Yesterday brought the launch of UKIP’s poster campaign in
support of the party’s campaign for elections to the European Parliament (EP).
Party backer Paul Sykes is paying a cool £1.5 million to fund this – and fund
it directly, not through Nigel “Thirsty”
Farage’s party machine. Anyone would think that Sykes does not trust the party
he supports to spend his money wisely.
Another squeaky finger up the bum time coming!
And now
the posters are out there, the debate has started as to the credibility of
the assertions they make, with UKIP’s chief spinner Patrick “Lunchtime” O’Flynn doing his best to
justify arguments which expose his party’s hypocrisy
and dishonesty in roughly equal measure. Starting at the very beginning –
as always, a very good place to start – the first poster deploys an unemployed
construction worker.
What's that, "Lunchtime"? Those rotten politicians wouldn't let you any closer to Parliament?
This may seem surprising, given apparent labour shortages in
that industry, but “Lunchtime” is
adamant: “Unemployment may have been
falling slightly in construction, but there have been an awful lot of builders
out of work in the last few years and their pay rates have fallen since the
accession of the A8 countries”. Sadly, he has yet to come up with a
reliable citation for that one.
from Political Scrapbook
Still, what’s another pair of burning trousers to a party
spinner, eh? Next is the tired chestnut asserting that “75% of our laws are made in Brussels”. Except they aren’t, and
nobody said they were. “The 75 per cent
figure was stated by Viviane Reding” says O’Flynn. Except she didn’t say
75%, and neither did she say what the UKIP poster is asserting. Fire extinguisher for Mr O’Flynn!
from Beaubodor
And while we’re on the subject of quoting Viviane Reding,
that is, as the late John Smith might have put it, a bit rich coming from a
party whose
leader accused her recently of “scraping
the barrel”. So Ms Reding is one of those sources from which UKIP can
pick and choose, in the style of well-cultivated hypocrisy. Then, as “Lunchtime” gets his blazing trousers
extinguished, there is unemployment.
from Beaubodor
“26 million people in
Europe are looking for work. And whose jobs are they after?” howls the UKIP
poster. The inference is clear: freedom of movement rules mean all those rotten
foreigners are coming over here to take your job. Except the 26 million figure
includes UK unemployment. So the total has been bulked up by sleight of hand. O’Flynn
says “There’s nothing wrong with that”.
Man of high principle speaks
Well excuse me, “Lunchtime”,
but there’s everything wrong with that. And there is also the minor fact that O’Flynn
is
on the UKIP list for the East of England – he is ranked first, ahead even
of the party’s sitting MEP Stuart Agnew. So it is in his own personal interest
to push this mix of whoppers and frighteners, in order to secure a
well-remunerated job for Himself Personally Now.
Doing whatever it takes to get elected? New party, same as all the other parties.
You forgot to remind readers from which august publication Mr O'Flynn learnt his veritable trade in facts and therefore the percentage of credibility that should be expressly applied.
ReplyDeleteGuilt by association? A rival like Dacre would understand this.