Parliamentary career 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.
Western Goals Institute 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. 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. 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.
Ian Greer Associates In 1985, he began working for
Ian Greer Associates, lobbying on behalf of
US Tobacco. 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". Hamilton was obliged to concede he had been wrong to make no reference to the payment "when I went on those meetings with Ministers".
Strategy Network International 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.
Thatcher leaves office Margaret Thatcher appointed Hamilton a
whip in July 1990. In November 1990,
Michael Heseltine put himself forward as
a potential replacement for Thatcher as leader of the Conservative Party.
Tim Renton, the Chief Whip, told Hamilton to stay neutral, but Hamilton 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 Thatcher 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." 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". On 21 November 1990, Hamilton and like-minded colleagues met Thatcher at
Downing Street. On 22 November Thatcher announced that she would resign, and on 27 November, in the next round of the election for Conservative leader, Hamilton voted for
John Major.
Minister in Major Government 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, Hamilton denied them and issued proceedings for
libel, but he resigned on 26 October at the insistence of
John Major.
Approach to the Maastricht Treaty Denmark rejected the
Maastricht Treaty on 2 June 1992. Like some other Conservative ministers, Hamilton had also opposed the treaty and was a member of the Eurosceptic "No Turning Back" group. 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. 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.
Loss of Tatton 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. Disquiet in the local association became public, but the majority gave him the benefit of the doubt. 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." 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". 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 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.
UK Independence Party 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. Hamilton was elected to the committee on 1 November 2011. He later become deputy chairman of the party. Hamilton was demoted from his role as campaign director in April 2014. 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.
Member of the Senedd In the
2016 National Assembly for Wales election, Hamilton stood as UKIP's candidate for
Carmarthen East and Dinefwr, receiving 3,474 votes (11.7%). He also stood as the lead candidate in the
Mid and West Wales Region, becoming one of seven UKIP candidates to win a seat through the Regional List system. 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". Hamilton dismissed Farage's criticism as "irrelevant", accused him of "throwing toys out of pram" and referred to him as "the MEP for the South East of England". During his first 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". In leaked emails, he was accused by UKIP's biggest donor,
Arron Banks, of being a "corrupt old Tory". Nathan Gill subsequently left the UKIP group in the assembly to sit as an independent, resulting in Neil Hamilton becoming UKIP's Leader in Wales in September 2016. 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." At the
2017 general election, he received 985 votes (2.4%) in
Carmarthen East and Dinefwr. 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". Hamilton was ousted as leader of UKIP in the National Assembly on 17 May 2018 and was replaced by
Caroline Jones. 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." 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%). Hamilton was the only MS not to live in Wales. 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. 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. Hamilton contested the constituency of
Islwyn but came sixth with just 507 votes. He was also top of the UKIP list for that region but was not appointed as an additional member either. Meanwhile, the party lost all its other Senedd seats.
UKIP leader Following 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. In December 2023, the anti-racism magazine,
Searchlight, reported that Hamilton would step down as UKIP leader in 2024 in order to spend more time with his family. Following the election of
Lois Perry as leader in May 2024, he was appointed honorary president of the party. ==Legal cases==