The constant talking down of St Mirren by BBC Scotland football pundits, “the recovery”, Cheryl Cole/Tweedy, the popularity of Simon Cowell. Hell, the sexual attractiveness of said Mr Cowell. A few things that I just don’t understand. Alongside which can be placed the apparent popularity of UKIP, this is even more the case after flicking through their election leaflet.
The UKIP master
plan, if it can be described as that, is to target immigration as the key issue
that’s dragging Britain back. Except
that this leaflet is being economical with the truth. For starters immigration from outwith the EU
is not “unlimited” – there is no open door to people coming from countries in
Africa, Asia, the Americas or European countries that are not members of the
EU. 1950’s man’s main gripe is with the
freedom of movement that applies to all EU citizens and wants us to be angry at
plumbers, joiners and other manual workers who are not surly, obtuse, S*n
reading white van men.
While the banner
slogan states “4,000 people a week come to live in Britain from the EU”, the
flip side is not put forward by UKIP.
Under freedom of movement, Brits can move abroad and work, and many do
so. In 2012, 154,000 people left the UK
to work abroad, an average of 2,962 a week.
Then again if the assumption is that the majority of those people
leaving are retirees inspired by the thought of the “a year in Provence”
lifestyle, then that doesn’t really help UKIP’s arguments.
The problem
though is UKIP’s right front & centre is just attacking the EU, without either
providing viable solutions or identifying the real problems with “The European
Project”. Only UKIP will take back control
they say, yet they bemoan cheap labour and putting our infrastructure under
pressure and… er… basic human rights. Yet these are issues created by their
bedfellows at Westminster level, the Conservatives.
If UKIP have firm
evidence that companies are employing EU citizens for below minimum wage rates,
they should name and shame rather than throw baseless accusations about. Either that or advocate a proper living wage
for workers. As for UKIP’s line on
public services being under pressure, that’ll be the real cost of austerity. Except that Farage has blamed Greek Austerity
on the EU and is nowhere near as critical of the Osborne led austerity (mind
you, Osborne was influenced by the former head of the IMF, Lagarde). Osborne might have been claiming he was
acting to placate the markets, but Osborne’s plan is still his and his alone –
nothing to do with the ECB or the EU.
The time before last that I blogged about UKIP, I made the point that their message is targeted
at a squarely disaffected Tory constituency, which will have concerns with EU
regulation, straight bananas and all that.
The UKIP message is to all intents and purposes a middle England message. This has not changed, with not a peep about
the enshrinement of the privatisation of public services within the Lisbon
Treaty. What has changed is their
polling, about 15% for Westminster elections and north of 25% for the upcoming
European Elections. But not in Scotland,
where in the three Holyrood by-Elections in the last year, they polled below 5%
in each one. Not the performance of “Britain’s
most popular party” (© The Independent).
The seeming residency
on Question Time, the endless good press, the fear among Westminster’s main
parties, it all adds up to a party on the rise, yet they do not have an elected
MP at Westminster. The SNP in the 60’s
and 70’s, the SDP in the 80’s or Ashdown’s Lib Dems in the 90’s (pre the Blair
landslide) never got this good a run and they had MP’s.
I would
understand it if UKIP had a set of radical but popular policies. They don’t.
All they have is blame the migrants for all our ills. Maybe it’s the equivalent to the oldest trick
in the book, but it makes it all the more infuriating that Westminster’s finest
are in fear of a party that has shown itself to be a BNP-Lite. Is it any wonder that a still fairly debatable
case for Independence is still running rings around the Westminster parties. Still, blame the outsider worked for Hitler
and for Mussolini in economic times of trouble, maybe Putin’s not the only
dubious leader that Farage models himself on?