Ukip celebrate after their first-ever MP is elected

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Ukip are celebrating after getting their first ever MP - and could now be on the verge of getting into power as a government for the first time next year.

Eurosceptic Douglas Carswell who, just a few weeks ago, defected from the Tories to the anti-EU, anti-uncontrolled immigration party in anger at the way the three Establishment parties fail to listen to the views of ordinary people, absolutely crushed his opponents in yesterday's Clacton by-election in Essex by getting a 12,404 majority, getting more votes than all the others who stood put together.

As usual before British elections these days, the Establishment did everything in their power to dissuade voters from voting for Ukip by inventing scare stories. The latest ruse is to try and scare would-be Ukip voters by saying "A vote for Ukip will end up with Labour in power."

Yet, as usual, the voters refuse to listen to the scare stories as Douglas Carswell - who had already been the MP for Clacton when he was a Tory - romped home with 21,113 votes.

After the Tories' humiliating defeat, Conservative Party chairman Grant Shapps said: ‘Let me be blunt. What we have seen is a simple truth. This just puts Miliband closer to victory. This has just made his job of getting into Number 10 easier.'

The Prime Minister this morning added: ‘What last night demonstrates is that if you see a big Ukip vote, you will end up with Ed Miliband as Prime Minister, Ed Balls as Chancellor and Labour in power.

‘And more to the point, you won’t have the long-term economic plan which is really beginning to deliver for this country the stability and security people want.’

Following the victory, an ecstatic Ukip leader Nigel Farage declared Ukip were now a 'national party.' He celebrated his party's historic victory, and the fact they are now represented at Westminster, by drinking beer in a pub until almost 5am this morning.

He said: ‘Let me just say, I have had these conversations with backbench Conservatives and even had these conversations with backbench Labour MPs. I wouldn’t be surprised over the course of the next few months if there were more defections.’

Asked if that would include a Labour MP switching to Ukip he added: ‘Let’s see, don’t rule it out.’

In his acceptance speech, Mr Carswell explained his decision to stand down after defecting from the Tories.

'I resigned from Parliament to face this election because I answer first, foremost and last to you, you are my boss, I will not let you down,' he said.

'To my new party I offer these thoughts: humility when we win, modesty when we are proved right.

'If we speak with passion, let it always be tempered by compassion. We must be a party for all Britain and all Britons: first and second generation as much as every other.

'Our strength must lie in our breadth. If we stay true to that there is nothing that we cannot achieve.

'Nothing we cannot achieve in Essex and East Anglia, in England and the whole country beyond.'

Ukip's next target is Rochester and Strood, where Mr Carswell's fellow defector from the Tories, Mark Reckless, is hoping to return to Parliament.

Mr Carswell said: 'In Rochester, as in Clacton, I believe voters will reject negative campaigns by old party machines.'

In fact, Ukip very nearly ended up with two MPs on what turned out to be a great night for the up and coming party.

At the other by-election at Heywood & Middleton in Rochdale the party ran Labour close, with Labour's Liz McInnes winning it by just 617 votes over the Ukip candidate John Bickley (11,633 votes to 11,016 votes).

Labour may have won - just - in Heywood and Middleton but they'll be greatly concerned at the fact that Ukip almost beat them in a constituency which has always been a safe Labour seat and which has never had a non-Labour MP.

As in many modern by-elections, the turnout in both Clacton and Heywood & Middleton was low.

Carswell's victory for Ukip means that 12 political parties will be represented in the House of Commons, thought to be the biggest number since 1945 and an indication that Britain's traditional two-party system is fragmenting.

It is the first time an MP who has defected and stood under a different banner in a by-election has won since 1973, when Labour MP Dick Taverne resigned his seat and stood for 'Democratic Labour'.

The odds on Ukip now being part of a coalition government and getting into power for the first time after the 2015 General Election in May have now been slashed from 25-1 to just 6-1 - and anti-EU Farage has indicated that he would like to be Minister for Europe in such a government.

'What I will say is this: if things go well next spring, I would like to be minister for Europe,' he said. 'I mean that quite seriously.'

'I would like to be the person who goes to Brussels and says, "We want to trade with you. We want reciprocal relationships. But this European Treaty doesn't work for us, and so we are breaking it".'




Miliband takes a step towards Number 10: Panicked Tories admit Ukip's thumping win in Clacton leaves Labour 'closer to victory'

Mr Carswell won Clacton by-election with 12,404 majority over Conservatives
Tory chairman Grant Shapps says vote makes it easier for Ed Miliband to win
David Cameron says a 'big' Ukip vote will see 'Ed Miliband as Prime Minister'
Party leader Nigel Farage says 'tectonic plates' of British politics are shifting
Mr Farage celebrated by drinking beer in Ukip-supporting pub until 4.45am
Mr Miliband says Tories are now 'in retreat' after losing in 'own backyard'
Labour MP Liz McInnes wins in Heywood and Middleton in narrow victory
Majority of 617 for Labour over Ukip candidate John Bickley in Lancashire

By Matt Chorley, Political Editor for MailOnline and Tom McTague, Deputy Political Editor for MailOnline
10 October 2014
Daily Mail




David Cameron's hopes of winning the next election were in disarray this morning after rebel defector Douglas Carswell became Ukip's first elected MP with a thumping victory over the Tories.

Mr Carswell comfortably won the Clacton by-election with a 12,404 majority - a result which senior Tories this morning admitted left Ed Miliband in pole position to be the next Prime Minister.

Conservative Party chairman Grant Shapps said: ‘Let me be blunt. What we have seen is a simple truth. This just puts Miliband closer to victory. This has just made his job of getting into Number 10 easier.'

The Prime Minister this morning added: ‘What last night demonstrates is that if you see a big Ukip vote, you will end up with Ed Miliband as Prime Minister, Ed Balls as Chancellor and Labour in power.

‘And more to the point, you won’t have the long-term economic plan which is really beginning to deliver for this country he stability and security people want.’

Following the victory, Nigel Farage declared Ukip were now a 'national party' as he revealed he wanted to be minister for Europe in a coalition government.


Douglas Carswell (pictured, left, celebrating with Nigel Farage) is Ukip's first ever elected MP in the House of Commons, representing Clacton, the constituency he represented as a Tory before defecting to Ukip


Nigel Farage said Ukip was making 'staggering gains in stridently Labour territory' after Mr Carswell's victory


David Cameron said a 'big' vote for Ukip at the next election would hand victory to Labour, leaving Ed Miliband as Prime Minister

Mr Farage, who celebrated the party’s historic by-election drinking beer in a UKIP supporting pub until 4.45am, predicted there would be more defections in the coming months.

He said: ‘Let me just say, I have had these conversations with backbench Conservatives and even had these conversations with backbench Labour MPs. I wouldn’t be surprised over the course of the next few months if there were more defections.’

Asked if that would include a Labour MP switching to Ukip he added: ‘Let’s see, don’t rule it out.’

Mr Miliband said the Tories were now ‘in retreat’, but claimed there would not be a ‘shred of complacency’ for Labour after barely edging out Nigel Farage’s party in Heywood and Middleton.

He said: ‘What we saw last night was a Tory party losing in their own backyard in Clacton and in retreat on what used to be their frontline in the northwest.’

Mr Farage now hopes to use the stunning victory as a springboard to winning several seats at next year's general election, boasting of a 'shift in the tectonic plates of British politics'.

The victory came after Ukip's narrow defeat to Labour's Liz McInnes in the Heywood and Middleton by-election.

The Eurosceptic party finished just 617 votes from victory in the Greater Manchester constituency, raising serious questions about Ed Miliband's leadership.

Mr Farage said Ukip's victory in Clacton indicated that voters know that 'if you vote Ukip you get Ukip'. He added that his party was making 'staggering gains in stridently Labour territory'.

In his acceptance speech, Mr Carswell explained his decision to stand down after defecting from the Tories.

'I resigned from Parliament to face this election because I answer first, foremost and last to you, you are my boss, I will not let you down,' he said.

'To my new party I offer these thoughts: humility when we win, modesty when we are proved right.

'If we speak with passion, let it always be tempered by compassion. We must be a party for all Britain and all Britons: first and second generation as much as every other.

'Our strength must lie in our breadth. If we stay true to that there is nothing that we cannot achieve.

'Nothing we cannot achieve in Essex and East Anglia, in England and the whole country beyond.'

Ukip's next target is Rochester and Strood, where Mr Carswell's fellow defector Mark Reckless is hoping to return to Parliament.

Mr Carswell said: 'In Rochester, as in Clacton, I believe voters will reject negative campaigns by old party machines.'

This morning Mr Farage claimed more MPs were likely to defect to Ukip within the next few months - including Labour backbenchers.

Former Tory chairman Lord Ashcroft tweeted that the Conservative party leadership 'must take a large part of the credit for the rise of Ukip'.

UKIP secured 60 per cent of the vote to just 25 per cent for the Conservatives - the Tories' worst drop in support in a by-election for 20 years. ‎

Mr Carswell was the overwhelming favourite to retain his seat of Clacton, Essex, after triggering a by-election when he switched parties.

Turnout was 51.2 per cent with 35,386 ballot papers counted, a decrease from the 64.2 per cent turnout out at the 2010 general election.

Tory Mr Watling received 8,709 votes to finish second while Labour's Tim Young finished third with 3,957 votes.


The Ukip leader hailed last night's result as a seismic shift in British politics and vowed to double the number of his party's MPs in Parliament by winning in Rochester. He has also declared he would like to be Minister for Europe in a coalition government after May's General Election


Mr Farage celebrated Ukip's stunning by-election victory by drinking beer in a Clacton pub until 4.45am this morning


Mr Carswell was mobbed by reporters in Clacton this morning following last night's historic by-election win

Ukip defector Mark Reckless, who also triggered the by-election in Rochester and Strood, attended the count in Clacton's Princes Theatre.

Former Liberal Democrat MP Lembit Opik also made an appearance in support of independent candidate Charlotte Rose, who was campaigning for sexual freedom and finished in last place with 56 votes.

Mr Carswell previously secured the Clacton seat in 2010 with a majority of 12,068 votes over Labour's Ivan Henderson, having first being elected to Parliament in 2005 in the Harwich seat.

His victory for Ukip means that 12 political parties will be represented in the House of Commons, thought to be the biggest number since 1945 and an indication that Britain's traditional two-party system is fragmenting.

It is the first time an MP who has defected and stood under a different banner in a by-election has won since 1973, when Labour MP Dick Taverne resigned his seat and stood for 'Democratic Labour'.


Tory defector Douglas Carswell has made history by becoming UKIP's first ever elected MP in the Commons


Mr Carswell took selfies with constituents in Clacton-on-Sea this morning, as he became the first elected Ukip MP

The victory has piled more pressure on the Conservatives to retain the seat of Rochester and Strood, where the second defector to Mr Farage's party, Mark Reckless, will stand next month.

In an interview with the magazine Newsweek Europe, to be published today, Mr Farage makes the audacious suggestion that he is aiming for a ministerial job if Ukip wins a number of MPs in next year's election and is invited to join a coalition.

'What I will say is this: if things go well next spring, I would like to be minister for Europe,' he said. 'I mean that quite seriously.'

'I would like to be the person who goes to Brussels and says, "We want to trade with you. We want reciprocal relationships. But this European Treaty doesn't work for us, and so we are breaking it".'

Mr Carswell said Ukip's rise was 'a profound change in British politics'.

He said the strong showing in Heywood and Middleton, a 'rock-solid Labour seat' meant 'we can take votes from the centre-left as well as from the centre-right'.

He told Sky News: 'The idea that we are somehow the Tory party in exile, that myth died this evening.

'We are a different party that stands for all Britain and all Britons, from disillusioned former Labour voters to people who have given up on politics altogether, every bit as much as for traditional Conservative voters.

'This is something new, this is something different. The real significance is that result in the north of England. We are part of something that is profoundly different in British politics.'

He said his data showed that '45 per cent of people who voted Labour in 2010 voted for me.'

Dismissing the Tory attack that a vote for Ukip helps Mr Miliband reach No 10, he said that in Heywood and Middleton 'it was the Conservative vote that kept Ed Miliband's candidate in'.

Mr Carswell, who said he still had many friends in the Tory ranks despite his defection, said: 'I've even had some nice friendly texts from people in the Cabinet - they are friends and they are going to stay my friends.'

Tory minister Priti Patel, who is an Essex MP, said the result was disappointing but said people 'don't necessarily vote along traditional party lines' at by-elections and Mr Carswell had benefited from being the incumbent.

She told Sky News: 'The reality is we as a party have to look at this election now and take some lessons and learnings from that, but at the same time as we head into the general election that election campaign will be about the big issues of the day: who governs our country, who do you want as your prime minister and not about voting for alternative political parties that may actually just tap into your fears, anxieties or concerns on particular issues but don't necessarily have the policy solutions to those issues.'

The Treasury minister said there would be 'no deals' with UKIP at the general election.


Tory defector Douglas Carswell comfortably won the by-election in Clacton, Essex, with a 12,404 majority


Mr Carswell, his wife Clementine and Mr Farage enjoyed the attention after the UKIP victory was announced at Clacton Town Hall

Ukip had also been hoping to pull off a shock victory in the Greater Manchester constituency of Heywood and Middleton last night after campaigning strongly in an effort to make inroads into Labour's northern heartland.

However, despite the strong challenge from Ukip candidate John Bickley, Labour candidate Ms McInnes scraped a victory with 11,633 votes compared to Mr Bickley's 11,016.

The poll, which saw a voter turnout of just 36 per cent, was triggered by the death of Labour MP Jim Dobbin, who had held the seat since 1997.

A bitter inquest had begun within minutes of the result as ‎Labour MP John Mann said: 'If Ed Miliband does not broaden the Labour coalition to better include working class opinion ‎then we cannot win a majority government.'

After the result, Mr Farage said UKIP was 'ripping lumps' out of Labour in its northern heartlands.

He told Sky News: 'We are ripping lumps out of the old Labour vote in the north of England.

'The truth of what has happened in the North today is that if you are anywhere north of Birmingham, if you vote Conservative you get Labour.

'And the reason we haven't won up there, despite a fantastic campaign, is that too many people have stuck with the Conservatives, not recognising that Ukip is now the challenger to Labour in every urban seat in the north of England.'

He added that the result in the northern seat, where his party had barely contemplated victory, was 'stunning'.

Labour had approached the by-election with increasing panic amid concerns that Mr Miliband is haemorrhaging working class support on issues such as immigration and welfare.

MPs had said ‎if UKIP finished within 2,000 votes of Labour, serious 'alarm bells would start ringing' about Mr Miliband's leadership. They finished just 617 votes ahead.

‎Last night Labour sources insisted their share of the vote - 41 per cent - had increased compared with the general election in 2010 and it was the Tory and Lib Dem vote which had collapsed.

But Ukip's stunning result will increase the pressure on Mr Miliband following his disastrous party conference speech, in which he forgot to make any mention of the deficit or immigration and focused on Labour's 'comfort zone' issue of the NHS.


Labour's Liz McInnes celebrates her victory after the count at the Heywood and Middleton by-election. However, she got just 617 more votes than second-placed John Bickley of Ukip


Labour candidate Ms McInnes scraped a victory with 11,633 votes compared to UKIP John Bickley's 11,016


Labour celebrated the victory in Heywood and Middleton following the closely fought battle with UKIP

In her victory speech, Ms McInnes drew a large reaction from the crowd as she said the vote showed support for Mr Miliband.

She was forced to raise her voice above the crowd and momentarily halted her speech as people laughed and heckled.

'The people gave their backing to Ed Miliband's plans for an NHS with the time to care,' she said.

'They said to David Cameron, keep your mitts off our NHS. They have rejected a Tory government that is only standing up for the privileged few.'

She later added: 'I am proud to have been selected as the new MP for Heywood and Middleton.

'Our vote held up, we had not anticipated the Tory vote collapsing quite so dramatically. But our core voters turned out. We didn't take anyone's votes for granted and we have run a very strong positive campaign.'

Asked if she expected UKIP to run have Labour so close, she said: 'To be honest with you I have been through more or less every scenario. As I said before, we don't take anyone's vote for granted.

'We work very hard and I am just pleased our vote held up. We can't choose our opponents.

'I am proud and honoured to have been selected for this area. I am not disappointed that the majority has been reduced. I knew this was going to be a tough fight and we have run a really strong positive campaign and we have fought for every single vote.'

David Cameron, who celebrated his 48th birthday yesterday, is now under intense pressure to halt the UKIP tide in Rochester and Strood, Kent, where Mark Reckless, another Tory turncoat, has triggered a by-election expected to take place next month.

The Tory campaign machine will head there today, with Mr Cameron promising to 'throw everything we can' at keeping the seat. Tory HQ is planning to recruit Labour and Lib Dem voters in a 'keep Ukip out' campaign to prevent Mr Reckless clinching another victory for UKIP.

One poll has put Mr Reckless, who defected from the Conservatives to Ukip last month, on course for victory. A double defeat to Ukip would be a grave blow to the Prime Minister, with the general election now months away, and might encourage further defections.


In Clacton, the voter turn-out was calculated at 51.2 per cent, with results announced in the early hours of today

The dramatic by-election win in Clacton comes after two years of major gains by Ukip in local and European elections.

It marks the pinnacle for a party founded just 20 years ago and which has endured a turbulent history of infighting, defections and allegations of racism, sexism and homophobia.

In 2012, with the Tories haemorrhaging support to Ukip, Mr Cameron promised to hold an in-out referendum on Britain's membership of the European Union if he remains Prime Minister after 2017.

The move, with a promise of clawing powers back from Brussels, was thought to have placated many Eurosceptics on the Conservative backbenches.

But in August this year Mr Carswell announced his shock defection to UKIP at a press conference in central London.


Mr Farage was revelling in last night's victory, during walkabout in Clacton

He lambasted the Prime Minister and senior Conservatives for not being 'serious about real change.'

Among a list of criticisms, he insisted that the failure to take a stand against the European Union was at the heart of his decision.

'They are not serious about real change. It's above all the failure to deliver on the promise of political reform that has driven me to be here today,' he said.

'Europe's the one continent on the globe that is not growing... Yet who in Westminster, who among our so-called leaders is prepared to envisage real change?'

Mr Carswell said he had been an enthusiastic cheerleader for Mr Cameron's Bloomberg speech, in which he set out proposals for an in-out referendum by 2017 if the Tories are in power after next year's general election.

But he said he did not believe the policy was 'sincere', saying the leadership wanted to secure 'just enough' to pretend change was happening.

Hours later Mr Cameron vowed to launch a 'very strong' campaign against Mr Carswell, condemning the defection as 'counter-productive'.

But it became clear that Mr Carswell's popularity in Clacton meant the Tories were fighting a losing battle from the start.

One senior Conservative said: 'There is not a Tory machine campaign machine in Clacton, it is a Carswell machine.'

The Prime Minister made a last ditch visit to Clacton last week, and acknowledged the Tories were 'the underdogs'.

The Conservative candidate fighting Mr Carswell was Giles Watling, an actor best known for his appearance as the vicar in the 1980s sitcom 'Bread', who is from the area and has been a local councillor for several years.

But in a sign of the Tory attitude to the seat, London Mayor Boris Johnson was caught out on live radio this week when he could not remember Mr Watling's name.

Quizzed on the radio about the Conservatives' chances in this week's by-election, Mr Johnson could only venture that the candidate was a 'superb man... Stirling? Girling? Something like that.'


Mr Carswell secured the Clacton seat with a majority of 12,404 ahead of Conservative candidate Giles Watling


Despite being expected to storm to victory, Mr Carswell appeared nervous as he waited for the result

Mr Carswell's switch to Ukip in August was then followed by the defection of Mark Reckless last month, on the eve of the Tory party conference.

Senior Tory strategists accepted they stood little chance of holding Clacton.

But Mr Cameron has made clear he will not give up on Mr Reckless' Rochester and Strood constituency, accusing him on betraying Tory activists who worked hard to get his 'fat ****' on the Commons benches.

Mr Reckless has a small lead in the polls, but the Conservatives believe they can hold it, and will head there on Friday afternoon after the Clacton result to campaign.

Ukip's only MP to date came when Castle Point MP Bob Spink defected from the Conservatives in 2008.

But he did not trigger a by-election, choosing instead to just sit in a different part of the Commons.

He subsequently stood unsuccessfully as an independent at the 2010 general election.

Mr Carswell was originally elected as the Conservative MP for Harwich in 2005, but was returned in Clacton in 2010 after boundary changes with a majority of over 12,000.

DOUGLAS CARSWELL: THE RADICAL EUROSCEPTIC RAISED IN AFRICA



Douglas Carswell was one of the most prominent Eurosceptic Tory MPs but his defection to Ukip in August was still a major surprise in Westminster.


The libertarian Clacton MP regularly spoke out against the Government on Europe, the economy and Parliamentary reform.


The maverick backbencher once led calls for MPs' expenses to be opened up to the public– but was then criticised after it emerged he claimed cash back for a 'love chair' for his home.


He is popular among many of his former Tory his colleagues, some of whom refused to campaign against him.

In Clacton his popularity outstrips that of the Tories. One senior Conservative said: 'There is not a Tory machine campaign machine in Clacton, it is a Carswell machine.'


Mr Carswell grew up in Uganda where his doctor parents worked.


He was educated at St Andrews School, Kenya, before moving to the exclusive Charterhouse boarding school in Surrey.



Read more: Douglas Carswell wins Clacton by-election as UKIP's first MP | Daily Mail Online
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Blackleaf

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A jubilant Ukip leader Nigel Farage has said that his party is "targeting everybody" as he campaigns in Kent ahead of next month's Rochester and Strood by-election, in which he hopes his party will win a second MP just weeks after it won its first.

Tory and Labour MPs have called for a response to UKIP's surge.

Mark Reckless, whose resignation as the Conservative MP for Rochester and Strood triggered a by-election in which he will stand as the Ukip candidate, said Ukip would "bring decisions back from Westminster" and "put local communities in charge".

Douglas Carswell, other politician who recently defected from the Tories to Ukip and was recently elected as Ukip's first-ever MP, in the Clacton constituency, urged voters to "choose change". He praised Mr Reckless for his decision to seek voters' approval in a by-election and criticised other parties for conducting "a highly personal, aggressive smear campaign" against the Ukip candidate.

Mr Farage said the result of Thursday's poll in Clacton, which Mr Carswell won for Ukip by 12,404 votes, was "absolutely phenomenal".

He dismissed scare stories peddled by the Tories and others who say that a vote for Ukip is actually a vote for Labour and could see Ed Miliband becoming Prime Minister in May by saying that "if you vote Ukip, you will get Ukip".

Nigel Farage says UKIP is targeting all voters in Rochester

BBC News
11 October 2014


If you vote UKIP, you get UKIP, Nigel Farage said, flanked by Mark Reckless (l) and Douglas Carswell (r)

UKIP leader Nigel Farage has said his party is "targeting everybody", as he campaigns in Kent ahead of the Rochester and Strood by-election.

Mr Farage said UKIP was "its own force" and rejected any electoral pact with the Tories for the general election.

He was campaigning with two ex-Tories - Mark Reckless, who is standing for UKIP in Rochester, and Douglas Carswell, who has become UKIP's first elected MP.

Tory and Labour MPs have called for a response to UKIP's surge.

Mr Reckless, whose resignation as the Conservative MP for Rochester and Strood triggered a by-election, said UKIP would "bring decisions back from Westminster" and "put local communities in charge".

Mr Carswell urged voters to "choose change". He praised Mr Reckless for his decision to seek voters' approval in a by-election and criticised other parties for conducting "a highly personal, aggressive smear campaign" against the UKIP candidate.

Mr Farage said the result of Thursday's poll in Clacton, which Mr Carswell won for UKIP by 12,404 votes, was "absolutely phenomenal".



He again dismissed Conservative claims that voters who switched support from the Tories to UKIP risked handing power to Labour.

The evidence of Clacton was "vote UKIP, get UKIP", he said.

The Rochester by-election is expected to take place next month.

'Good protest vote'

Mr Farage said his party was "not a splinter" of the Tories and dismissed questions about any electoral pact with them.

"We want to win our own representation in Westminster and we believe only by doing that can we fundamentally change British politics," he said.

"To sell out so that one or two people can have ministerial positions is not what Ukip's about.

Mr Reckless said UKIP would "bring decisions back" to Rochester from central government

"I don't trust David Cameron. I don't believe a word David Cameron says and for that reason it would be fruitless to even enter into any negotiation."

Mr Reckless has reiterated that UKIP wants to "rebalance" immigration, which he said had held down wages for some workers and increased competition for jobs.

The Labour candidate for Rochester and Strood, Naushabah Khan, said voters had more pressing issues, such as "a hospital which is failing" and "60% of our primary schools which are failing".

The Liberal Democrat candidate, Geoff Juby, said his party "seem to be out on the streets a bit more" than Labour and the Conservatives.

Clive Gregory, standing for the Green Party, said a vote for him would be "a good protest vote" whereas UKIP represented "the same nonsense as the Conservatives".

The Conservatives will conduct a full postal ballot of constituents to select their candidate.

'Mutually assured destruction'

Asked about the national picture, Tory MP Jacob Rees Mogg renewed calls for a pact between the Conservatives and UKIP.

He told the Times newspaper that the impact UKIP has had on the Labour vote in northern England had been encouraging.

"We should think about what that means in terms of the UKIP-Conservative relationship because the Conservative family could win a majority on that basis," he said.

"Otherwise, the only thing we manage is mutually-assured destruction."

On Friday, Prime Minister David Cameron said next year's general election would be "the most important in a generation".

Meanwhile, Labour leader Ed Miliband said his party needed to "reach out" to disaffected voters.

'All bets are off'

He said Labour had changed and realised it was "not prejudiced" to worry about immigration, but said he did not think UKIP could "represent the interests of working people".

In the wake of the party's narrow victory in another by-election this week, in Heywood, several Labour MPs expressed concerns about Mr Miliband's electoral strategy.



Former pensions minister Frank Field said "very large numbers" of Labour voters were unhappy with the way the party was performing.

"If last night's vote heralds the start of UKIP's serious assault into Labour's neglected core vote, all bets are off for safer, let alone marginal seats at the next election." Mr Field said.

He added that "until we get that central to our message we're in trouble".

In Clacton, Mr Carswell overturned a 12,068 Conservative majority in the Essex seat he had previously held as a Tory.

In Heywood and Middleton, Greater Manchester, Liz McInnes held on for Labour in a contest triggered by the death of the former MP, Jim Dobbin.

She won with 11,633 votes - or 41% of the vote - with UKIP's John Bickley 617 behind - with 39% of the vote

Following the results, Mr Farage predicted UKIP could hold the balance of power following the next general election.

"We've got a chance here in a general election next year that is likely to be very tight, in an election in which no one party is likely to have a majority.

"If UKIP can keep this momentum going, we could find ourselves next May in a position where we hold the balance of power," he said.





BBC News - Nigel Farage says UKIP is targeting all voters in Rochester
 
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Blackleaf

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On the day it was revealed that Ukip may win as many as 128 MPs in the General Election on 7th May - Record poll surge gives Ukip 25%: Survey would hand Farage astonishing 128 MPs... and puts Ed Miliband on new low* | Daily Mail Online - the rising party's jubilant leader and MEP for the South East of England, Nigel Farage, wrote in yesterday's Mail on Sunday about why his party are doing so well....

NIGEL FARAGE: Why did we win? Because WE don't play you for fools


By Nigel Farage, Ukip Leader and MEP for the South East
12 October 2014
Mail on Sunday

It is not often that one has the pleasure of giving both the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition hum-dinging headaches on a single memorable night.

But that is what Ukip did this week with our by-election results in Clacton and in Heywood and Middleton.

Following my campaign visits to the latter I had dared to hope that we might break our record vote share for a by-election – the 28 per cent recorded when we narrowly failed to take Eastleigh in Hampshire off the Liberal Democrats last year.

In the event our superb candidate in Heywood, John Bickley, smashed it to pieces, chalking up a massive 39 per cent vote share in Labour’s strongest northern citadel of all.



Man of the people: Nigel Farage - seen here doing what he and the ordinary person like to do but which you will not see the Labour, Tory or Lib Dem leaders do - said his party gave both the Prime Minister and Ed Miliband a 'hum-dinging headache'

John’s record stood for only a couple of hours – Douglas Carswell weighed in with an incredible 60 per cent in Clacton.

So what does it all mean? Labour reckoned it showed the Tories were in free-fall, while the Tories reckoned Labour had been humiliated in a home fixture. For once, both were right.

But the Conservative message soon changed to the familiar yet increasingly bizarre claim that Ukip’s success means Ed Miliband is likely to win the next election. The claim was propagated by Tory chairman Grant Shapps, a man so devoid of genuine political ideas that he makes a blank canvas look like a Jackson Pollock.

In Clacton, the electorate voted Ukip and got Ukip. In Heywood and Middleton, it was the rump of 3,000 or so Conservative voters who could have avoided ‘getting Miliband’ had they switched to us – because Labour’s majority was only 617. Once again, the Tories had split our vote and in doing so saved a left-wing party, just as they did in Eastleigh.

In the great urban areas of the North and the Midlands, the Conservatives have become a minor legacy party with a toxic brand and no apparent prospect of recovery. I could take you on a tour of towns and cities that were represented by Tory MPs a generation ago, but are now devoid of them. Perhaps we could call it the Matthew Parris Heritage Trail, after the Tory Times columnist whose vicious and outrageous attack describing Clacton as ‘Britain on crutches’ was a gift to our campaign.


In Labour's northern citadel of Heywood and Middleton, Ukip's John Bickley managed 39 per cent of the vote


Ukip have risen dramatically in the polls since April 2012 when they languished on 9% with little hope of an MP


David Cameron and Nigel Farage are the most popular duo to run the country - in a "CONKIP" coalition - according to a poll


Despite Farage's comments being derided by Britain's mainly left-wing media, almost 60 per cent of Britons agree with him that immigrants with HIV should not be allowed into the UK. The public would also like to see Farage become Immigration Minister in some sort of government, closely followed by Deputy PM and Europe Minister

THE Cameron Conservatives are not the new politics; they are getting in the way of the new politics. The British public are crying out for change and increasingly they see Ukip as offering the best prospect of that change.

In recent years the three older parties have together turned politics into a ghetto for the liberal metropolitan elite – a space from which most of the British public is ruthlessly excluded.

All back Britain’s prohibitively expensive and anti-democratic subservience to the European Union, all are signed up to an energy policy that drives bills ever higher and all back continued enormous increases in spending on foreign aid. In short, all have fallen prey to the conceit of being generous with other people’s money. All too are happy to render Britain effectively borderless in respect of more than two dozen neighbouring countries.

None has an answer to the social mobility crisis that has grown since the option of academically selective education within the state sector was throttled in the 1970s. All are happy to see Britain entangled in dodgy and often counterproductive foreign wars. All would keep us locked inside the European human rights regime. And perhaps worst of all, they are all run by cliques of college kids who know little of the real world.

No wonder those who have to earn a proper living and strive to pay their own bills and are not prisoners to political correctness find that Ukip is a party they can connect with and be proud to support.


More in touch with ordinary people: Unlike a certain Mr Ed Miliband, Mr Farage knows how to properly each a bacon sandwich without making himself look silly


David Cameron's Conservative party are not the new politics 'they are getting in the way of the new politics'

Most of all, Ukip is being identified as the one party that is prepared to get to grips with the immigration crisis.

Only by leaving the EU can we escape the obligation to maintain open borders. Only then can we set our own immigration policy according to our needs. We need an Australian-style points system that would bring volume control and quality control.

That way we can welcome those migrants with major contributions to make – jobs to create, investments to bring and British values to adopt – while keeping out those without the skills, aptitudes or attitudes that can improve our society.

And once we get immigration under control we can then have half a chance of sensibly planning the provision of key public services such as schools and hospitals, having sufficient social housing available and giving working people a fair shake at finding decent and decently rewarded employment.

The public are demanding a change to the immigration system that only Ukip is prepared to provide. The other parties just offer spin and people hate being played for fools.

There is a great whoosh of energy around Ukip these days. The metropolitan media, which has hitherto been desperately slow on the uptake, turned out in enormous numbers in Clacton on Friday morning. They had just discovered what millions of voters have known for ages: the People’s Army is on the march.

Now we have won under First Past The Post and have every chance of winning enough seats at the General Election next year to hold the balance of power. The British people want us in the next Parliament and it is our job to convince them to send us there in real numbers.


"Now we have won under First Past the Post we have every chance of holding the balance of power"

I am aware of the hopes invested in our party by millions of patriotic, decent and hardworking men and women. It is a huge responsibility. It is not only our right to seek election into the House of Commons in May, it has also become our duty to succeed. Too many people have been too badly let down by the political establishment for far too long for failure to be an option.

All roads now lead to Rochester & Strood for the by-election that Mark Reckless triggered when he joined us.

Team Dave will throw their kitchen sink at us – and lots of unpleasant items they keep in it. But if Mr Cameron continues to tolerate the smear campaign being waged against Mark by his lieutenants, he risks setting off an even bigger wave of support for Ukip.

We are not the finished article yet. We must and will continue to work on our weaknesses as well as build on our strengths. But what a long way we have come in the past couple of years. We are fighting to win your country back from political elites at home and abroad.

We want to make politicians once again the servants of the people and not their masters. We want to make them accountable to you. We know that you never stopped believing in Britain – neither did we.

Unlike Nick Clegg – whatever happened to him, by the way? – we know Britain is good enough to be a proud, independent nation, trading its way to prosperity across the globe. Getting on with its neighbours but not run by them. Engaged on the world stage, but nobody’s poodle.

That’s our vision and I think it could be yours.


Read more: NIGEL FARAGE: Why did we win? Because WE don't play you for fools* | Daily Mail Online
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Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,892
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Magaret Thatcher is smiling since the Ukip more closely resembles her policies than do the current Conservatives.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
50,068
1,920
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Magaret Thatcher is smiling since the Ukip more closely resembles her policies than do the current Conservatives.


Ukip are the real Tories. They're what the Tories used to be until the Tories became all wishy-washy and liberal fifteen or twenty years ago.

It used to be the case that there was a huge gulf between Labour and the Tories, with Labour clearly on the Left and the Tories more to the Right. Everybody knew what each party stood for. That was what is what like in the Eighties under Maggie. But nowadays the Tories have become so wishy-washy, liberal and politically correct, who have a leader who is a rabid Europhile and is into all that green nonsense which is increasing our energy bills, that there is nothing to choose between them and Labour. They're both identikits of each other and are both run by identikit, posh, career politicians who do not know what real life is like and have had no other job outside of politics (unlike Farage, who used to work in the City before he got into politics, trading commodities on the London Metal Exchange before he joined brokerage firm Drexel Burnham Lambert) and the British people have had enough. Those people who sued to vote Tories but have had enough of their party's lurch to the Left in recent times are now switching over to Ukip in their droves. But it's not just disgruntled Tories. Even Labour voters who are fed up with high levels of immigration and their party ignoring their concerns, and even labelling those who voice their concerns over immigration as "racists" (we all remember the Gillian Duffy Affair in the run up to the 2010 General Election), are now switching over to Ukip.

As for Farage, he himself is one reason why Ukip are becoming so popular. He seems more in tune with the concerns of the ordinary British people than Cameron, Miliband and Clegg are, and seems to be the only one of the four main party leaders who shares the same concerns as most ordinary people. Also, unlike the other three bozos, Mr Farage likes smoking cigarettes and having a few pints down the pub - again, like a lot of ordinary people - whereas you'll never see the posh Miliband, Clegg and Cameron doing those things. Farage is seen more as a man of the people, whereas the three Establishment goons are seen as out-of-touch. He seems just like the ordinary guy you can have a chat and a laugh with on a Saturday night in the Slug and Lettuce, whereas Cameron, Miliband and Clegg don't..

 
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