Everything about Uk Independence Party totally explained
The
United Kingdom Independence Party (commonly known as
UKIP, ) is a
British political party. Its principal aim is the withdrawal of the UK from the
European Union. UKIP currently has one seat in the
House of Commons, 10 seats in the
European Parliament and two in the
House of Lords. It also has around 60 local councillors on principal authorities, town and parish councils. Membership stands at around 16,700.
The party's policy is that the United Kingdom "shall again be governed by laws made to suit its own needs by its own Parliament, which must be directly and solely accountable to the electorate of the UK". Other aspects of policy include promises to reduce taxation, the preservation of the
pound sterling, promises to be tough on crime, and tighter controls on immigration.
In the
2004 European elections, UKIP received 2.7 million votes (16.8% of the national vote), gaining twelve seats in the
European Parliament but in the
2005 general election, the party received only 618,000 votes (2.38% of the national vote). The party gained its first MP when former Conservative MP
Bob Spink who had been sitting as an Independent Conservative defected in April 2008.
History
Early years
UKIP was founded in 1993, by
Alan Sked and other members of the all-party
Anti-Federalist League. Its central aim was to seek the withdrawal of the
United Kingdom from the
European Union. The new party attracted many from the anti-European wing of the Conservative Party, which was split on the European question after the
pound was forced out of the
European Exchange Rate Mechanism in 1992 and the struggle over ratification of the
Maastricht Treaty. UKIP candidates stood in the
1997 general election, but were overshadowed by
James Goldsmith's
Referendum Party. After the election, Sked resigned the leadership and left the party which was, he said, 'doomed to remain on the political fringes'. However, Goldsmith's death soon after the election precipitated the dissolution of the Referendum Party, with a resulting influx of new UKIP supporters. The leadership election was won by millionaire businessman
Michael Holmes, and in the 1999 elections to the
European Parliament UKIP surprised commentators by picking up three seats and 7% of the vote. In that election, Nigel Farage (
South East England), Jeffrey Titford (
East of England), and Michael Holmes (
South West England) were elected.
Over the following months there was a power struggle between the leader, Michael Holmes, and the party's National Executive Committee (NEC). This was partly due to Holmes making a speech which was perceived to call for greater powers for the
European Parliament against the
European Commission. In a stormy meeting, ordinary party members forced the resignation of both Holmes and the entire NEC. Holmes resigned from the party itself in March 2000. There was a legal battle when he tried to continue as an independent MEP until resigning from the European Parliament in December 2002, when he was replaced by
Graham Booth, the second candidate on the UKIP list in South West England.
Jeffrey Titford was narrowly elected to the vacant leadership, and succeeded in healing many of the wounds left by the previous infighting.
2001 general election
UKIP put up candidates in more than 420 seats in the
2001 general election, coming fifth in terms of votes cast (but with just 1.5% of the vote) and failing to win any representation at Westminster. It also failed to break through in the elections to the
Scottish Parliament or the Welsh Assembly, despite those elections being held under
proportional representation. In 2002 Titford stood down as party leader, but continued to sit as a UKIP MEP. He was replaced as leader by
Roger Knapman.
Kilroy-Silk
In late 2004, reports in the mainstream UK press speculated on if or when former
Labour Party MP and chat show host
Robert Kilroy-Silk would take control of the party. These reports were heightened by Kilroy-Silk's speech at the UKIP party conference in Bristol on
2 October 2004, in which he called for the
Conservative Party to be "killed off" (following UKIP's forcing the Conservatives into fourth place in
Hartlepool).
Interviewed by
Channel 4 television, Kilroy-Silk didn't deny having ambitions to lead the party, but underlined that Roger Knapman would lead it into the next general election. However, the next day, on
Breakfast with Frost, he criticised Knapman's leadership. After further disagreement with the leadership, on
27 October 2004 Kilroy-Silk resigned the UKIP whip in the European Parliament. Initially, he remained a member, while seeking a bid for the party leadership. However, this wasn't successful, and Kilroy-Silk resigned completely from UKIP on
20 January 2005, calling it a "joke". Two weeks later, he founded his own party,
Veritas, taking several UKIP members, including both London Assembly members, with him. Kilroy-Silk has subsequently resigned from Veritas.
2006 leadership election
In October 2005,
Petrina Holdsworth resigned as Chairman of UKIP and from the party's National Executive Committee. She was replaced as Chairman "on an interim basis" by the party's former leader,
Jeffrey Titford MEP. In December 2005,
David Campbell-Bannerman, a former Conservative, became the new party chairman, appointed by the party leader,
Roger Knapman MEP. Knapman's four-year term as leader ended in June 2006, triggering a leadership contest that saw four challengers (
Richard Suchorzewski, David Campbell-Bannerman,
David Noakes and
Nigel Farage), from which Farage emerged as victor on
12 September 2006.
Farage's stated intention is to broaden public perception of UKIP beyond merely being a party seeking to get the UK out of the EU, to one of being a
free market party broadly standing for traditional
conservative and
libertarian values.
Proposed change of name
It was announced on
5 February 2007 that UKIP intends to change its name to
Independence Party. This change will be subject to a postal ballot of members, and would have to be accepted by the
Electoral Commission under the Registration of Political Parties Act.
Policies
Although the UKIP's original
raison d'être was, without a doubt, the
EU, it has now expanded from being a
single-issue party to developing a full domestic agenda, starting with a wide-ranging review and the establishment of a policy development group. UKIP has now produced detailed policy documents on taxation and education .
UKIP also opposes the extension of state funding for political parties. Its economic stance is based what it claims to be the need for much lower taxation in order to compete internationally, a position which has been reinforced since the election of Nigel Farage as leader in September 2006.
On Europe
UKIP contends that the EU is
corrupt, that it's undemocratic (particularly given that
European Commissioners, who are appointed by national governments rather than directly elected, have authority to initiate legislation in some policy areas), that Britain's membership is very expensive, and that Britain's sovereignty is diluted by being part of a large bloc. In particular, it perceives the latter issue as being so fundamental a problem that only complete withdrawal from the Union can address it. For this reason, the aim of British withdrawal from the EU is written into UKIP's constitution. In line with this, one of UKIP's political goals is to break what it sees as the pro-EU consensus among the three established parties, and prevent the introduction of the
euro and the adoption of a
European constitution.
ID cards
UKIP are against the planned introduction of
identity cards, believing them to be ineffective as a way of combating fraud and terrorism, and an infringement of individual liberty. In December 2004 UKIP affiliated to the anti-ID card campaign,
No2ID. Concern for civil liberties also led UKIP to oppose the Civil Contingencies Act 2004, which gives additional powers to the UK
Home Secretary in broadly defined "emergency situations". UKIP's
Jeffrey Titford MEP condemned the bill as "totalitarian".
Devolution and unionism
Although UKIP are strongly opposed to the centralization of power and political
union in Europe, it's a strong supporter of both centralization of power and political
union in the UK. Arguing that, within the UK itself, all political power should reside in Westminster.
UKIP therefore both opposes the notion of a
devolved English parliament and argues that the
Scottish Parliament and
Welsh and
Northern Irish Assemblies should be abolished, with all parliamentary powers returning to
Westminster.
Without such abolition, UKIP argues that England should be treated on the same basis as Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland with English constituency MPs sitting in Westminster 10 days a month to debate matters similarly reserved to the Scottish Parliament and Welsh and Northern Irish Assemblies, such as health, education and transport. UKIP believes Scottish MSPs and Welsh and Northern Irish AMs should be abolished. Their role should be performed by the elected Westminster MPs who would return to sit in their respective devolved legislatures for the ten days per month that English MPs would debate English matters at Westminster. (The devolved legislatures currently sit only 10 days a month as it is.)
Climate change
UKIP believed that the
Climate Change Bill, published by the Labour Government in March 2007, reflected a failure to devise a viable plan for alternative sources of energy to replace
fossil fuels: it considered that the Bill was 'deeply misguided'.
UKIP argues in favour of the expansion of
nuclear power for reasons of energy security as well as to cut carbon emissions. In line with American policy, it doesn't think large-scale cuts of carbon emissions are necessary. It also argues that plans to invest in
wind power are uneconomic.
Electoral performance 2004-2007
UKIP's first electoral success was the election of three MEPs in 1999, and it made further advances in 2004. Although it increased its share of the vote in both the
2001 general election and
2005 general election, it didn't achieve the same levels of vote as in those elections to the European Parliament.
UKIP's expectations were high before the
2004 European Parliament election, with a number of opinion polls – starting with one from
YouGov - showed them on course to beat the
Liberal Democrats and pick up a dozen MEPs. The prediction proved accurate, with UKIP winning 16.8% of the vote and taking third place nationally with 12 seats. UKIP won seats in eight regions, taking votes from all three major political parties. It came second, ahead of both Labour and the Liberal Democrats, in four regions: South West, South East, Eastern and East Midlands. In the East Midlands region UKIP came within a percentage point of being top of the poll. UKIP received assistance in coordinating its 2004 election campaign from
Dick Morris, formerly
Bill Clinton's campaign advisor who has since emerged as an advocate of US
unilateralism and an opponent of the EU.
The party had hoped to sustain its momentum in the 2005 General Election, but despite fielding 495 candidates, the party failed to win any seats at Westminster. At the general election, UKIP gained 618,000 votes, or 2.4% of the total votes cast (an increase of 220,000 votes/0.9% from its result in the 2001 general election). Although this may be regarded as respectable for a small party, and sufficient to place it fourth in terms of total votes cast behind the Liberal Democrats, the Liberal Democrats polled, as is customary, in excess of 20% of the total vote cast. UKIP's best result on election night was in Boston & Skegness, where their candidate Richard Horsnell came third with 9.6% of the vote.
In the 2006 English local elections, UKIP won its first borough council seat in
Hartlepool when Stephen Allison was elected to serve as Councillor for the St. Hilda Ward. UKIP also beat Labour into fourth place in the
Bromley and Chislehurst by-election in June 2006. The UKIP candidate,
Nigel Farage, came third with 8.1% of the vote, against Labour's 6.6%.
In the
2007 local elections UKIP fielded its highest number of candidates - just under a thousand. Six UKIP councillors were also up for re-election in these elections. Four lost their seats, two were re-elected and three new seats were won, leaving the party with a net loss of one councillor.
In the regional list vote for the
Welsh Assembly election the party polled 38,490 votes, 3.9% of the total, an increase of 9,063 votes from the
2003 election when they polled 3.5% of the total. In the
Scottish Parliament elections the party polled 8,197 votes, 0.4% of the total, a fall of 3,772 votes from the
2003 election when they polled 0.6% of the total.
On
19 July 2007, Dr. K.T. Rajan polled 285 votes (0.8%) in the
Ealing Southall by-election coming 6th out of 12 candidates.
Toby Horton polled 536 votes (1.9%)in the
Sedgefield by-election held on the same day, coming 6th out of 11 candidates.
Relationship with other parties
The Conservatives
UKIP is often seen as a "Tory pressure group", whose main aim is to persuade the Conservative Party to support withdrawal from the European Union. Many prominent members of UKIP are former members of the Conservative Party, such as former UKIP leader Roger Knapman; in addition, some of the staff at Conservative Central Office are former UKIP candidates.
Although UKIP didn't come close to winning any seats at the 2005 general election, they polled well enough that their votes, if added to the Conservative candidates totals constituency by constituency, would have led to Conservative majorities in 22 more seats (13 of which were won by Labour, 9 by the Liberal Democrats). This has led to UKIP being criticised for preventing the election of eurosceptic Conservative MPs. UKIP counter by saying that they won't oppose any incumbant M.P.s from any party who support the
Better Off Out campaign. A recent
ConservativeHome survey revealed that 43% of surveyed members of the Conservative Party felt that UKIP was the closest party to their views (apart from the Conservative Party itself), with 66% either supporting or sympathising with the Better Off Out campaign. 6 Conservative MPs have signed the Better Off Out petition.
In April 2006,
Conservative Party leader
David Cameron called UKIP members "fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists" while talking on
LBC radio in London after a question about UKIP using the Freedom of Information Act to force the disclosure of donors. UKIP demanded an apology for the "closet racists" remark and threatened legal action for slander, although this was later dropped, on the grounds that to sue the party would have to prove loss, and the comment had actually had a positive effect for UKIP. Conservative MP
Bob Spink criticised his leader's remarks, as did the pro-Conservative
The Daily Telegraph.
In April 2007 an undercover journalist was found to be spying on the UK Independence Party.
Tom Harper, a journalist on the
Sunday Telegraph, used his middle name to try to delude the party into thinking he was a supporter, but according to UKIP still kept his real name on his voicemail and forgot to use his fake e-mail address. They claim that they initially thought he was a plant and played him along by feeding him "laughable made-up stories", but once they found out that he was a journalist, they threw him out. UKIP described the journalist as the "Worst plant since giant hogweed".
Defection of Conservative peers to UKIP
On
9 January 2007, two former Conservative peers defected from the Conservative Party to the UKIP. Lords
Pearson and
Willoughby de Broke joined the UKIP as they felt the Conservative Party wasn't producing policy to support their beliefs. They had previously had the Conservative whip withdrawn when they'd encouraged voters to support UKIP. Other high-profile Conservatives have defected to UKIP, but this is the first example of sitting parliamentarians doing so. On
20 January 2007 the
Earl of Dartmouth, also a former Tory peer, defected.. On
22 April 2008, Conservative MP
Bob Spink defected to UKIP, thus giving them their first representative in the
House of Commons
Far-right parties
UKIP's constitution contains a clause guaranteeing that the party won't discriminate on the grounds of race and will be non-sectarian, and the party's rules require all candidates to declare that they've no past or present links with far-right organisations.
Despite its stated policies, some critics of UKIP claim links between it and racist groups.
Aidan Rankin, co-author of the party's 2001 manifesto, was once involved with the
Third Way, which was founded by former members of the
National Front (though he's since repudiated these views and has denied ever being a racist; it must also be stated that Third Way has never been as extreme as the NF).
Alistair McConnachie, a five-times UKIP candidate and National Executive member, was expelled from UKIP for his views on
the Holocaust.
Some other candidates were formerly members of the
New Britain Party.
It has been a stated policy of the
British National Party (BNP) to "eliminate" UKIP, as they perceive that UKIP's existence prevents them from capitalising on the issue of EU membership. The BNP has infiltrated UKIP in the past, notably in the cases of Mark Deavin, a UKIP head office researcher (hired by the party founder Alan Sked) who was exposed as a BNP agent in 1997, and John Brayshaw in 2004. The aim appears simply to have been to damage UKIP.
Minority members of UKIP
The first ethnic-minority candidate to represent UKIP in a parliamentary by-election was
Ashwinkumar Tanna, a
pharmacist who had previously been an independent candidate for
Mayor of London. He represented UKIP in the
Tottenham by-election, 2000; his campaign, which called for British withdrawal from the EU and fairer treatment for immigrants, was ignored by the media apart from a brief paragraph in Chemist and Druggist magazine.
Perhaps the best-known black member of UKIP is former TV chef
Rustie Lee, who stood as a candidate in the 2005 general election and also appeared in the party's election broadcast that year. The most senior black member of the UKIP leadership is
Delroy Young, another general election candidate, who was elected to the party's NEC in 2006 (coming 2nd out of 46 candidates). Young recently received death threats, allegedly on the orders of a senior party member. UKIP's only Muslim local councillor to date was
Mohammed Yaqub, originally elected as a
Conservative to
Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council. He and a colleague defected to UKIP in 2004 but were defeated in their re-election bids a few months later.
Membership
Current membership stands at around 16,700. Members receive personal invitations to area events in advance,the full colour party magazine
Independence and a membership card. Members also receive the magazine "Bulletin from Brussels" and regular newsletters from their local branches and MEP'S.
Members are invited to and may participate and vote at the national conference, as well as annual and extraordinary general meetings.Membership costs £20.00 per annum or £10.00 per annum for OAPs, Students or those on Benefits.
Current representatives
UKIP has three representatives in the
Parliament of the United Kingdom:
Bob Spink in the
House of Commons who joined the party in April 2008 and
Lord Pearson of Rannoch and
Lord Willoughby de Broke in the
House of Lords. All three were selected or elected to Parliament representing the Conservative Party: Spink joined UKIP having left the Conservatives, whilst the two Lords directly defected in January 2007. UKIP has around 60 district,town and parish councillors. Although the party doesn't provide a list of councillors, an unofficial list is maintained on the British Democracy Forum.
Ashley Mote, who was elected as a
Member of the European Parliament for UKIP in 2004 but had the
party whip withdrawn within days, joined the far-right
Identity, Tradition and Sovereignty grouping in the
European Parliament, alongside parties like the French
National Front. Mote, who was elected for the
South East England constituency, had the UKIP whip removed on
15 July 2004, because he hadn't informed them previously of an imminent court case involving housing
benefit fraud. He was subsequently made to leave the party and is currently serving a 9-month jail sentence for several counts of fraud. On
28 February 2007 UKIP suspended
Tom Wise due to his being under investigation by
OLAF (the European Anti Fraud Office).
The remaining MEPs are:
Leaders of the UK Independence Party since 1993
Eurosceptics in the European Parliament
In 2004, 37
MEPs from the UK,
Poland,
Denmark and
Sweden founded a new
European Parliament group called
Independence and Democracy from the old
Europe of Democracies and Diversities (EDD) group. The main goals of this group are to reject the
Treaty establishing a constitution for Europe and to oppose further European integration. The group's leaders are
Nigel Farage of UKIP and
Jens-Peter Bonde of Denmark.
See also
EuroscepticismFurther Information
Get more info on 'Uk Independence Party'.
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