Updated 11.45am

The leader of Britain's anti-European Union UK Independence Party (UKIP) Nigel Farage said today he would stand down after having realised his ambition of winning last month's referendum in favour of Brexit.

"I have never been, and I have never wanted to be, a career politician. My aim in being in politics was to get Britain out of the European Union," he told reporters.

Farage caused a storm in the European Parliament after the Brexit vote.

"So I feel it's right that I should now stand aside as leader of UKIP.

"During the referendum campaign, I said 'I want my country back'. What I'm saying today, is, 'I want my life back,' and it begins right now."

What I'm saying today, is, 'I want my life back,' and it begins right now

It is not the first time Farage has quit as leader of the party. He stood down in May 2015 after failing to win a parliamentary seat in last year's general election, only to withdraw his resignation three days later.

He said he would continue to support the party, and continue to watch Brussels "like a hawk" during the negotiations around Britain's exit from the EU.

He reiterated his view that Britain's new prime minister needed to be from the "Leave" campaign but declined to back a specific candidate out of Andrea Leadsom, Michael Gove or Liam Fox. Current frontrunner Theresa May backed "Remain".

Farage, 52, has been a member of UKIP since its 1993 birth and was first elected to the European Parliament in 1999.

 

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