Nigel Farage 'has £35k pay docked by EU over misspending claim'
- Published
Nigel Farage has had his MEP's salary docked by £35,500 after claims he misspent EU funds, the ´óÏó´«Ã½ understands.
The ex-UKIP leader was investigated by the European Parliament over claims his office assistant had not been working on EU matters.
Half of his salary has been withheld to recoup the money the Parliament says it is owed.
The move was condemned by a spokesman for the European Parliament group which Mr Farage heads.
UKIP faces UK probe into EU funding
"There is a vindictive campaign by the European Parliament of selective persecution of Eurosceptic MEPs, parties and groups," said the spokesman for the European Freedom and Direct Democracy group.
"This allegation is all part of their politically motivated assault."
European Parliament auditors last year suspended the contract of Christopher Adams, who was hired to be Mr Farage's assistant in Brussels and Strasbourg.
Mr Adams, a former UKIP Parliamentary candidate, was also the national nominating officer for UKIP, says.
The European Parliament has declined to comment.
The monthly pre-tax salary for an MEP is 8,484 euros (£7,530), which is the equivalent of an annual gross salary, before tax, of 101,808 euros (£90,235). They also receive thousands more in expenses for staff and travel costs.
Mr Farage, who will lose his job as an MEP in 2019 after 20 years in the European Parliament, recently described himself as "skint" in an interview with Mail on Sunday.
The 53-year-old will be entitled to annual EU pension of £73,000 when he reaches the age of 63.
He denied claims of hypocrisy - after campaigning for Brexit - saying: "Why should my family suffer?"
"I have just voted to get rid of my job. I was the turkey that voted for Christmas. How is that hypocrisy?," he told the ´óÏó´«Ã½'s Andrew Marr show.
He added that he doubted the money, which would be partly funded by money from the so-called EU divorce bill, would ever be paid, saying: "Given the arbitrary way the European Union behaves in terms of money, I would be very surprised if I get any of it. I don't think it will even occur."
A 2016 investigation by the European Parliament alleged that funds for two groupings in the Parliament - which included UKIP and other Eurosceptic parties - had been wrongly spent "for the benefit of UKIP".
It said £146,696 of the funds intended for European Parliament business should be repaid.
An Electoral Commission investigation into whether the party broke UK electoral law is ongoing.
CORRECTION 13 Jan 2018: An earlier version of this story incorrectly said the EFDD group (Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy) in the European Parliament had been in breach of funding rules.
- Published12 January 2018
- Published12 January 2018