional government of Namibia set up in defiance of UN Resolution 435 on Namibian independence Derek Laud was an ex Monday Club activist and protege of Hamilton s friend Michael Brown who offered Hamilton a fee of 8 000 per year Hamilton failed to register the paid for consultancy Hamilton took free trips to South Africa in the company of Brown 22 Thatcher leadership contest edit Thatcher appointed Hamilton a whip in July 1990 In November 1990 Michael Heseltine initiated a leadership challenge to Margaret Thatcher Hamilton was told by the Chief Whip to stay neutral but says he ignored this instruction I naturally ignored this advice and fed all my intelligence into her campaign He also said that he made the fateful suggestion that she interview each cabinet member individually believing they would lack the resolve to tell her to her face that she must go Unfortunately I had miscalculated 23 Hamilton strongly encouraged Thatcher to persist At a meeting where Peter Lilley argued that Thatcher could not survive Hamilton subjected him to a barrage of sarcasm and heckling 24 On 21 November 1990 Hamilton and like minded colleagues met Thatcher at Downing Street Thatcher did subsequently resign and in the next round of the election Hamilton voted for John Major 25 Minister in Major Government edit From 1992 to 1994 Hamilton was the Minister for Deregulation and Corporate Affairs in John Major s government He came under pressure to step down after the resignation of another minister Tim Smith on 19 October 1994 after Smith had admitted to taking money in the cash for questions affair Facing the same allegations 26 Hamilton denied them and issued proceedings for libel but he resigned on 26 October at the insistence of John Major 27 Approach to the Maastricht Treaty edit Denmark rejected the Maastricht Treaty on 2 June 1992 28 Like some other Conservative ministers Hamilton had also opposed the treaty and was a member of the Eurosceptic No Turning Back group 29 Despite this Hamilton remained for a time loyal to the Major government which endorsed the treaty Hamilton urged his colleagues not to resign over the Treaty and other issues citation needed No longer a minister at the time of the 1995 Conservative Party leadership election Hamilton did not support Major Initially a supporter of Michael Portillo when Portillo did not contest the leadership Hamilton voted instead for John Redwood Hamilton also sent condolences to Portillo in 2001 when he failed to win that year s leadership election 30 Loss of Tatton edit Prior to the 1997 general election Hamilton determined to try to retain his parliamentary seat His majority at the 1992 general election had been almost 16 000 votes In 1997 Tatton was the fourth safest Conservative seat in Britain Hamilton was under investigation by the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner as part of the cash for questions enquiry and some party members thought he should stand down after the collapse of his case against The Guardian 31 Disquiet in the local association became public but the majority gave him the benefit of the doubt citation needed 32 Hamilton resisted the pressure from senior Conservatives and Conservative Central Office to stand down Jeremy Paxman states that Conservative Central Office begged him not to stand but in a gesture of overweening arrogance he refused to go quietly 33 On 8 April 1997 Hamilton was chosen as the Conservative candidate for Tatton 182 for 35 against 100 abstained The Observer commissioned ICM polls in the constituencies of the three Conservative candidates tainted by scandal and seeking re election Hamilton Allan Stewart and Piers Merchant Both Stewart and Merchant were found to have support consistent with their party s standing but in Tatton there was massive hostility to Hamilton 34 When Martin Bell the BBC war correspondent announced he would stand as an independent candidate in Tatton the Labour and Liberal Democrat candidates for the area stood down in order to give Bell a clear run against Hamilton Bell defeated Hamilton winning by a majority of over 11 000 votes with a swing of 48 Although Hamilton vowed to return to parliament this defeat marked the end of his political career in the Conservative Party In March 1999 George Osborne was selected by the Tatton Conservative Association to be their candidate for the following general election William Hague s leadership edit Following Hamilton s ejection from Tatton and the Conservative defeat in the 1997 election the new party leader William Hague sought to distance the Conservative Party from the disgraced Hamilton and asked Hamilton to stay away from the party conference 35 UK Independence Party edit In September 2011 Hamilton attended the annual conference of the UK Independence Party UKIP The party s leader Nigel Farage pledged to support him in the election for the National Executive Committee 36 Hamilton was elected to the committee on 1 November 2011 37 He later become deputy chairman of the party 38 Hamilton was demoted from his role as campaign director in April 2014 39 In the May 2014 local elections he stood as a UKIP candidate in the St Mary s Park ward of Wandsworth London Borough Council and finished 8th of the 9 candidates with 396 votes 40 In the elections for the National Assembly for Wales on 5 May 2016 he was elected as a Member of the National Assembly for Wales for the Mid and West Wales Region one of seven UKIP candidates to win a seat through the Regional List system 41 On 10 May 2016 UKIP s AMs voted him their leader in the Welsh Assembly defeating Nathan Gill The UKIP leader Nigel Farage criticised the move as an unjust act of deep ingratitude 42 Hamilton dismissed Farage s criticism as irrelevant 43 accused him of throwing toys out of pram 44 and referred to him as the MEP for the South East of England 45 In leaked emails he was accused by UKIP s biggest donor Arron Banks of being a corrupt old Tory 46 Nathan Gill subsequently left the UKIP group in the assembly to sit as an independent 47 resulting in Neil Hamilton becoming UKIP s Leader in Wales in September 2016 48 Hamilton was ousted as leader of UKIP in the National Assembly on 17 May 2018 and was replaced by Caroline Jones 49 In August 2018 UKIP leader Gerard Batten MEP announced that there would be a membership ballot for the leadership of UKIP in Wales The eventual winner would become the UKIP Assembly Group Leader and ultimately the party s main spokesperson for Wales Hamilton Jones and another UKIP Assembly Member in Wales Gareth Bennett stood in the election which was won by Bennett Hamilton said he could happily work with Mr Bennett but Jones said she had a lot of thinking to do Batten said he expected his Welsh Assembly members to now work together for UKIP s cause and get on with the job 50 Following his maiden speech in the Welsh Assembly he was accused of making sexist remarks towards female politicians after referring to Kirsty Williams and Leanne Wood as concubines in a harem 51 Hamilton caused further controversy during a debate on the effects of Brexit in Wales When Eluned Morgan claimed that the economic consequences of Brexit would be hardest for those who could least afford it Hamilton remarked that suicide s an option He was instructed by the presiding officer to apologise for the remark Hamilton initially refused saying What is there to apologise for and What was unparliamentary about the remark He did eventually apologise saying I apologise for whatever remark I am supposed to have made 52 In April 2018 Hamilton said that the idea that Enoch Powell was some kind of uniquely racist villain is absolute nonsense Commenting on Powell s Rivers of Blood speech about mass immigration Hamilton said that Powell was wrong about predicting racial violence but had been proved right by events in terms of social change that was never desired by the majority of the British people Hamilton said that Powell changed politics by articulating the fears and resentments of millions and millions of people who are being ignored by the establishment In response the leader of Plaid Cymru Leanne Wood accused Hamilton of keeping Powell s racist rhetoric going Labour AM Hefin David described Hamilton s comments as outrageous 53 In April 2019 Hamilton was the UKIP candidate in the by election for Newport West He came third behind the Labour and Conservative candidates with 2 023 votes 8 6 54 Hamilton was the only MS not to live in Wales 55 By 2021 he was UKIP s only representative at any level above local government On 12 September 2020 he was appointed acting leader replacing Freddy Vachha 56 In the 2021 Senedd election Hamilton moved to the South Wales East region He criticised BBC Wales for excluding UKIP from the main leaders debates with Hamilton instead being invited to a separate debate alongside Reform UK and the Wales Green Party 57 Hamilton contested the constituency of Islwyn but came sixth with just 507 votes 58 He was also top of the UKIP list for that region but was not appointed as an additional member either 59 Meanwhile the party lost all its other Senedd seats 60 After a period as acting leader Hamilton was elected as leader in October 2021 receiving 498 out of 631 votes cast 78 9 against challenger John Poynton 61 Legal cases editBBC libel case 1984 1986 edit On 30 January 1984 a Panorama programme Maggie s Militant Tendency was broadcast The programme made a number of allegations regarding Hamilton s past and more recent activities These included his attending and giving a fraternal speech in 1972 to the Movimento Sociale Italiano MSI an Italian neo fascist party led by one of Benito Mussolini s ex ministers Giorgio Almirante 62 Hamilton s membership of the Eldon League and his involvement with the Powellite faction of the Monday Club and the far right activist George Kennedy Young the former Deputy Director of MI6 and Chairman of the Society for Individual Freedom The programme also made the claim that Hamilton gave a Nazi salute in Berlin while messing around on a parliamentary visit in August 1983 A Nazi salute is a criminal offence in the Federal Republic of Germany 63 In October 1986 Hamilton and his fellow MP Gerald Howarth one of his closest friends sued the BBC for libel along with Phil Pedley a former chairman of the National Young Conservatives who had appeared on the programme 64 The Guardian newspaper highlighted Hamilton s admission in The Sunday Times in an article he wrote after the court case that he did give a little salute with two fingers to his nose to give the impression of a toothbrush moustache 64 The prosecution was financed by Sir James Goldsmith 65 and Taki The Spectator columnist David Davis then a director of Tate and Lyle persuaded that company to donate a sum to the cause Lord Harris of High Cross who helped to finance Hamilton s failed libel action against Mohammed Al Fayed 13 years later also raised approximately 100 000 66 During the case Hamilton said he saw himself as being the Mike Yarwood of the Federation of Conservative Students 67 and that he frequently did impressions of public figures such as Frankie Howerd Harold Wilson Edward Heath Charles De Gaulle and Enoch Powell Hamilton said he had coloured himself black in 1982 to look like Idi Amin and dressed as Canon James Owen on a boat on the River Cam 68 He said he would have twenty character witnesses My main character witness was going to be Norman St John Stevas 69 In a Sunday Times article Hamilton denied there was any malicious intent behind the salute He also pointed out that one person present at the incident Julian Lewis was a Jew and that a number of his relatives were killed by the Nazis during the war 69 BBC collapse edit In mid trial and without cross examining Hamilton the BBC capitulated on 21 October 1986 The Director General Alasdair Milne stated he was instructed to do so by the Governors of the BBC The corporation was directed to pay the men s legal costs Hamilton and Howarth were awarded 20 000 each and in the next edition of Panorama on 27 October the BBC made an unreserved apology 70 The settlement of the case raised serious concerns regarding political pressure and the intimidation of witnesses Before the BBC defence lawyers had an opportunity to interrogate Hamilton the Board of Governors met during the trial and instructed the BBC Board of Management to settle the case the BBC executives at this meeting expressed serious doubts about the decision It was pointed out the BBC had not even begun to put its case 71 The National Young Conservatives hinted at a stitch up at the BBC The chairman Richard Fuller told the Eastern Area Young Conservatives I find it strange that they have apparently decided to settle now when things appeared to be going well 72 Attention focussed on the actions of Malcolm McAlpine a cousin of Alistair McAlpine the treasurer of the Conservative Party He denied yesterday that he had promised Mr Hamilton that he could deliver the governors behind a settlement 72 Witness allegations editIn the immediate aftermath of the BBC settlement allegations of witness intimidation abounded A BBC internal memorandum to the Board of Management claimed some 17 witnesses had been intimidated into changing their testimony 73 A BBC source stated Nearly all the defence witnesses have had a quiet word in their ears Only two or three people connected with Tory politics who would have given vital evidence for us now stick to their testimony Some previously expressed disgust at incidents they had witnessed Now they claim to have witnessed nothing 74 Howarth and Hamilton said the case against Pedley would not be dropped and Pedley said he would not be joining the BBC decision The Financial Times reported A solicitor for Mr Hamilton and Mr Howarth said later that their linked libel action against Mr Philip Pedley would continue Mr Pedley indicated that he intends to continue the case 75 The media began to focus on the remaining unsettled case The Guardian reported that The spotlight had swivelled to Phil Pedley the Tory defendant who remained adamant he would fight on alone backed by independent funds and he claims a wide range of Conservative supporters 76 Pedley did not name the supporters but the then chairman of the Young Conservatives Richard Fuller pledged financial support to the fight and in a meeting with Jeffrey Archer Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party Fuller resisted Archer s demand to back down 77 Labour accused Conservative Central Office of organising a cover up over claims that Hamilton had given a Nazi salute on a visit to Berlin and sought to question the then party chairman Norman Tebbit 78 Dale Campbell Savours claimed he had evidence in the form of a letter from Pedley to the former Party Chairman John Selwyn Gummer demonstrating Conservative Central Office CCO had contacted witnesses 79 Tebbit confirmed one witness had been in touch with CCO I am aware that one potential witness sought advice from Central Office but was told that no advice could be given Tebbit accused Campbell Savours of making his accusations behind the cloak of parliamentary privilege and left the chamber to make his reply My staff are appalled and disgusted They are filled with contempt for a man who can make these sort of accusations of a criminal offence against a member of staff who Mr Campbell Savours knows damn well is not guilty of it 80 On 25 October the press reported new evidence of inappropriate witness contact 81 Later that day Hamilton announced that he was dropping the action against Pedley However Pedley reaffirmed that he had no intention of withdrawing from the case 82 Hamilton s announcement failed to quell demands for an enquiry and Campbell Savours denounced Tebbit s tactic of making his statements outside the House of Commons chamber accusing him of a deliberate ploy to avoid placing himself in contempt by misleading the House in a personal statement He invited Tebbit to make a statement in the House If he refuses then the country will know that a conspiracy of silence is being engineered by senior figures to hide the truth 83 More information appeared in the press alleging witness interference including the Hogan Memorandum the internal BBC document listing the witnesses who had changed their account 84 The Independent revealed the existence of a taped conversation of a Tory witness being shaken rigid by Central Office s suggestion that the Berlin events had not happened and no other witness would substantiate or give evidence about those alleged incidents and the witness was told no other witness would back his account The witness said this was like a bad dream 85 Campbell Savours claimed this was proof of BBC nobbling and announced that he was sending his evidence to Sir Michael Havers the Attorney General 86 In the Commons Campbell Savours stated Central Office set about an elaborate attempt to interfere directly with potential witnesses Attempts were made to manage and rig statements by Mr David Mitchell I repeat what I have said previously but additionally I am able to say today that there is a tape in existence that confirms the nature of the conspiracy to hide the truth and which identifies persons Today I have sent a transcript of that tape to the Attorney General I have to inform you Mr Speaker that it is but one of two tapes I await a transcript of the second tape 87 Statement contradictions edit Press interest turned to Hamilton s past statements about the Berlin visit over which Tory witnesses were alleged to have been pressured to say that they had not seen goose stepping or Nazi style salutes Hamilton had given a categorical denial he had made a Nazi salute in Berlin to John Selwyn Gummer the Party Chairman in January 1984 Dear John I make it absolutely clear that whilst in Berlin I did not do any goose stepping nor did I at any time give Nazi salutes Indeed I have always thought the latter was a criminal offence in the Federal Republic But writing in the Sunday Times Hamilton admitted making a little salute in the Reichstag 88 Hamilton s admission had the effect of reaffirming the testimony of the two witnesses who alleged he had given a Nazi salute in Berlin and exposing those witnesses who had reversed their position citation needed Dropping of libel action against the Young Conservatives edit Hamilton and Howarth reversed their earlier position and dropped their libel action against Pedley They said that extracting an apology from Pedley was not worth the bother 89 On 3 December 1986 Pedley refused the offered settlement terms and asked for a hearing in open court Justice Simon Brown ruled that Hamilton and Howarth be debarred from alleging Pedley s words were libel and should pay Pedley s costs 90 Pedley made a statement from the steps to say he stood by his words in the Panorama programme and restated he had never said the MPs were Nazis rather their behaviour was part of a pattern that would harm the Party and in the case of Hamilton s Berlin behaviour the Final YC Report accused Hamilton of batty eccentricity On the more substantive allegations Pedley said he reiterated the points made in the YC Report had been called into question I consider I have the responsibility to vindicate the good work done by the members of that committee Several have endured abuse and hate mail following publication of their names in the Young National Front paper Bulldog and other extremist papers I hope this will now cease together with set ups and the surveillance and harassment of other witnesses in my case by private security companies 91 In December 1986 Hamilton was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to David Mitchell Cash for questions edit Main article Cash for questions affair On 20 October 1994 The Guardian published an article which claimed that Hamilton and another MP Tim Smith had received money in the form of cash in brown envelopes It claimed the money was paid to the men by Mohamed Al Fayed the owner of Harrods In return the men were to ask questions on behalf of Al Fayed in the House of Commons Smith admitted his guilt and resigned immediately Hamilton claimed innocence but was forced to resign five days later on 25 October 1994 Libel action against The Guardian edit Hamilton brought legal action for libel against The Guardian Hamilton joined Ian Greer a parliamentary lobbyist as a co plaintiff In the process the Bill of Rights 1689 was amended by the Defamation Act 1996 to allow statements made in Parliament to be questioned in court 92 On 30 September 1996 the day before the start of the trial Hamilton and Greer settled citing a conflict of interest and lack of funds The Guardian greeted the Hamilton collapse with the headline A Liar and a Cheat Alan Rusbridger editor of The Guardian said The decision by Neil Hamilton and Ian Greer must be one of the most astonishing legal cave ins in the history of the law of libel and called for the issues to be examined by Sir Gordon Downey the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards and the Inland Revenue 93 They each paid 7 500 towards the paper s legal costs All the cash for questions evidence was sent to Sir Gordon Downey the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards 94 On 1 October 1996 Hamilton appeared on the evening television program Newsnight and engaged in a live debate with Alan Rusbridger the editor of The Guardian 95 Enquiry edit The cash for questions parliamentary enquiry took place in 1997 led by Downey Hamilton vowed that if the Downey report found against him he would resign Edwina Currie a former health minister gave evidence She told the inquiry that in May 1988 Hamilton had been unmoved by a set of photographs that depicted smoking related cancers that is harm to young people which might be caused by a product tobacco that he promoted 96 Hamilton argued the pictures were irrelevant Both Hamilton and Michael Brown had received a 6 000 honorarium and hospitality from Skoal Bandits 97 In December 1989 the sale of Skoal Bandit products was banned in the UK by the Secretary of State for Health Kenneth Clarke 98 Downey reported that he found the evidence against Hamilton in the case of Al Fayed compelling Hamilton received over 25 000 and had deliberately misled Michael Heseltine then President of the Board of Trade in October 1994 when he said he had no financial relationship with Ian Greer In a phone conversation Hamilton gave an absolute assurance to Heseltine that there was no such relationship but he had received two payments from Greer in 1988 and 1989 totalling 10 000 99 Hamilton had asked for payment in kind so the money would not be taxable He also failed to register his stays at the Hotel Ritz Paris and at Al Fayed s castle in Scotland in 1989 100 On 3 July 1997 the enquiry found Hamilton guilty of taking cash for questions The Independent wrote Sir Gordon contrary to Hamilton s confident expectations had no compunction about concluding that he did indeed take cash in brown envelopes and called on the new party leader to expel the miscreants 99 Hamilton Smith also found guilty Brown and Michael Grylls were harshly criticised If Hamilton and Smith had remained in parliament Downey said he might have recommended long periods of suspension for both Hamilton rejected these findings whereas Smith who had stood down accepted them apologised for his conduct and retired from politics altogether Libel action against Al Fayed edit Hamilton also brought a legal action for libel against Mohamed Al Fayed On 16 January 1997 Al Fayed appeared in an edition of the Dispatches documentary series on Channel 4 101 He claimed that Hamilton had demanded and had accepted cash payments of up to 110 000 102 Harrods gift vouchers and a free holiday at the Hotel Ritz Paris in 1987 in return for asking questions in Parliament on behalf of Harrods While Hamilton did not deny the holiday he continued to maintain that he was innocent of improper conduct On 31 July 1998 Hamilton s action was approved for a court listing Funds for the action were donated by Lord Harris of High Cross the Earl of Portsmouth and Taki who raised 50 000 103 Other contributors to the fund included Simon Heffer Norris McWhirter Peter Clarke Lord Bell Gyles Brandreth and Gerald Howarth Hamilton s co plaintiff in the BBC action Some Conservative MPs approximately 40 of the 165 also made contributions In total approximately 410 000 was raised 104 The jury trial commenced in November 1999 Hamilton and his wife were cross examined by George Carman QC Carman put to Hamilton that he had acted corruptly to demand and then take 10 000 from Mobil Oil in 1989 for tabling an amendment to a finance bill At the time Hamilton was a member of a Commons select committee on finance 105 Al Fayed said Hamilton had taken the money either in brown envelope cash payments or through Ian Greer Hamilton said in his own evidence I have never received a penny from Mr Fayed I have never asked 106 His counsel in the closing comments argued that Al Fayed s assertions had destroyed his client s reputation 107 On 21 December 1999 the jury unanimously decided in favour of Al Fayed declaring Hamilton corrupt 108 2 A year later Hamilton lost his appeal against the decision 109 and was refused leave to appeal to the House of Lords on 2 April 2001 Bankruptcy editOn 22 May 2001 unable to pay his legal fees and with costs amounting to some 3m Hamilton declared bankruptcy He was discharged from bankruptcy in May 2004 False rape accusation editOn 10 August 2001 Hamilton and his wife Christine were arrested by police who were investigating an alleged rape The Hamiltons said they could not have been present at the alleged rape scene because they were hosting a dinner party and produced alibis including one from Derek Laud 110 The investigation against the couple was dropped when it became apparent that the accusations were entirely false This event was recorded on film by Louis Theroux who at that time was spending time with the Hamiltons for an episode of his documentary series When Louis Met 111 In June 2003 Nadine Milroy Sloan the woman responsible for the unfounded accusation was sentenced to three years in jail for perverting the course of justice 112 In February 2005 the publicist Max Clifford who had acted for Milroy Sloan settled paying Hamilton an undisclosed sum 113 In 2014 Milroy Sloan under her birth name Emily Checksfield was jailed again for falsely claiming to police that her ex partner had threatened to kill her with a Samurai sword 114 The same year Clifford was jailed for sexual assaults on under age girls 115 After Clifford died in prison in December 2017 he was described by Hamilton as a monster 116 Television appearances editOn 9 May 1997 Hamilton and his wife appeared on the current affairs satire quiz programme Have I Got News for You The episode was recorded one week after Hamilton lost his seat Angus Deayton the presenter of the panel game wore a white suit instead of his usual brown one This was a humorous reference to Martin Bell who wore just such a suit throughout the 1997 general election campaign As a further taunt at the end of the show the Hamiltons were handed their fee in brown envelopes 117 At one point Hamilton quipped I ve found it s much better making political jokes than being one 118 On 30 March 2000 Hamilton appeared on Da Ali G Show on Channel 4 for a satirical comedic interview 119 when he was seen to be sharing what appeared to be a marijuana joint with the comedian Sacha Baron Cohen s Ali G character 120 In 2001 Hamilton appeared on When Louis Met a documentary by Louis Theroux during which he described himself and his wife as professional objects of curiosity 121 Since then the Hamiltons have appeared in pantomimes television chat shows and programmes such as The Weakest Link Who Wants to Be a Millionaire and Ready Steady Cook 122 He appeared on a celebrity edition of Mastermind on Boxing Day 2004 citation needed He appeared on stage in The Rocky Horror Show wearing six inch stiletto heels a basque suspenders and stockings however he declined to appear on Big Brother or Celebrity Wife Swap 122 In 2005 Hamilton appeared on the Johnny Vegas show 18 Stone of Idiot where he danced in a perspex box whilst Vegas and a member of the public poured buckets of fish over his head 123 124 Due to his television appearances The Guardian described him as an all purpose Z list celebrity 124 Political ideology editHamilton argued for the individual s right to smoke clarification needed He was the only member in committee to oppose the Conservative government s bill to outlaw trafficking in human organs 125 In April 1986 Hamilton was one of ten MPs to vote against the government on an EEC bill Hamilton was a member of the No Turning Back group advocating Thatcherite policies citation needed In November 1989 Hamilton won the Spectator parliamentary wit of the year award He jokingly remarked that when told of winning the award he thought it was for being the Twit of the year 126 Hamilton s comments are frequently controversial During a debate about amputees he said that Frank Dobson does not have a leg to stand on January 1987 127 To Jeremy Corbyn he suggested that some of his IRA friends could be used to get rid of pensioners by shooting them also in 1987 128 Personal life editOn 4 June 1983 five days before polling day in the 1983 general election Hamilton married Mary Christine Holman the secretary to Tory MP Michael Grylls 129 in Cornwall In September 2003 after having a residence in the Tatton constituency for twenty years the Hamiltons moved to Hullavington Wiltshire where they purchased a home in October 2004 In 2006 they released a song coinciding with the World Cup England are Jolly Dee 130 In 1992 Hamilton suffered a broken nose when he defended Harvey Proctor during a homophobic attack in Proctor s shirtmaking shop Two men were later imprisoned for the assault 131 Since 2008 he has been company secretary of Vixen Consultants Limited 132 The trading name of Vixen Consultants is Christine Hamilton 133 Notes edit Acting from 12 September 2020 to 18 October 2021 References edit a b HAMILTON Mostyn Neil Who s Who 2016 A amp C Black an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc 2016 online edn Oxford University Press 2015 online edn November 2015 Accessed 10 May 2016 a b Sengupta Kim 22 December 1999 The Hamilton Affair Fayed demolishes Hamilton in the sleaze trial of the century The Independent Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 UKIP Ex Conservative minister Neil Hamilton elected party leader BBC News 19 October 2021 About Neil Aber Connect Archived 6 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Mr M N Hamilton Notes of the month Parliamentary privilege Socialist Review 180 SWP November 1994 Retrieved 5 May 2012 BBC News Election 97 Neil Hamilton Con Archived from the original on 1 July 2003 Retrieved 4 May 2007 Accessed 23 May 2014 Guy Rais Goose step not backing Nazism says Tory MP Daily Telegraph 16 October 1986 Eldon League Wants To Abolish 20th Century Logansport Pharos Tribune United Press International 26 May 1985 p 7 UK General Election results February 1974 Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine at politicalresources net UK General Election results May 1979 Archived 11 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine at politicalresources net Chris Moncrieff and Vik Iyer Hamilton s career came to crashing end over cash for questions scandal The Irish Independent 11 August 2001 Hamilton declared bankrupt BBC News 22 May 2001 Hamilton declared bankrupt The Guardian 22 May 2001 Register of Potential and Actual Peerage Cases in which the Debtor is a Member of the House of Commons including a Record of Returns Sent Insolvency Law Jordan Publishing 22 April 2010 a b David Leigh amp Ed Vulliamy Sleaze the Corruption of Parliament pages 48 49 ISBN 185702 694 2 Petrol Lead and Benzene Content Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Commons 4 December 1984 Retrieved 5 May 2012 Labour Research November 1988 p 2 Anti fascists plan Tory protest The Independent 30 September 1992 Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 21 July 2016 David Leigh amp Ed Vulliamy Sleaze the Corruption of Parliament page 76 ISBN 185702 694 2 David Leigh amp Ed Vulliamy Sleaze the Corruption of Parliament pp 65 70 ISBN 185702 694 2 The Committee Office House of Commons 8 July 1997 Hansard Select Committee on Standards and Privileges First Report VI SUMMARIZING THE EVIDENCE Continued 7 ALLEGATIONS RELATING TO NON DECLARATION OF INTERESTS b The Campaign relating to Skoal Bandits Publications parliament uk Retrieved 21 July 2016 Patricia Wynn Davies The Attack on Sleaze How apartheid regime set out to woo Tories The Independent 26 October 1994 David Leigh amp Ed Vulliamy Sleaze the Corruption of Parliament page 136 ISBN 185702 694 2 Select Committee on Standards and Privileges First Report iv STRATEGY NETWORK INTERNATIONAL Hansard Neil Hamilton in Iain Dale ed Memories of Margaret Thatcher A Portrait By Those Who Knew Her Best Biteback Publishing 2013 ISBN 184954607X Bruce Anderson John Major Making of the Prime Minister 1991 Christine Hamilton s autobiography 2005 David Hencke Tory MPs were paid to plant questions says Harrods chief in The Guardian dated 20 October 1994 The individual responsibility of ministers in David Pollard Neil Parpworth David Hughes Constitutional and Administrative Law Text with Materials Oxford University Press 2007 p 171 Western Europe 2003 Europa Europa Publications Psychology Press 2002 p 117 Anthony Forster Euroscepticism in Contemporary British Politics Opposition to Europe in the British Conservative and Labour Parties Since 1945 Psychology Press 2002 p 89 Michael Brown I was there when they first met he delighted in showing off she was the centre of attention The Independent 13 August 2001 The 1997 General Election edited by D T Denver p 83 ISBN 0714649090 Neil Hamilton should step down as Knutsford s MP now a true blue Tory argued this week Warrington Guardian 9 October 1996 Archived from the original on 25 July 2014 Jeremy Paxman The Political Animal 2002 ISBN 9780141032962 Bruce Page The Murdoch Archipelago 2003 ISBN 9781849837798 Profile Neil Hamilton BBC News 10 August 2001 Neil Hamilton joins UKIP s Nigel Farage show BBC News 9 September 2011 Retrieved 12 September 2011 Hamilton back with NEC post UKIP 1 November 2011 Archived from the original on 16 April 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2011 NEC Archived 3 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine UKIP Lucy Fisher Ukip demotes Neil Hamilton as party fears over sleaze grow The Observer p24 20 April 2014 Accessed 23 May 2014 St Mary s Park Ward results Wandsworth London Borough Council Welsh Election 2016 Labour just short as UKIP wins seats BBC News 6 May 2016 UKIP s Farage attacks Hamilton s leadership victory BBC News 10 May 2016 Nathan Gill very disappointed and Farage criticism irrelevant Neil Hamilton ITV News 10 May 2016 Farage throwing toys out of pram says Neil Hamilton BBC News 10 May 2016 UKIP s Farage attacks Hamilton s leadership victory BBC News 10 May 2016 Tom Peck 17 August 2016 Ukip s leader in Wales withdraws himself from his party in the Welsh Assembly The Independent Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 17 August 2016 UKIP MEP Nathan Gill told to quit as successor is ready BBC News 29 July 2016 Retrieved 28 October 2016 Nathan Gill leaves UKIP assembly group to sit as independent BBC News 17 August 2016 Retrieved 28 October 2016 Neil Hamilton out as UKIP assembly leader BBC News 17 May 2018 UKIP Wales members elect Gareth Bennett as assembly leader BBC News 10 August 2018 Retrieved 12 August 2018 Sexism row over Neil Hamilton s maiden assembly speech BBC News 18 May 2016 Neil Hamilton apology for Brexit suicide remark BBC News 29 March 2017 Retrieved 15 April 2017 UKIP Wales leader defends Enoch Powell BBC News 16 April 2018 Retrieved 17 April 2018 Steven Morris 5 April 2019 Newport West byelection Labour retains seat amid Brexit chaos The Guardian Retrieved 5 April 2019 Will Hayward 10 February 2020 The Welsh AM who claimed 9 000 to get to Cardiff Bay from his home in England Wales Online Retrieved 14 February 2020 Neil Hamilton Appointed Interim Leader of UKIP UKIP 14 September 2020 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Chandler Andy 21 April 2021 Neil Hamilton brands BBC excluding UKIP from main leaders debates outrageous Herald Wales Retrieved 5 October 2021 Islwyn Welsh Parliament constituency BBC News Retrieved 8 May 2021 South Wales East BBC News Retrieved 8 May 2021 Greg Heffer Election results Labour remains in power in Wales after winning working Senedd majority Sky News Retrieved 8 May 2021 2021 NEC and Leadership Election The Results UKIP Retrieved 27 November 2021 Parliament Debate on Recommendation to Strip Msi Leader of His Immunity JTA 24 May 1973 Robert Kahn Holocaust Denial and the Law A Comparative Study p 15 2004 ISBN 9781403964762 a b Wilson Jamie 22 December 1999 Who will listen to his story now The Guardian London Retrieved 26 March 2010 Marcel Berlins Price of backing a loser The Guardian 31 January 2000 Sengupta Kim 22 December 1999 The Hamilton Affair The cost Right wing donors united by their loathing of Fayed The Independent London Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 20 May 2010 Daily Telegraph 17 October 1986 The Daily Telegraph October 1986 a b Neil Hamilton Sunday Times News in Focus feature 26 October 1986 The Times 28 October 1986 Simon Freeman and Henry Porter BBC to settle Tory libel case Sunday Times 19 October 1986 a b Peter Fiddick and Dennis Barker BBC in crisis over libel case deal The Guardian 20 October 1986 Hamilton and Howarth v British Broadcasting Corporation Hansard HC Deb 31 October 1986 vol 103 c272W John Merritt Tories Nobble BBC Claim The Daily Mirror 20 October 1986Anne Spackman New evidence emerges in BBC Libel Case The Independent 25 October 1986 David Thomas Raymond Hughes and Michael Cassall MP urges resignations at BBC after libel settlement Financial Times 22 October 1986 Fighting on alone The Guardian 22 October 1986 David Sapsted MP s get damages The Times 20 October 1986Dennis Barker and Peter Fiddick Young Tory in Archer Meeting The Guardian 21 October 1986 PMQs Hansard HC Deb 21 October 1986 vol 102 cc940 6Ivor Owen Labour calls for statement on alleged libel case interference Financial Times 22 October 1986John Pienaar Tebbit leaning on Tories over BBC The Independent 22 October 1986 BBC Court Case Hansard HC Deb 23 October 1986 vol 102 cc1307 10 Anthony Bevins Top Tory named in BBC Row The Independent 24 October 1986Alan Travis Labour accuses Tories of Libel Pressure The Guardian 24 October 1986 Anne Spackman New Evidence emerges in BBC libel case The Independent 25 October 1986 David Hencke MP drops Young Tory libel action The Guardian 27 October 1986 Anthony Bevans Tebbit challenged to make statement on BBC case The Independent 28 October 1986 Alan Travis Tory Squeeze Claim The Guardian 28 October 1986 Alan Travis Tory Squeeze claim The Guardian 28 October 1986 Anne Spackman and Anthony Bevins BBC witness shaken rigid The Independent 29 October 1986 James Naughtie MP claims tape proof of BBC nobbling The Guardian 5 November 1986 BBC Libel Action Hansard 4 November 1986 Neil Hamilton News in Focus feature Sunday Times 26 October 1986David Leigh and Paul Lashmar Nazi Salute storm refuses to die down The Observer 2 November 1986Paul Foot Spot the Goose Daily Mirror 3 November 1986 The Times 27 October 1986 The Financial Times 4 December 1986 High Court written judgement 14 July 1987 Pedley Prepared Court Statement 3 December 1986 A thoroughly moderate man Time Out 17 December 1986 Robert Shrimsley Guardian Case MP seeks law change Financial Times 15 February 1996 Williams Kevin 1997 Only Flattery is Safe Political Speech and the Defamation Act 1996 Modern Law Review 60 3 388 393 doi 10 1111 1468 2230 00087 David Hencke David Leigh and David Pallister A Liar and a Cheat The Guardian 1 October 1996 Timeline of Hamilton Cash for Questions Case BBC News Retrieved 21 July 2016 Select Committee on Standards and Privileges First Report UK Parliament 20 February 2017 Retrieved 5 July 2019 The Independent 5 July 1997 The Committee Office House of Commons House of Commons Standards and Privileges First Report Publications parliament uk Retrieved 5 May 2012 Safety ban on Skoal Bandits The Herald 14 December 1989 a b Donald McIntyre A clear response to the cash for questions MPs The Independent 4 July 1997 The sleaze report Five men who fell below the standards that Parliament demands from an MP Hamilton cash and a stay at Ritz Smith accepted cash in return for lobbying Grylls Misled committee over dealings Bowden Did not declare Brown Failed to register The Independent 4 July 1997 Appendix 33 continued Appendix 1 Channel 4 and Fourth Estate Press Releases Select Committee on Standards and Privileges First Report House of Commons January 1997 Hamilton loses libel case BBC News 21 December 1999 The odd couple behind the odd couple BBC News 23 December 1999 The Independent 23 December 1999 The undoing of Neil Hamilton BBC News 22 December 1999 Retrieved 26 March 2010 Matt Wells I lacked candour but I am not corrupt The Guardian 11 December 1999 Hamilton s tragedy was to help Al Fayed The Guardian 16 December 1999 Wells Matt Wilson Jamie Pallister David 22 December 1999 A greedy corrupt liar The Guardian Retrieved 15 December 2021 Neil Hamilton loses libel appeal The Guardian 21 December 2000 Neil Hamilton loses libel appeal BBC News 21 December 2000 Retrieved 26 March 2010 Dinner guests whose testimony will count 22 June 2022 Archived from the original on 22 June 2022 Retrieved 22 November 2022 Theroux hits gold with Hamiltons BBC News 11 December 2001 Retrieved 2 April 2013 Hamiltons relieved as accuser jailed BBC News 13 June 2003 Retrieved 26 May 2009 Nadine Milroy Sloan Christine and Neil Hamilton false accusation Deabirkett com Retrieved 5 May 2012 Boffey Daniel 3 May 2014 Hamiltons toast end of PR king Max Clifford s reign with champagne The Guardian Retrieved 3 May 2014 Beth Robson 2 October 2014 Army veteran speaks of prison ordeal at hands of Hamiltons rape claim liar Emily Checksfield after she is jailed for more lies kentonline co uk Max Clifford jailed for eight years for sex assaults bbc co uk 2 May 2014 Max Clifford Was An Unscrupulous Monster Says Neil Hamilton lbc co uk 11 December 2017 Invincible Christine at Neil s side BBC News 10 August 2001 Have I Got News for You season 13 episode 4 BBC Broadcast 9 May 1997 Da Ali G Show S1E1 IMDb Hamilton shared joint with Ali G BBC News 18 January 2000 Informers and sex scandals The Irish Times a b The weird and wonderful world of former Tory MP Neil Hamilton Evening Standard 10 April 2012 Johnny Vegas 18 Stone of Idiot The Digital Fix 2 November 2005 Retrieved 15 January 2017 a b Neil Hamilton disgraced MP to Z list celebrity to political comeback The Guardian 10 May 2016 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Robert Barr Associated Press London Kidneys for Cash Scandal Prompts Action to Ban Sale of Organs Los Angeles Times 16 July 1989 Matthew Parris Iron Lady eyes up the men at her feet Political sketch The Times 23 February 1990 3 32 pm 29 January 1987 J E Hanger and Co Ltd Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Commons Retrieved 5 May 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Elimination of poverty in old age etc Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Commons 1 December 1987 Retrieved 5 May 2012 Andrew Roth Sir Michael Grylls Conservative MP exposed in cash for questions investigation obituary The Guardian 24 February 2001 Neil amp Christine Hamilton s World Cup Song England are Jolly Dee YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Abrams Fran 1 March 1997 Court Threat to Proctor Over Shop Accounts The Independent London Archived from the original on 9 May 2022 Retrieved 8 October 2013 Vixen Consultants Limited at Companies House Retrieved 8 December 2019 Value Added Tax information for VIXEN CONSULTANTS LIMITED trading as CHRISTINE HAMILTON vat check co uk Retrieved 8 December 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Neil Hamilton politician nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Neil Hamilton Official website Official twitter account Guardian Special Report Hamilton Al Fayed Libel Case Mohamed Al Fayed on Hamilton Socialist Review article on Hamilton Nov 1994 Guardian Lies site claiming a conspiracy against Hamilton Parliament of the United Kingdom New constituency Member of Parliamentfor Tatton1983 1997 Succeeded byMartin Bell Political offices Preceded byJohn Redwood Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Corporate Affairs1992 1994 Succeeded byJonathan Evans Senedd Preceded byWilliam Powell Member of the Senedd for Mid and West Wales2016 2021 Succeeded byJane Dodds Party political offices New office Leader of the UK Independence Party in the Senedd2016 2018 Succeeded byCaroline Jones Preceded byNathan Gill Leader of UKIP Wales2016 present Incumbent Preceded byGareth Bennett Leader of the UK Independence Party in the Senedd2019 2021 Position abolished Preceded byFreddy Vachha Leader of the UK Independence PartyActing2020 present Incumbent Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neil Hamilton politician amp oldid 1214082766, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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