Further to Nigel Farage's Times article yesterday saying that if Thatcher had still been in power then UKIP would never have been considered necessary, Ken Bell writes:
UKIP should be the perfect party of protest for
the people of this country, but unfortunately this seemingly trivial
incident involving me suggests that instead the party really is the Thatcherite
wing of the Tory Party in exile. If that is the case, then why would any working
class person cast a vote for such an organisation?
It is quite possible that the party has decided
that a retreat into a kind of suburban heartland makes sense, but I think
that such a strategy makes for very bad tactics. At the end of the day, such
people are like cousin Reg, in that they are all tongue and trousers.
You want to know about Reginald I suppose. Back
in 1977 I found myself in Rhodesia as it was then called.
More importantly I found myself the guest of the country's special
branch who had it in their minds that I was a type to question. One
of the plods told me that Rhodesia
was going to survive because it had support in the UK. He
went on to explain that his cousin Reginald had just written to
say that he had moved a motion in support of the place at his local
Conservative branch.
I replied that Rhodesia's only chance
of survival was if Cousin Reg and his mates got off their lardy arses
and came and picked up rifles. Since I did not see any signs of that happening,
I suspected that Rhodesia was heading for the toilet. Needless to say, I was
right, wasn't I?
Now then, Britain is full of this type of person
who may sound off about leaving the EU, but when referendum day dawns are more
than likely to chicken out for fear of the economic consequences
that withdrawal may entail.
In the case of the unskilled
and semi-skilled working class, the people who flit between a
McJob and a benefit claim, that is less likely to happen as
their conditions are already so bad that a punt on independence may
very well appeal to them. These are the people that I was helping before I even
joined UKIP and they would have been the bedrock of my support, had Fred
McGlade not suffered from his funny turn.
I am not suggesting that UKIP moves lock, stock
and barrel to the left. What I am saying is that candidates should fight
individual campaigns based upon what they feel is right for the people in that
particular area. What will play in a depressed mill town in Northern
England is not the same as what the people of Surrey want to
hear. So long as we all stay under the same umbrella, it should allow the party
to grow in all the regions. Obviously in the long term the compromise
would not hold, but then again in the long term we are all dead. If it holds
long enough to force a referendum on the future of our country then we will
have succeeded in our aim.
That would be the sensible strategy to follow,
but as I have seen over the past week, UKIP is far from being a sensible party,
which means that the people that I most wanted to represent
will remain voiceless.
Nice work, Fred.
I'm sorry, Ken. People with the foul manners and lack of tase (and decency) to call a dead lady an "old whore" because they disagree with her politics, render themselves unsuitable for selection by any party.
ReplyDeleteHad a Labour MP used the same language, Miliband would have rightly ordered an apology, or de-selected them.
This is about decency, not politics.
When will you zealots finally get that through your heads?
But that wasn't want happened. UKIP colluded with the SWP, which is bad, and offered cash to a duly nominated candidate for public office so that he would withdraw from that election. Very, very, very bad, indeed.
ReplyDeleteThat was because he Tweeted that she was an old whoere within an hour of her death.
ReplyDeleteEven her most fanatical enemies on the Labour benches wouldn't go that far (at least not in public, if they wished to carry on being MP's)-it's a breach of all standards of taste and decency.
Although I hate Miliband's politics, I must add that I thought his speech was excellent-measured, respectful, decent and fundamentally British.
ReplyDeleteKen's outburst was the opposite.
But this isn't about that. This is about the manifest links between UKIP in Britain's principal Trotskyist organisation, a cesspit of violent misogyny, as well as UKIP's attempt to bribe a validly nominated candidate for public office to withdraw.
ReplyDelete