Lurking in the
background in Britain is a political party that lurks in all nations where
the governing forces create fear, hostility and austerity on the
population. The rise of intolerant totalitarianism
occurs in particular when economic conditions deteriorate for the working
families. In Britain this is what is happening
now.
A recent special
election for a seat in Parliament produced a second place finish for the
heretofore little regarded UKIP Party. Here
is a description of what those people are all about.
If Ukip had a name
that truly reflected its priorities, it might be called the UK
Immigrationphobe Party. Ostensibly the anti-EU party, an obsession with
immigration and exit from Europe as a means to close Britain 's doors is its prevailing
motive. The word immigration runs through its policy statements like red
lettering in seaside rock, and its proposed five-year ban on entries to the UK is the
message it rams home on every doorstep.
That is far from all.
It is deeply sceptical of global warming, wants to abolish inheritance tax,
employers' National Insurance contributions, aims to partially reverse the
recent hunting and smoking bans, and would increase defence spending by some 40
per cent. It is, in thought if not yet in personnel, the extreme right-wing of
the Conservative Party in exile; a party run in the main by self-made
businessmen with an agenda to match. And it has a record of defections,
internecine squabbles and acrimony, plus scandals that have led two of its
former MEPs to jail.
And of course we have the traditional ultra conservative
homophobia and bigotry in full force.
Ukip's
deputy leader, Paul Nuttall, uses his blog to vent his spleen against political
correctness. In one post, he supported the Bristol hoteliers who faced court action
after refusing to let a gay couple sleep in the same bed, and the football
pundits Andy Gray and Richard Keys, sacked by Sky over their "sexist"
remarks about a female referee's assistant. He wrote: "Firstly, Christian
hoteliers Peter and Rosemary Bull lost a court case in Bristol , which was brought by two homosexual
men who took exception because the couple refused to allow them to sleep in the
same bed. What a complete joke. Aren't people allowed to live by their
religious beliefs in the country any more? … Gray was partaking in something we
call 'banter' in football circles … It's not as if he said it live on air, but,
then again, so what if he had?"
To his great credit Conservative Party leader and
Prime Minister David Cameron has (so far) rejected moving his party in the direction of
UKIP, but his base is not quite as firm.
But if the current Conservative dominated government continues its
program of injecting misery on the populace in the name of economic progress
then the politics of hatred and bigotry may yet takes its place in Britain . Thank you Conservative economic policy, if it
happens they could not have done it without you.
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