Sunday, January 06, 2013

Lets love bomb Ukip.

Seems that our Prime Minister is still not over-enamoured with Ukip activists/supporters. On Marr today he said some of them were 'pretty odd', which is being interpreted as 'insulting'. Since I think being 'pretty odd' is an essential requirement of anyone taking an active interest in politics, I do not consider this to be at all insulting. I've certainly been called a lot worse, without feeling at all offended. And I think David Cameron has called Ukip supporters something like 'fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists' in the past, so the relationship is clearly 'warming'.

The most ludicrous aspect of stories currently running about Ukip is the extrapolation of existing polling figures into a General Election result.  National newspapers are even predicting the current Conservative MPs who will be ousted as a result of Ukip votes. My good colleagues, Guto Bebb and Stephen Crabb are fingered here. If this sort of nonsense was for real, Electoral Calculus has me as the only safe Tory bet in Wales in 2015. Well, I suppose they have to fill their columns with something. Probably because politicians are generally a bit odd, some MPs are thrashing around like headless chickens, searching for an 'answer' to the 'Ukip problem'. Here's my suggestion.

The Government (and the Conservative Party) should focus on what is right for the UK, and smile benignly on our Ukip friends. Thank them for their contribution to political discourse, and for floating interesting ideas. Then buy coffees all round and get back to work. We know that the deficit has to be significantly reduced by 2015. We know that immigration numbers have to be significantly reduced as well. And we know that welfare spending has to be brought under control by, and that we must negotiate a different relationship with the EU by 2015. Plus a few other things as well. We need to do these things because they are right -and nothing whatsoever to do with Ukip. Normally, when UK Governments are embarked on difficult programmes, opinion polls tend to record big swings to the 'the third party', in past times, the Liberal Democrats. But the Lib Dems are now in Gov't so voters are backing Ukip to show displeasure. Lot better than the BNP. The increase in Ukip support is only in small part to do with 'policy'.

Most Ukippers I know are sensible patriotic people who detest bureaucracy, hate public sector waste, and are generally good and friendly folk. I also always find their instinct generally quite 'Conservative'. Can't recall engaging a Ukipper in conversation that I didn't like. Of course I don't agree with Ukip on everything, but we as Coalition partners don't agree on everything either. In fact I don't agree with my own party on everything. I just think we should address Ukip with Rees-Moggian politeness and style, and let them know how much we love them, and how much we would like them back in the fold. I reckon that in 2015, most of them will be.

3 comments:

Barleybill said...

We know that the deficit has to be significantly reduced by 2015. We know that immigration numbers have to be significantly reduced as well. And we know that welfare spending has to be brought under control by, and that we must negotiate a different relationship with the EU by 2015.

Sure, but UKIP are the ones shouting it from the roof tops. DC just seems to be responding and as for renegotiating there is no guarantee that Europe will negotiate.

Glyn Davies said...

Bill - Not sure that 'shouting from the rooftops' actually delivers anything. And anyway from my perspective several Conservative MPs have been making the points more cogently to better effect. Its true thatthere are no guarantees but I'm more optimistic than you sem to be. In the end we may as a nation prefer to leave the EU. It would not unduly alarm me, but at this stage I support the Prime Minister's intention to make our relationship with the EU operate in the UK's interest.

Anonymous said...

Well Glyn, the Conservative Party (CP) are 'at it again' - falling for old policies that are not moving the UK economy ahead at anything like the rate it needs to move ahead thereby leading to falling living standards.

Without sufficient economic growth the CP is staying on austerity measures even to the extent of risking massive civil disturbances.

When is the CP going to learn that there are solutions - solutions that will see the UK economy rip ahead against the entire world?

It's not like I haven't shouted at you (metaphorically speaking), but it seems your party is tone death.

Well, "Old Labour" are receptive to new (and old) ideas about moving the UK economy ahead.

We really can DO IT!

For example, but a national policy geared to supporting local collaboration and not the current national policy of punishing local and open collaboration.

See, e.g.,

http://www.lfig.org/articles/from-local-innovation-to-growing-global-market-share/

When ru going to push this idea inside the CP Glyn?

You can’t possibly like the state of the UK economy – we need to put “Great” back into Britain – this shouldn’t be a party political issue – Labour art starting to listen – why is your party so stubborn?