Shortly afterwards, Knapman left the Conservative party to join UKIP. He stood as their candidate in the
2001 general election for
North Devon, coming fourth yet narrowly retaining his deposit. From 2000, he was UKIP's political advisor, and in 2002 he was elected unopposed as party leader. In
2004 he was elected a
Member of the European Parliament for the
South West England constituency. As leader of the only British party in the European Parliament to vote against the expansion of the EU in 2004 (and publicly opposing immigration), there was some amusement in May 2006 when it was revealed that he had employed a team of Polish builders to renovate his Grade II listed home in Devon, claiming there were no suitable local workers – a claim denied by local builders. He contested
Totnes at the
2005 general election, coming 4th with 7.7% of the vote. In 2006, he announced that he had no intention of seeking re-election as party leader; the
leadership contest was won in September of that year by
Nigel Farage MEP. Knapman was the only leader of UKIP to have succeeded in completing a full four-year term until Farage did so in 2014 after returning to the role in 2010. ==References==