The UK reform leader, Nigel Faraj, defended the decision to suspend one of his deputies, warning of “continuous fighting” within the political parties.
Writing in telegraph, Farage admitted that the class “expressed” unity “in reform, but said it was” unreasonable “not to take action.
They are his first public comments since he was MP Robert Lowe SuspendedAnd it will now sit as an independent while an investigation is made.
Loui is accused of bullying in the workplace, and also aims separately to the threats of physical violence against the party leader. He denies claims.
In response to a piece of telegraph in Faraj, he said it was “a completely false narration.”
Louis – a deputy of Great Yarmouth – said that there is “reliable zero evidence” against him, and that he was suspended in response to the criticism of Farage in an interview earlier this week.
“There is absolutely no truth,” in calling for Louis’s comments on Thursday and allegations against him after a day.
Boston and Skigin’s deputy said he was aware of Louis’s comment on Friday before his announcement, but the “anxiety that we had” on the alleged behavior of Louis “lasted for some time.”
Faraj wrote: “If the last general elections teach us anything, then the public does not like the political parties that are involved in continuous fighting.”
He said that the reform has built a unified party, but “thanks to one of our deputies, Ruert Lowe, unloading a barrage of criticism against our main operations and the actor’s main actors, this feeling of loneliness was stripped.”
Faraj said that Louis had fallen with his parliamentary colleagues “in one way or another” since his election eight months ago.
“We have done our best to keep a cover on things, but in the end, containing containers fails,” Faraj said.
The reform, the successor of the Brexit party in Farage, was heading to a rise in recent opinion polls, but the class has revealed sections within the party and means that its five deputies have now decreased to four.
Louis is accused of bullying in the workplace by two employees in his offices.
He was also referred to the police through reform due to allegations that he committed threats of physical violence at least twice to party leader Dia Youssef.
The party appointed a lawyer to conduct an investigation into the allegations. Louis said previously that he “collaborated and spoke at length” with the lawyer.
In his Telegraph article, Farraj said that the reform had a “duty of care” for his employees, and it was “completely correct” to conduct an independent investigation.
“It is unreasonable to simply be able to ignore such allegations,” he added.
Response to Farraj, Loui A new statement issued 250 words on x, He said he was “respectful” for him – but “you know this is a completely false narration.”
He said he was only aware of the procedures against him after he had an interview with Daily Mail, in which Faraj criticized.
Louis said that he asked Farraj to have dinner with him to solve the situation, adding: “All this should have happened behind closed doors. When I repeatedly paid.”
On Friday, Tim Montgomery, a former conservative commentator who defected reform last December, said once he reached the reform, “chose these tensions” between Farraj Woy.
“I don’t know that these individual allegations are clear, but I think this will reach his head at some point in any case,” BBC Newsnight told BBC News
The divisions were publicly appeared when the Daily Mail newspaper published her interview with Louis on Thursday, where the reform said in the shadow of Farraj, “A protest party led by Christ.”