He qualified as a solicitor of England and Wales on 16 February 2021.[4]
Political career
Hunter-Clarke began his political career at the age of eighteen, when he was elected as a town councillor in the May 2011 local elections. He was elected to Skegness Town Council, standing for the Conservative Party.[5] He defected to the UK Independence Party (UKIP) in September 2012[6] at the party's national conference in Birmingham, making him the only UKIP member of Skegness town council.
Hunter-Clarke was elected onto UKIP's National Executive Committee in 2014.[10] On 20 November 2014, Hunter-Clarke, then 22, was announced as UKIP's parliamentary candidate in the seat of Boston and Skegness.[11] Being considered winnable, this was a key seat for the party,[12] but Hunter-Clarke was ultimately defeated by the Daily Telegraph journalist Matt Warman. Hunter-Clarke achieved the second highest vote share for UKIP nationally; beaten only by UKIP's MP Douglas Carswell.
After the general election, Hunter-Clarke became the national UKIP co-ordinator for the fledgling referendum campaign Vote Leave.[13] This prompted UKIP to release a statement, as the party was currently backing neither Vote Leave nor Grassroots Out for the Electoral Commission's designation.[14]
In 2016, he was an unsuccessful candidate in the council by-election for the Gibbonsdown ward in Wales, achieving 54 votes.[15]
Together with fellow UKIP candidate Melanie Hunter-Clarke, he was also an unsuccessful candidate for councillor in the Welsh council ward of Llantwit Major in 2017, receiving 112 votes.[16]
Hunter-Clarke was Neil Hamilton's agent for the 2016 National Assembly for Wales election.[17] On Hamilton's election, he made Hunter-Clarke his personal chief of staff.[18] After Hamilton was elected as the group leader,[19] Hunter-Clarke became chief of staff for the group.[20]
In June 2018 Hunter-Clarke was dismissed as the group's Chief of Staff in the National Assembly for Wales after Caroline Jones AM ousted Hamilton as the Leader of the UKIP Group.[23] Hunter-Clarke consequently took Jones and the UKIP Assembly Members to an employment tribunal.[24] At a preliminary hearing on 28 February 2019 the Assembly Commission, Michelle Brown AM and Caroline Jones AM failed in their applications to be removed as respondents in the case. The case continued, and a three-day preliminary hearing was listed to be heard in June 2019.[24]
On 3, 4, and 5 June 2019 a three-day hearing took place in Pontypridd to determine who in fact employed Hunter-Clarke, as still no-one admitted to being his boss.[25] On 4 June it was suggested that Hunter-Clarke had indeed not been dismissed and therefore was entitled to a year's back pay.[26] Following the evidence heard Hunter-Clarke withdrew his claims against the National Assembly for Wales, Caroline Jones and the UKIP Group. This left Neil Hamilton as the sole respondent in the case. Hunter-Clarke's representative subsequently outlined that it was now clear 'Mr Hamilton was trying to make a political point at Mr Hunter-Clarke's expense'.[27]
On 19 June 2019, Judge Moore ruled that Neil Hamilton was Hunter-Clarke's employer for the purposes of s230 of the Employment Rights Act 1996.[28]
Hunter-Clarke unsuccessfully contested the Dereham Withburga ward in the 2023 Breckland District Council election, receiving 305 votes; his affiliation was described as "Local Conservatives".[30]
On 3 May 2024 Hunter-Clarke was elected as a councillor for the Hermitage Ward in a by-election for Breckland District Council, receiving 313 votes.[31]