It was the brother v brother challenge that considerably livened up the Labour Party leadership contest. Imagine if the maverick Nigel Farage had a brother standing against him to lead UKIP, two larger than life Farages, it would never be out of the headlines.

The results will be announced on 5th November and it is unlikely the same kind of fireworks will explode which the Milibands experienced. Farage is the only well known contender, he is brand UKIP, and a media darling. His party members have the chance now to give someone else the opportunity if they want a different style of leadership. He has three challengers – Eastern Region MEP and former Tory activist David Campbell-Bannerman, economist Tim Congdon and former boxer Winston McKenzie.

I met Campbell-Bannerman (left) during Euro election hustings last year and he was a fair candidate who didn’t try to score political points by massaging his own ego or slagging off our candidates. I remember thinking, “a pity he still isn’t Conservative”.

I have met Farage too. He was decent enough to return my phone call when I left a message asking to speak to him about an academic paper I was writing for a postgraduate Social Science Research Methods certificate on the success of UKIP during the the 2004 Euro Elections. A couple of weeks later I was sipping a coffee in the lobby of the European Parliament in Brussels during a visit to my MEP Robert Sturdy when Farage breezed past me. I couldn’t resist introducing myself as the anonymous mature student he had helped recently and explained about my day job for the first time. We sat and had a coffee together, and an invitation for dinner followed if I was ever to return.

I can’t imagine Farage not winning this contest, which is being held following the resignation of Lord Pearson of Rannoch who decided after only nine months that he was not cut out of the job. How refreshingly honest.