Showing posts with label Farage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Farage. Show all posts

Monday, 26 May 2014

UKIP TOP THE POLLS !

Now that nearly all of the results are in, we can finally see the effect that UKIP have had in the elections for the European Parliament.

Really rather astonishingly, this party, which has been called a bunch of "fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists" by our beloved Leader, has come top of the polls; does this then brand more than a quarter of the population that voted as such ? Across England, outside of London, UKIP actually polled over 31% of the vote; this figure was dragged down by the huge Labour bias in London, and by the SNP/Labour axis in Scotland but, even so, it demonstrates enormous disquiet amongst the electorate.

The response of the 3 traditional parties to this earthquake has been pathetic. They're all relying on voters returning to the fold at next year's General Election so, while telling us that they've "listened" or "will address the voters' issues", or "understand the voters' concerns", they've basically sat on their hands and swallowed hard. They really do not 'get it'.

No doubt, many voters will go back to their roots next year, but many will not. UKIP may win a few seats in the UK Parliament, or they may not. However, for a party to come from nowhere to be top of any national election is phenomenal. In 2009, they gained 16.5% of the vote and now that has risen to 27.5%; this is not the usual swings and roundabouts between Labour and Conservatives, it is something far more fundamental.

The insults, abuse and  brickbats that have been hurled at Nigel Farage and his party over recent months have failed to deter voters from expressing their unhappiness; unless the other main parties mend their ways and start really listening to the electorate, next year's election may not be quite so spectacular but they will find it most challenging. UKIP has a whole year in which to build on its successes and build they will. The Parliamentary by-election in Newark, due to be held on 5th June, will be their first opportunity to show just how significant is their following and it's not beyond the bounds of possibility that they could even win it.

It is high time that the 3 old parties were shaken out of their complacency and UKIP might just be the lot to do it. The only problem is that once they gain seats in the House of Commons, they'll start to become part of the establishment; will they then continue to be a force to be reckoned with, or will they just become another bunch of career politicians with snouts in the trough and paying little or no attention to their voters ? Only time will tell.

Saturday, 4 May 2013

Ukip TRIUMPHANT !

The remarkable performance of Ukip in county council elections held last Thursday serves to demonstrate only too clearly the degree of disaffection with politics felt by people of all views and in all parts of the country. While gaining almost a quarter of all votes cast, Ukip captured only about 6% of the seats on offer, indicating that their support was spread across the country rather than being concentrated in particular areas as is the case with the three 'main' parties.
 
Unfortunately, the universal nature of Ukip's appeal is also a drag on their ability to achieve very much. Although they are an irritant to the others, particularly to the Tories but also to Labour and the Liberal Democrats, for them to become a party of real power they have to increase their share of the vote still further, certainly to more than 30%; only then would whole councils and even Parliamentary seats come their way.
 
Of course, next year's European elections are run under a different system and it is more than possible that Ukip will top the poll then and that they will gain a few more MEPs, but they are still unlikely to outnumber their opponents when it comes to representation from these islands. All that voters can do is take heart from this week's results, convince their neighbours to 'see the light' and push on.
 
That the other main parties are at least a little worried by the spectre of Ukip has been evident for some time though their leaders seem to have no idea as to how to combat it other than trotting out the same tired old phrases. The Cameroonians insist on talking about 'hard-working people', a catch-phrase that alienates whole swathes of the population - job-seekers, the sick and the retired. Worse still is when they refer to 'hard-working families', which leaves out anyone who happens to be single or not to have children; whoever dreamt up this piece of political cant needs putting down. Listening to Theresa May on the radio this morning was pretty embarrassing, as she stumbled around trying to tell the people what they wanted to hear but without actually saying anything.
 
Labour, too, has found a new phrase, a piece of Orwellian 'newspeak' that defies understanding; Miliband's 'One Nation Labour' is so meaningless, as it was when the Tories used an almost identical phrase, as to be laughable. Labour has but one purpose, that being to soak anyone who has anything in order for the state to waste the proceeds on whatever ludicrous social schemes it can invent. To try to claim that they have the good of the whole nation at heart is risible; one only has to listen to the ravings of the likes of Denis Skinner or any one of the assorted Trades Union leaders to know the extent of their hatred for what they see as the 'ruling classes'. 'One Nation', my eye.
 
As for the Liberal Democrats, their poll rating is rapidly disappearing off of the chart even if they still have areas of strength. Nationwide, they are seen as an increasingly pointless party and their performance in the South Shields by-election, in which they finished behind the BNP and only just beat the candidate from the 'Monster Raving Loony Party', must be one of the worst results ever for a major party. If Ukip are, in Cameroon's words, a party of closet racists, the Liberal Democrats are most certainly a party of closet socialists and perhaps people are beginning to realise this. Their love for all things European, nuclear disarmament and everything 'green', has also put them at odds with the real world in which we live and they are suffering for it.
 
For Ukip, it is easy as they aren't in power. For Nigel Farage to say what should be done is much easier than actually doing it but he does, at least, say the right things and appears to have a much better understanding of people than do Cameroon, Milipede and Clogg. He doesn't talk down to us and doesn't spout meaningless platitudes; he doesn't resort to gimmicks, unless his 'downing' of an occasional pint is one. His party, undoubtedly, were the real winners of the council elections and also came second in the by-election in the left wing stronghold of South Shields, demonstrating an ability to take votes from left as well as right.
 
This was round one and Ukip won on points; in round two, next year's European elections, they need to step up the pace and start getting their punches through to the body. If they can do that, anything's possible in round three, the 2015 General Election.