Last week Ukip councillor David Silvester sparked fury by blaming the recent flooding on the Government’s decision to legalise gay marriage.
Mr Silvester accused David Cameron of acting “arrogantly against the Gospel” and added: “It is his fault that large swathes of the nation have been afflicted by storms and floods.”
Day later Mr Farage himself provoked a wave of anger by claiming women with children were worth less to city firms than men.
He courted further controversy by labelling the ban on handguns in the wake of the Dunblane massacre “crackers”.
It emerged yesterday that Godfrey Bloom, who was expelled from the party last autumn after describing women as “sluts”, taunted a disabled Oxford student by asking him: “Are you Richard III or not?”
He compared David Browne, an undergraduate from Belfast, to the medieval king who suffered from a spine deformity during an Oxford Union debate last Thursday.
Mr Farage called for greater discipline among the Ukip members and said he would not tolerate further embarrassment from candidates voicing eccentric views.
He plans to set up day-long assessment centres to find top quality candidates for next year’s general election to prevent people who are “just about the odd barmy opinion” being picked.
“It’s really to try and work out whether these are reliable, steady, solid people,” he said.
“We must together be campaigning on similar issues,” he said.
“I need us to have a disciplined election machine.”
But he insisted he did not want to create “a new Labour outfit where they’ve all got pagers on their belts and they’re told what to say and think.”
Mr Farage believes a third of Ukip’s supporters are former Labour voters and is keen to extend his influence among blue collar workers.
But the former stockbroker risks alienating himself from working class voters by arguing against limits on bankers’ bonuses.
He said: “We don’t need official caps or limits being placed on these things. Don’t forget that quite a lot of this comes back to people in terms of pension incomes and all the rest of it.
“The very thought that the bureaucrats in Brussels now set the limits we can pay the highest earning people in London is truly astonishing.”
Ukip also boasts supporters from among the City elite.
Last year Mayfair-based investment group Harwood Capital donated £50,000 to the party.
Mr Farage argued the salaries offered to top local government officials and think-tanks are of more concern than bankers’ pay.
He said: “The numbers of people now working in local authorities, working in the quangos, who are earning a hundred thousand pounds a year with quite remarkable pension deals compared to people in the private sector are somewhere where really big savings need to be made.”
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On the back of Farage’s foolish comments we realise that it has no meaning as he is trying to sort out his own mess as he has had near absolute power in the party, unchallenged by anyone of competence who remains and on the very day he has been published with his big words we note the actual actions in his party:
Ukip donor takes out bizarre anti-gay advert