Nigel “Thirsty”
Farage and his fellow saloon bar propper-uppers at UKIP were in good spirits
(and, no doubt, a variety of other alcoholic beverages) on Friday after their
success in the Rochester and Strood by-election. The Kippers now had two MPs,
albeit in rather contrived circumstances. They had truly arrived. So, as with
all grown-up parties, they now had to have a split.
Squeaky party unity finger up the bum time
Or perhaps that should be another split, because the Farage
fringe have already had at least two of them: even as Douglas “Kamikaze” Carswell was celebrating
becoming the first UKIP MP, Farage was not only expressing opinions on
immigration that Carswell, a true libertarian, could not possibly reconcile
with his own, he was also making
his infamous observations on HIV.
“Farage calls for ban
on immigrants with 'life-threatening illnesses'... hours after being urged to
show 'compassion' by new MP (whose father inspired Hollywood with treatment of
HIV in Africa)” observed the Mail
(Carswell père diagnosed the first cases in Uganda). The
new UKIP MP was clearly uncomfortable with his leader’s pungent populism. Matters
soon got worse.
Best of friends. Asterisk
Economics spokesman
Patrick “Lunchtime” O’Flynn then
came under fire for the heinous crime of trying to make the party’s sums
add up: being a former political correspondent, he knows that, come the General
Election, the hard questions are going to be asked. Sadly, Farage makes up
policy on the hoof, on the basis of who has his ear, or more likely his bar
tab.
But at least “Lunchtime” appears to have survived the
attempt to oust him from his post, perhaps because nobody else wants to go near
it. Could the Kippers then make it three splits in a row? You betcha, says
Sarah: even before the Rochester and Strood vote, Farage had a falling out with
new man Mark Reckless over, you guessed it, immigration. Mr Thirsty had changed policy on the
fly again.
“The policy changed on
Wednesday and I'm a bit sore about how I came out of that ... Until Nigel
changed it on Wednesday, the policy of the party was everyone can stay for the
transitional period, no doubt about that, that there would then be a permanent
arrangement which would be part of the EU negotiation” said Reckless, after
Farage disowned his “send them all back”
inference.
He then tried
the lamest of deflections, telling “We
don’t want any mass movements of people … I’m absolutely astonished that the
Tories are twisting this in the way that they are”, but his problem is not
his former party, but his new party leader. Farage makes it up as he goes
along, while O’Flynn, Carswell, and yes, even Reckless, don’t agree with him
and his rabble-rousing attitude.
Can the Kippers get to next May intact? I wouldn’t bet on that one, thanks.
Isn't it lucky for then that the people who vote for them neither know nor care about these internal inconsistencies?
ReplyDelete"being a former political correspondent"
ReplyDeleteBut to be fair it was The Daily Express so not a lot of reasoning needed.
@Future liccer
Hope you are not being patronising about potential UKippers?
After all someone's got to read those manifestos whenever they get around to churning one out and then complain when they don't meet their own wish list.
Who read their last manifesto? Certainly not their "Stop HS2" supporters. In 2010 HS2 was a UKIP must have, definately a good idea and all fully supported. Together with two additional routes. Now they see votes in being different it has become a terrible EU inspired plot that wil destroy the countryside and culural heritage of the Chilterns and, err, the east side of Birmingham. Good job I saved a copy of the 2010 policy......
ReplyDeleteBut I do agree, most of those who vote for them have no idea and no interest in what the detail policies are - as long as it's negative to foreigners the detail doesn't matter.