Posted on 05/03/2014 4:43:04 AM PDT by UKrepublican
ST IVES, CAMBRIDGESHIRE, UK An over-capacity crowd of around 650 people met UKIP leader Nigel Farage for the final town hall-style meeting of his pre-European Election tour of the United Kingdom. With UKIP swag plastered all over the Burgess Hall venue, Farage entered to rapturous applause, flanked by increased security following the assault on him earlier this week. Farage was speaking to the throngs of disaffected Brits, who have witnessed their livelihoods sacrificed for multiculturalism, big state-driven debt, and the transfer of sovereignty over their own lives from their local towns and villages to centralised governments in London and Brussels. He channeled Thatcher, he channeled Reagan, he channeled the Tea Party spirit, and as one audience member put it: "he channeled Enoch Powell." And he and his supporters rightly reject the 'extremism' myth, one that older conservatives found difficult to deal with when accosted by political correctness and double-speak. "Once you actually examine our positions, and what we stand for you find we're not really extreme at all," Farage said. Immediately, the UKIP leader had the crowd in stitches and seemingly endless rounds of applause after almost every point he made. "Britain is led by a bunch of college kids who have never worked a real job a day in their lives!" he exclaimed, referring to the fact that most MPs and political candidates nowadays go straight from university into working in parliament or think-tanks, scarcely representative of the country.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
May God protect Nigel Farage. There are too many people who would love to have make him dead. He’d better realize that and take the necessary precautions.
If Palin, Cruz, Paul, Lee, North, Gingrich, Tim Scott, Trey Goudy, Alan West, and a few governors such as Scott Walker and Jan Brewer would break from the Republican Party and form a new Liberty Party the entire playing field would change. By 2020, we could have a competitive 3 party system.
This is, at the least, a very London/southern centric view of things. The fact is that in the northern and midland counties UKIP members are more likely to be disaffected Labourites or even liberals. In large stretches of the country UKIP is now effectively the main opposition to the ruling Labour councils, and certainly the only party that has any chance of kicking them out of office. Most of the socialist councillors are lazy and arrogant. They think they have some god given right to office in these places on the basis that they are "working-class", and therefore they have done nothing for them for years. They are going, I believe, to get a very big surprise over the next few election cycles in the UK.
As for "Red Ed", as you call him, he's more like chameleon Ed, turning mildly pink when he needs to. IOW, He talks the talk when he's addressing the remnant of the true socialist revolutionary guard in the Labour party, but he doesn't really believe any of it. He knows that socialism in the UK was an utter disaster and that adherence to its tenets now would lead to economic catastrophe and ultimately electoral suicide.
I can understand that opinion, but just as in the US, the UK is a great deal more conservative that outward appearances would indicate. There really is very little practical policy differences between The Conservative and Labour parties these days - we have had a long period of effectively consensus politics. Most of the hardcore support for both parties is essentially tribal in nature. If you can get past that mindset, and UKIP is beginning to, people of both sides begin to realise that the party they have given lifelong support for does not reflect their opinions.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.