5 things voters should know about UKIP

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UKIP are more than a man in a pub drinking a pint. Behind Farage's Cheshire Cat grin are some dangerous policies.

You don’t have to have real political power in Britain to shift the terms of the debate. Just look at UKIP. Despite the fact that the party is expected to do well in this year’s European Elections, it is unlikely that this will translate into anything meaningful come next year’s General Election – although don’t bet against Nigel Farage overturning Laura Sandys’ majority in South Thanet.

And yet despite this, the Tories and to a lesser extent Labour appear to be running scared of the eurosceptic party – each week both seem to unveil new ‘tough’ announcements on UKIP pet issues such as immigration and welfare.

However while having a risible influence on the mainstream, UKIP’s distance from any real political power allows the party to retain its radicalism (not actually radical at all, but rather reactionary) which those closer to the summit of power are forced to abandon (remember when Lib Dem conference used to vote to hammer the rich and unilaterally disarm?)

Behind Nigel Farage’s charisma, however, the madness remains. Farage may come across like the mildly amiable chap from everybody’s local, but he leads a party which, from a policy perspective, is completely off the scale.

UKIP aren’t simply ‘anti-politics’, but they actually stand for things, such as:

Charging NHS patients to jump waiting lists

Back in July, UKIP’s ‘health spokesperson’ John Stanley penned an article in which he argued that people requiring urgent NHS treatment should be seen within two hours – a reasonable enough proposition. However he added that those requiring non-urgent treatment should be given the option of paying so as to jump the queue ahead of those who cannot afford to:

“We should accept that if a triaging clinician feels we don’t need treating within two hours required for standard cases then we be either willing to pay or willing to wait longer so cases most deserving are treated best. People should pay a higher charge if they haven’t registered with a GP as being directed back to primary care avoids unnecessary A&E visits.”

Stanley also endorsed GPs charging to see patients and said that, under UKIP, people who qualified for free prescriptions would be exempt from the flat fee – but only if they had not been drinking.

Banning all teaching of climate change

UKIP would ban the teaching of climate change in schools were it to win the 2015 General Election, according to the party’s education spokesperson. This, despite the fact that there is a 97 per cent consensus among climate scientists supporting global warming and the fact that human emissions are behind it.

Climate ‘sceptics’ don’t publish many scientific papers (I wonder why), and UKIP doesn’t want children to know about the vast majority of papers which overwhelmingly support the idea of man-made climate change.

Last week UKIP Education spokesman MEP Derek Clark told Index on Censorship:

“We will still ban Al Gore’s video for use in schools if I’ve got anything to do with it. I will not have much opposition within the party. It is, of course, not just this video which needs banning; all teaching of global warming being caused in any way by carbon dioxide emissions must also be banned. It just is not happening.”

The party has the laziest MEPs in Europe

UKIP’s attendance record in the European Parliament is worse than that of their counterparts from the three major parties. Happy to sign-in and collect their allowances (beer money), UKIP’s nine MEPs missed around a third of the votes in the European Parliament between 2009 and October 2013.

UKIP attendance graph-JPEG

The complete abolition of inheritance tax

Just 2.6 per cent of those who die every year pay inheritance tax. The average taxpaying estate is worth £875,000, according to HMRC. Inheritance tax raises £2.9bn a year for the Treasury from some of the wealthiest people in the country, while estates worth less than £325,000 don’t pay a penny.

And yet UKIP wants to abolish it completely.

At a time of rising inequality, redistributive policies such as inheritance tax are a symbolic bulwark against US-levels of inequality. In this respect, UKIP policy panders to the 2.6 per cent of the population who have some of the biggest estates in Britain. Play the world’s smallest violin.

Has friends on the European far-right

UKIP is part of the Europe of Freedom and Democracy group in the European Parliament (EFD). The EFD is comprised of 10 parties and one independent MEP. These include the anti-immigrant Movement for France, the ultra-nationalist Slovak National Party and True Finns.

The leader of the Slovak National Party has said the best policy for dealing with the Roma is “a long whip in a small yard”. In December 2011, an opinion poll of True Finn voters revealed that 51 per cent agreed with the statement: “People of certain races are unsuited for life in a modern society”.

Apparently this is ok with UKIP, though. In fact, anyone objecting to such alliances is liable to face severe repercussions. In 2010, UKIP expelled MEP Nikki Sinclaire after she objected to working with “extreme views” of UKIP’s political allies.

316 Responses to “5 things voters should know about UKIP”

  1. neilcraig

    I would certainly agree with you that anything involving St Al Gore Nobel and Oscar, patron saint of 20 ft sea levels and warmist fraudsters is almost certain to be fraudulent.
    But then one could say almost equally so of any alarmist claims. If tou have evidence of Watts being less than 1,000 times more honest than your alarmist liars please produce it.

  2. trollthriller

    Or perhaps you are as innumerate as you are unscientific.

    The dark money is but one element of the funding behind denial.

    Still denying the oceans warm because you don’t understand how that could happen?

    Go on, who funds the frauds in the GWPF?

  3. trollthriller

    Over 99% of papers, over 97% of scientists, all the world’s scientific bodies, the military, insurance companies – they’re all in on “the hoax” – a hoax so vast and pervasive even the facts collude.

    You have to deny there’s a problem because you don’t have a solution. You have to deny the measurements saying the oceans are warming because you don’t understand how they could. You have to deny the globe is warming because the You Kip tool kit can’t fix it.

    Nearly two century old science and You Kip can’t cope. As you’re so keen on Occam, please tell us when You Kip will legislate CO2 from absorbing IR. There’s a good little sheepy Kipper.

    Here, have some more science. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/01/140123075709.htm

  4. neilcraig

    “but one element” gosh. Who wold that be then – Darth Vader or SPECTRE?
    You have made a specific claim and it has been proven to be a specific & total lie.
    The claim

  5. trollthriller

    Glad to prove how deeply unsceptical you are. My pleasure. http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/en/campaigns/global-warming-and-energy/polluterwatch/Dealing-in-Doubt—the-Climate-Denial-Machine-vs-Climate-Science/

    So, Drexel’s study on dark money, Greenpeace on the denial machine.

    You can’t back up a single one of your assertions without a lucky dip into the derpy denial lucky dip of Watts. No PSI? No Tallbloke? Go for all the loons.

    On my side I have all the journals. And you have nutty blogs.

    Kip, kip, hurray!

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