Your support helps us to tell the story
As your White House correspondent, I ask the tough questions and seek the answers that matter.
Your support enables me to be in the room, pressing for transparency and accountability. Without your contributions, we wouldn’t have the resources to challenge those in power.
Your donation makes it possible for us to keep doing this important work, keeping you informed every step of the way to the November election
Andrew Feinberg
White House Correspondent
A former leader of the UK Independence Party, dubbed the “father of Brexit”, has died aged 90.
Jeffrey Titford began his political career as a Conservative councillor in Clacton before joining the Referendum Party, which went on to merge with Ukip.
The former MEP became leader of the Tory party for three years in 2000 before he briefly returned as acting leader in 2010. He held the post for three months before Nigel Farage took over in the run-up to the 2016 Brexit referendum.
Mr Titford quit the Tory party in 1992 in protest over prime minister John Major’s decision to sign the Maastricht Treaty. He described the treaty as the “final straw”, adding: “I could see the writing on the wall and knew it was never going to work.
“I resigned from the Conservative Party and I was looking for a group which would say ‘No, this is wrong’.”
The Maastricht Treaty, signed in February 1992, formally created the European Union.
He was one of the first to join the Referendum Party, standing in Harwich in the 1997 general election. He came fourth with nine per cent of the vote, before being elected to the European Parliament in 1999.
In 1999, he was elected to become one of eight MEPs representing the new East of England constituency when proportional representation was used for the first time in the European Parliament elections. Three Ukip MPs were elected to the European Parliament that year.
At the time, he said: “The polls have said that seven out of 10 people don’t want to have anything to do with the Euro [currency] and nearly 50 per cent want to withdraw from the European Union.
“All it needed was a party to stand up for those two principles.”
Speaking to the BBC in 2008, Mr Titford said: “If I can influence anybody into believing, as I do, that the EU is wrong for Britain, I shall have achieved my objective.”
In 2016, that objective was realised when the UK voted to leave the EU by 52 to 48 per cent – officially exiting the bloc in 2020 after three years of negotiations.
A report from Cambridge Econometrics, commissioned by City Hall in January, claimed that the cost of Brexit to the UK’s economy is £140billion.
A former colleague and friend of Mr Titford, Stuart Gulleford, described him as a “visionary and a democrat, who did not believe that EU membership provided a viable future for Britain as an independent, self-governing nation”.
“He was one of the fathers of Brexit,” he added.