Published: 12:27 PM July 11, 2018 Updated: 6:21 PM September 17, 2020

Former and almost certain future Ukip leader Nigel Farage

Comedian and passionate Brexiteer John Cleese said he is quitting Britain in November because he is 'so disappointed' with the country.

The former Monty Python comic said his 'particular beef' is with British newspapers.

He revealed he was heading to the 'gorgeous' island of Nevis in the Caribbean.

He told BBC Two's Newsnight: 'I'm leaving in November.

'I actually am leaving. I'm making arrangements now. John Cleese (second from left) with his Monty Python colleagues (Philip Toscano/PA)

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Mr Cleese said he was 'so disappointed with so much about this country at the moment'.

The press reform campaigner said he had tried to secure press reform and changes to the voting system but had failed so he was going to 'try somewhere else'.

Mr Cleese said the standard of debate around Brexit had been 'awful' and there had been 'dreadful lies'.

The Fawlty Towers star was an enthusiastic Brexit backer who told the Radio Times after the vote: 'I don't think Brexit was a mistake, myself. I'm rather delighted that all these forecasts of doom and destruction have turned out, at this point, not to have been real.'

Explaining why he voted Leave, he continued: 'I don't want to be ruled by Brussels bureaucrats who want to create a super state. I was pro-Brexit for that reason.

'If I had three words to sum up why we had to get out of Europe, they would be: Jean-Claude Juncker. He's a little jumped up Luxembugger [sic] who's never really had a proper job.'

In June 2016 he suggested the only way to reform the European Union was to kill the president of the European Commission.

'It should give up the Euro, introduce accountability and hang Jean-Claude Juncker,' he tweeted.

It should give up the Euro, introduce accountability,and hang Jean-Claude Juncker https://t.co/JtN3VwKPRi

-- John Cleese (@JohnCleese) June 11, 2016

The comedian said the 'George W Bush voters' of the mid-West and south of America have 'no sense of irony'.

Asked if he meant that they were a 'bit thicker', he replied: 'Yes.'