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UK Independence Party

The UK Independence Party (UKIP; /ˈjuːkɪp/ YOO-kip) is a Eurosceptic, right-wing populist political party in the United Kingdom. The party reached its greatest level of success in the mid-2010s, when it gained two members of Parliament and was the largest party representing the UK in the European Parliament. The party is currently led by Neil Hamilton.

UK Independence Party
AbbreviationUKIP
LeaderNeil Hamilton[1]
ChairmanBen Walker
General SecretaryTom Harrison[2]
FounderAlan Sked
Founded3 September 1993; 29 years ago (1993-09-03)
Preceded byAnti-Federalist League
HeadquartersHenleaze Business Centre, 13 Harbury Road, Henleaze, Bristol, BS9 4PN[3]
Youth wingYoung Independence
Membership (2020) 3,888[4]
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing[10] to far-right[11]
European Parliament groupEurope of Democracies and Diversities (1999–2004)
Independence/Democracy (2004–2009)
Europe of Freedom and Democracy (2009–2014)
Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy (2014–2018)
Alliance for Direct Democracy in Europe (2014–2017)
Europe of Nations and Freedom (2019)
Colours  Purple   Gold
Slogan"People not politics"
Local government[12]
0 / 19,698
Website
ukip.org

UKIP originated as the Anti-Federalist League, a single-issue Eurosceptic party established in London by Alan Sked in 1991. It was renamed UKIP in 1993, but its growth remained slow. It was largely eclipsed by the Eurosceptic Referendum Party until the latter's 1997 dissolution. In 1997, Sked was ousted by a faction led by Nigel Farage, who became the party's preeminent figure. In 2006, Farage officially became leader and, under his direction, the party adopted a wider policy platform and capitalised on concerns about rising immigration, in particular among the White British working class. This resulted in significant breakthroughs at the 2013 local elections, 2014 European Parliamentary elections, and 2015 general election. After the UK voted to leave the EU in the 2016 Brexit Referendum, Farage stepped down as UKIP leader, later joining the Brexit Party. UKIP subsequently saw its vote share and membership heavily decline, losing almost all of its elected representatives amid much internal instability and a drift toward a far-right, anti-Islam message.

Ideologically positioned on the right-wing of British politics, UKIP is characterised by political scientists as a right-wing populist party. UKIP's primary emphasis has been on Euroscepticism, calling for the United Kingdom's exit from the European Union (EU). It promotes a British unionist and British nationalist agenda, encouraging a unitary British identity in opposition to growing Welsh, Irish and Scottish nationalisms. UKIP has also placed emphasis on lowering immigration, rejecting multiculturalism, and opposing what it calls the "Islamification" of Britain. Influenced by Thatcherism and classical liberalism, it describes itself as economically libertarian and promotes liberal economic policies. On social issues such as LGBT rights, education policy, and criminal justice it is traditionalist. Having an ideological heritage stemming from the right-wing of the Conservative Party, it distinguishes itself from the mainstream political establishment through heavy use of populist rhetoric, for example, through Farage's description of its supporters as the "People's Army".

Governed by its leader and National Executive Committee, UKIP is divided into twelve regional groups. While gaining electoral support from various sectors of British society, psephologists established that at its height, UKIP's primary voting base consisted of older, working-class white men living in England. UKIP has faced a critical reception from mainstream political parties, much of the media, and anti-fascist groups. Its discourse on immigration and cultural identity generated accusations of racism and xenophobia, both of which it denies.

History

Foundation and early years: 1991–2004

 
The initial UKIP logo

UKIP began as the Anti-Federalist League, a Eurosceptic political party established in 1991 by the historian Alan Sked. The League opposed the recently signed Maastricht Treaty and sought to sway the governing Conservative Party towards removing the United Kingdom from the European Union (EU).[13] A former Liberal Party candidate, member of the Bruges Group, and professor at the London School of Economics (LSE), Sked had converted to Euroscepticism while teaching the LSE's European Studies programme.[14] Under the Anti-Federalist League's banner, Sked was a candidate for Member of Parliament (MP) for Bath at the 1992 general election, gaining 0.2% of the vote.[15] At a League meeting held in the LSE on 3 September 1993, the group was renamed the UK Independence Party, deliberately avoiding the term "British" so as to avoid confusion with the far-right British National Party (BNP).[16][17]

UKIP contested the 1994 European Parliament election with little financing and much infighting, securing itself as the fifth-largest party in that election with 1% of the vote.[18] During this period, UKIP was viewed as a typical single-issue party by commentators, some of whom drew comparisons with the French Poujadist movement.[19] Following the election, UKIP lost much support to the Referendum Party; founded by the multi-millionaire James Goldsmith in 1994, it shared UKIP's Eurosceptic approach but was far better funded.[20] In the 1997 general election, UKIP fielded 194 candidates and secured 0.3% of the national vote; only one of its candidates, Nigel Farage in Salisbury, secured over 5% of the vote and had his deposit returned.[21] UKIP was beaten by the Referendum Party in 163 of the 165 seats in which they stood against each other.[21] The Referendum Party disbanded following Goldsmith's death later that year and many of its candidates joined UKIP.[22]

 
A UKIP campaign bus, 2004

After the election, Sked was pressured into resigning by a party faction led by Farage, David Lott and Michael Holmes, who deemed him too intellectual and dictatorial.[23] Sked left the party, alleging that it had been infiltrated by racist and far-right elements, including BNP spies.[24][25] This connection was emphasised in the press, particularly when Farage was photographed meeting with BNP activists.[24] Holmes took over as party leader, and in the 1999 European Parliament elections—the first British election for the European Parliament to use proportional representation—UKIP received 6.5% of the vote and three seats, in South East England (Farage), South West England (Holmes), and the East of England (Jeffrey Titford).[26]

An internal power struggle ensued between Holmes and the party's National Executive Committee (NEC), which was critical of Holmes after he called for the European Parliament to have greater powers over the European Commission. Led by Farage, the NEC removed Holmes from power, and Titford was elected leader.[27][28] In the 2001 general election, UKIP secured 1.5% of the vote, and six of its 428 candidates retained their deposits. It had lost much of its support to the Conservatives, whose leader William Hague had adopted increasingly Eurosceptic rhetoric during his campaign.[29] In 2002, the former Conservative MP Roger Knapman was elected UKIP leader, bringing with him the experience of mainstream politics that the party had lacked.[30] Knapman hired the political campaign consultant Dick Morris to advise UKIP. The party adopted the slogan "say no" and launched a national billboard campaign.[31] In 2004, UKIP reorganised itself nationally as a private company limited by guarantee.[32]

Growing visibility: 2004–2014

 
Nigel Farage, leader of the party from 2006 to 2009 and again from 2010 to 2016, and an MEP from 1999 to 2020.

UKIP's support increased during the 2004 European Parliament elections, when it placed third, securing 2.6 million votes (16.1%) and winning twelve seats. This had been made possible through increased funding from major donors and the celebrity endorsement of chat show host Robert Kilroy-Silk, who stood as a candidate in the East Midlands.[33] Kilroy-Silk then criticised Knapman's leadership, arguing that UKIP should stand against Conservative candidates, regardless of whether they were Eurosceptic or not. This position was rejected by many party members, who were uneasy regarding Kilroy-Silk. After Farage and Lott backed Knapman, Kilroy-Silk left the party in January 2005.[34][35] Two weeks later, he founded his own rival, Veritas, taking a number of UKIP members—including both of its London Assembly members—with him.[36]

After Kilroy-Silk's defection, UKIP's membership declined by a third and donations dropped by over a half.[37] UKIP continued to be widely seen as a single-issue party and in the 2005 general election—when it fielded 496 candidates—it secured only 2.2% of the vote, and 40 candidates had their deposits returned.[38] Electoral support for the BNP grew during this period, with academics and political commentators suggesting that the parties were largely competing for the same voter base, a section of about 20% of the UK population.[39] Given that the BNP had outperformed UKIP in most of the seats that they both contested, many UKIP members, including several figures on the NEC, favoured an electoral pact with them, a proposal that Farage strongly condemned.[40]

In 2006, Farage was elected leader.[41] To attract support, he cultivated an image of himself as a "man of the people", openly smoking and drinking, showing disdain for the established parties, and speaking in an open manner that appeared unscripted.[42] He sought to broaden UKIP's image from that of a single-issue party by introducing an array of socially conservative policies, including reducing immigration, tax cuts, restoring grammar schools, and climate change denial.[43] In doing so he was attempting to attract disenfranchised former Conservatives who had left the party after its leader, David Cameron, had moved in a socially liberal direction.[44] According to Farage, Cameron was "a socialist" whose priorities were "gay marriage, foreign aid, and wind farms".[45] Cameron was highly critical of UKIP, referring to them as "fruitcakes, loonies, and closet racists".[46] The Conservatives' largest donor, Stuart Wheeler, donated £100,000 to UKIP after criticising Cameron's stance towards the Treaty of Lisbon and the EU.[47] After trust in the mainstream parties was damaged by the parliamentary expenses scandal, UKIP received an immediate surge in support.[48] This helped it in the 2009 European Parliament election, in which it secured 2.5 million votes (16.5%), resulting in 13 MEPs, becoming the second largest party in the European Parliament after the Conservatives.[49][50] During the election, UKIP outperformed the BNP, whose electoral support base collapsed shortly after.[51]

 
Lord Malcolm Pearson led the party in 2009

In September 2009, Farage resigned as leader.[52][53] The subsequent leadership election was won by Lord Malcolm Pearson, who emphasised UKIP's opposition to high immigration rates and Islamism in Britain, calling for a ban on the burqa being worn in public.[54][55][56] Pearson was unpopular with the UKIP grassroots, who viewed him as an establishment figure too favourable to the Conservatives.[57] In the 2010 general election, UKIP fielded 558 candidates and secured 3.1% of the vote (919,471 votes), but won no seats.[58][59] Pearson stood down as leader in August, and Farage was re-elected in the leadership election with more than 60% of the vote.[60][61][62][63]

Farage placed new emphasis on developing areas of local support through growth in local councils.[64] Observing that the party had done well in areas dominated by white blue-collar workers with no educational attainment, and that conversely it had done poorly in areas with high numbers of graduates and ethnic minorities, UKIP's campaign refocused directly at the former target vote.[65] UKIP support would be bolstered by dissatisfaction with the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government and the perception that its austerity policies benefited the socio-economic elite while imposing hardship on most Britons.[66] During this year, UKIP had witnessed far greater press coverage and growing support, with opinion polls placing it at around 10% support in late 2012.[67] UKIP put up a record number of candidates for the 2013 local elections, achieving its strongest local government result, polling an average of 23% in the wards where it stood, and increasing its number of elected councillors from 4 to 147.[68][69][70] This was the best result for a party outside the big three in British politics since the Second World War,[71] with UKIP being described as "the most popular political insurgency" in Britain since the Social Democratic Party during the 1980s.[72]

Entering mainstream politics: 2014–2016

 
Results of the European Parliament election, 2014 in Great Britain. Districts where UKIP received the largest number of votes are shown in purple.

In March 2014, Ofcom awarded UKIP "major party status".[73] In the 2014 local elections, UKIP won 163 seats, an increase of 128, but did not take control of any council.[74] In the 2014 European Parliament elections, UKIP received the greatest number of votes (27.5%) of any British party, producing 24 MEPs.[75][76] The party won seats in every region of Britain, including its first in Scotland.[77] It made strong gains in traditionally Labour voting areas within Wales and the North of England; it for instance came either first or second in all 72 council areas of the latter.[78] The victory established Farage and UKIP as "truly household names".[79] It was the first time since 1906 that a party other than Labour or the Conservatives had won the most votes in a UK-wide election.[80]

UKIP gained its first MP when Conservative defector Douglas Carswell won the seat of Clacton during an October 2014 by-election.[81][82] In November fellow Conservative defector Mark Reckless became UKIP's second MP in a Rochester and Strood by-election.[83][84] In the 2015 general election, UKIP secured over 3.8 million votes (12.6% of the total), replacing the Liberal Democrats as the third most popular party, but only secured one seat,[85] with Carswell retaining his seat and Reckless losing his.[86][87] In the run-up to the election, Farage stated that he would resign as party leader if he did not win South Thanet.[88][89] On failing to do so, he resigned,[90][91] although was reinstated three days later when the NEC rejected his resignation.[92][93] A period of 'civil war' broke out among senior membership between those who favoured Farage's leadership and those seeking a change.[94] In the 2015 Oldham West and Royton by-election the party attacked Jeremy Corbyn as a security risk, but only gained a small increase in support at the expense of the Conservative Party. In the 2016 National Assembly for Wales election, UKIP nearly tripled their share of votes (from 4.7 per cent to 12.5 per cent) and won seven seats.[95] UKIP had also won control of its first UK council, in Thanet, in May 2015; it took overall control from Labour and increased its seats on the council from two to 33.[96]

To counter the loss of further votes to UKIP, the governing Conservatives, led by David Cameron, promised a referendum on the UK's continued membership of the EU.[97] Rather than taking part in the official Vote Leave campaign, to which various Eurosceptic Conservative and Labour politicians were linked, UKIP affiliated itself with the Leave.EU campaign group.[98] Farage gained regular press coverage during the campaign, in which Leave.EU emphasised what it characterised as the negative impact of immigration on local communities and public services.[98] The June 2016 referendum produced a 51.89% majority in favour of leaving the EU: the accomplishment of UKIP's raison d'être raised questions about the party's future.[99] The loss of its MEPs would result in the loss of its primary institutional representation and a key source of its funding.[100]

Decline: 2016–present

Downward turn (2016–2018)

After the referendum, Farage resigned as UKIP leader.[101] Diane James was elected as his successor, but resigned after 18 days.[102] Farage's former deputy, Paul Nuttall, was elected leader that month.[103] In March 2017, the party's only MP, Carswell, left the party to sit as an independent.[104] The next month, Reckless also left UKIP.[105] In the 2017 local elections, UKIP lost all 145 seats it was defending, but gained one on Lancashire County Council.[106] These results led several prominent former UKIP members to call for the party to be disbanded.[107] In the following 2017 general election, UKIP received fewer than 600,000 votes and won no seats. The following day, Nuttall resigned and Steve Crowther took over as interim party leader.[108] In July 2017, it lost its majority on Thanet council when Councillor Beverly Martin defected to the Conservatives;[109] in September all three UKIP councillors on Plymouth City Council defected to the Conservatives,[110] as did Alexandra Phillips, who had been UKIP's Head of Media for three years.[111]

 
The UKIP logo, used briefly by the party from 2017 to 2018

In 2017, Henry Bolton, a former soldier, was elected leader.[112] In January 2018, UKIP MEP Jonathan Arnott resigned from the party.[113] In December 2017, former UKIP Suffolk County Council member and parliamentary candidate from the general election in Central Suffolk and North Ipswich, Stephen Searle, murdered his wife Anne Searle at their home in Stowmarket.[114][115][116][117] In January 2018, UKIP's NEC delivered a vote of no confidence in Bolton; only Bolton voted against the motion.[118] He nevertheless refused to resign.[118] In protest, Margot Parker resigned as deputy leader,[119] as did the party's spokesmen for government, education, immigration, and trade and industry.[120] A few days later, all seventeen UKIP members of Thurrock Council left the party and formed Thurrock Independents.[121] In February, UKIP members passed a vote of no confidence in Bolton, removing him as leader. He was replaced by Gerard Batten as interim leader until a new leadership election could be held.[122] When the election occurred in April, Batten stood unopposed and was elected.[123]

Association with the far right (2018–2019)

 
Under Gerard Batten's leadership, UKIP moved towards a far-right stance

In the 2018 local elections UKIP lost 124 of the 126 seats it was defending, and gained a single seat in Derby for a net loss of 123.[124] MEP James Carver left UKIP to sit as an independent on 28 May 2018, becoming the sixth UKIP MEP to leave since 2014.[125]

Under the leadership of Henry Bolton, party membership was understood to have fallen to around 18,000 by January 2018.[126] During Batten's interim leadership term, the party avoided insolvency after a financial appeal to members.[127] As the new permanent leader, Batten focused the party more on opposing Islam, which he described as a "death cult",[128] was criticised as an "explicitly far-right party" after they invited Paul Joseph Watson as a spokesman,[129] sought closer relations with the far-right activist Tommy Robinson and his followers,[130] and made Muslim-only prisons party policy (which was criticised as "the first step to Muslim concentration camps").[131] The party saw its membership rise by 15% in July 2018, following the publication of the Chequers Agreement and allowing three prominent far-right activists to join the party.[132] Previous leader Nigel Farage stated he was "really upset" that Robinson could be allowed into the party and that he believed Gerard Batten was marginalising the party.[133]

Batten's appointment of Robinson as an advisor was followed by a wave of high-profile resignations from the party. Farage announced his decision to resign in December 2018, calling Batten "obsessed" with Islam and saying that "UKIP wasn't founded to be a party based on fighting a religious crusade".[134] Former Deputy Chair Suzanne Evans had left earlier that week after Batten survived a vote of confidence from the party NEC.[135] The former leader of the party in the Welsh Assembly, Caroline Jones, and the MEP William Dartmouth had also cited the party's trajectory to the right as reasons for leaving the party.[136] Another former leader, Paul Nuttall, also left for the same reason.[137] By December 2018, a majority of the party's MEPs had left. Others leaving included Peter Whittle, the party's top vote-winner on the London Assembly.

On 9 December 2018, before an important vote on Brexit legislation, UKIP led a "Brexit Betrayal" rally in central London fronted by Robinson, alongside prominent far-right groups.[138] By April 2019, of 24 UKIP MEPs elected in the 2014 European Election, only 4 remained members of UKIP.[139] Ten of these MEPs would later move to Nigel's Farage's new party, The Brexit Party, whilst O'Flynn defected to the SDP. Most others continued to sit as Independent MEPs.

By April 2019, the British government had agreed an extension to EU membership with the EU until 31 October 2019, which would mean the UK would take part in the 2019 European Parliament elections. Candidates selected by UKIP to run in the election included right-wing YouTube personalities, Carl Benjamin and Mark Meechan.[140] Benjamin had caused controversy by making "inappropriate" comments in 2016 about the rape threats to a female Labour MP Jess Phillips, with the UKIP Swindon Branch chair calling for him to be deselected.[141] Videos made by Benjamin in which he used racist terms also caused controversy.[142] In May, the 2019 United Kingdom local elections saw UKIP lose around 80% of the seats it was defending. The party was criticised for failing "to capitalise on the collapse of the Conservatives" by commentators.[143] In the European elections later that month, UKIP received 3.3% of the vote and lost all its remaining seats.[144]

On 2 June 2019, Batten resigned his post as party leader as he had promised if he lost his MEP position.[145] In the 2019 UKIP leadership election, Richard Braine was elected UKIP leader and attempted to appoint Batten as deputy leader.[146] Braine's attempt to appoint Batten as the party's deputy leader was blocked by its National Executive Committee (NEC). Braine was criticised in the press for comments he has made which were considered racist and offensive, including one incident in which he claimed he "often confused" London mayor Sadiq Khan with Mohammad Sidique Khan, one of the 7/7 terror attackers.[147] Braine later further came underfire when he announced he planned to boycott the September 2019 UKIP Party conference in Newport, after less than 450 tickets were sold for the conference. The Chairman of UKIP, Kirstan Herriot, stated to members that Braine had attempted to cancel the conference due to the low turnout and was highly critical of this attempted action.[148]

Internal instability (2019–present)

 
The UKIP logo used until 2022

In October 2019, UKIP underwent a leadership crisis in the run-up to its NEC elections after it suspended Braine's membership, and by extension, his eligibility to be party leader, over allegations of data theft from party databases. Three other members associated with Braine – Jeff Armstrong, the party's general secretary appointed by Braine; NEC candidate Mark Dent; and Tony Sharp – were also suspended.[149] In response, Braine accused the NEC of carrying out a purge of members.[150] All four members were reported to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau.[149] On 30 October 2019, Braine resigned as leader of the party. He cited "internal conflict" and an inability to "prevent a purge of good members from the party", referring to the NEC's decision to add "Integrity", an anti-Islam faction within UKIP supporting Tommy Robinson, Batten and Braine, to the party's proscribed list of organisations.[151]

On 7 November 2019, Welsh Assembly Member and UKIP group leader Gareth Bennett resigned from UKIP and chose to sit as an independent in the Welsh Assembly. He stated that he wanted to support Boris Johnson's Brexit deal. As a result, the sole remaining UKIP member of the Welsh Assembly was Neil Hamilton.[152]

On 16 November 2019, National Executive Committee member Patricia Mountain was appointed interim leader in preparation for the December general election and the upcoming UKIP leadership election.[153] Only 44 UKIP candidates stood in the December 2019 general election,[154] targeting constituencies that voted to leave the European Union in which the Brexit Party withdrew their candidates for the Conservatives or where the Conservative candidate was in favour of remaining in the EU. On 2 December 2019, Mountain appeared on Sky News for an interview with journalist Adam Boulton as a part of the launch of the election manifesto for UKIP; it lasted for eight minutes and the interview was described by the Evening Standard as a "car crash",[155] and there were reports that she was mistaken for the titular character of Catherine Tate's Nan.[156][157] Mountain was unable to name a single seat her party was contending and "accidentally called her party racist".[158] UKIP failed to win any seats it contested in the election and nationwide the party received only 22,817 votes (0.1% of the vote share). This result was the lowest the party had achieved in a general election in the party's history.[159] The party also failed to retain any deposits, only received more than 1,000 votes in two seats, and, in another two seats, finished behind the satirical Official Monster Raving Loony Party.[160]

In January 2020, David Kurten, UKIP's last remaining London Assembly Member, left UKIP to stand as an independent candidate in the 2020 London Assembly election and the 2020 London mayoral election. Kurten described the politics of both UKIP and the Brexit Party as needing "rebranding" once Britain left the EU on 31 January. Kurten's departure ended UKIP's presence on the London Assembly.[161]

In March 2020, according to a tweet by the former leader, Gerard Batten, the party was reported to be "close to insolvency".[158]

On 25 June 2020, Freddy Vachha was elected unopposed as leader.[162] He stated that the party "went astray quite a few years ago" and that under his leadership it would "return to our libertarian freedom-loving principles".[163] On 12 September 2020, it was reported that Vachha had been suspended from the party following a formal complaint of bullying and harassment. Later that day, UKIP Wales leader Neil Hamilton was made interim Leader.[162][164] Vachha argued a short time later that he was still leader, and that his suspension was unconstitutional, as he claimed to have appointed Marietta King as chairman in place of Ben Walker a few days earlier.[165] Vachha decided to take legal action, however in December a judge refused his request to fast-track the case. Vachha then dropped his legal case and was ordered to pay the party's legal costs.[166]

In the 2021 Senedd election, UKIP performed poorly and suffered a "complete collapse" of voter support, with the Conservative Party gaining a number of voters who had in previous elections voted UKIP. The party finished seventh with 1.56% of regional list votes.[167][168] Neil Hamilton, Interim UKIP leader and UKIP's sole MS in the Welsh Senedd lost his seat, ending any representation UKIP had outside of local government in England. In the Scottish Parliament election, the party received just 3,848 (0.14%) list votes across the whole country despite standing in every region in Scotland.[169] In the 2021 local elections, UKIP lost all the seats they were defending from the previous elections in those council areas. Furthermore, in the London mayoral election, the UKIP candidate, Peter Gammons, achieved 0.6% of the total vote, finishing 13th. The party finished ninth in the London Assembly election, down from fourth in 2016.[168][167][170][171]

After a period as acting leader, Hamilton was elected as leader in October 2021, receiving 498 votes of 631 cast (78.9%) against challenger John Poynton.[172][173] In the May 2023 local elections, they lost all of their remaining council seats leaving the party without representation at any level of UK government.[12]

Ideology and policies

Right-wing populism

UKIP is situated on the right-wing of the left–right political spectrum.[174] More specifically, academic political scientists and commentators have described UKIP as a right-wing populist party,[7] and as part of Europe's wider radical right.[175] The term populism refers to political groups which ideologically contrast "the people" against an elite or group of "dangerous others" whom the populists claim threaten the sovereignty of "the people",[176] and during its establishment in 1993, UKIP's founders explicitly described it as a populist party.[177] At the time, its "ideological heritage" lay within the right-wing of the Conservative Party,[178] and UKIP was influenced by the "Tory populism" of Conservative politicians Margaret Thatcher and Enoch Powell.[174]

 
Farage at the 2009 UKIP Conference

The political scientists Amir Abedi and Thomas Carl Lundberg characterised UKIP as an "Anti-Political Establishment" party.[179] The party's rhetoric presents the idea that there is a fundamental divide between the British population and the elite who govern the country.[180] UKIP claims to stand up for ordinary people against this political elite.[181] UKIP politician Bill Etheridge for instance claimed that his party represented "a democratic revolution... the people of Britain rising up and fighting to wrestle power from the elite".[182] Contributing to this anti-establishment message, Farage describes the party's supporters as "the People's Army",[183] and he regularly held photo-opportunities and journalistic interviews in a pub, thus cultivating an "erudite everyman" image that contrasted with his past as a commodities trader.[184]

UKIP uses recurring populist rhetoric—for instance by describing its policies as "common sense" and "straight talking"—in order to present itself as a straightforward alternative to the mainstream parties and their supposedly elusive and complex discourse.[181] UKIP presents the UK's three primary parties—the Conservatives, Labour, and Liberal Democrats—as being essentially interchangeable, referring to them with the portmanteau of "LibLabCon".[185] Farage accused all three parties of being social-democratic in ideology and "virtually indistinguishable from one another on nearly all the key issues".[186] Farage has also accused the Scottish National Party of being "the voice of anti-Englishness", suggesting that elements of the Scottish nationalist movement are "deeply racist, with a total hatred of the English".[187]

Nationalism and British unionism

 
UKIP espouses a form of British nationalism; it states that it is a "civic" rather than an "ethnic" nationalism, although this categorisation has been disputed by political scientists[188]

UKIP has always had the politics of national identity at its core.[189] The party is nationalist, and its "basic claim—that the highest priority for the British polity is to assure that it is fully governed by the national state—is a nationalist one."[190] The party describes its position as being that of civic nationalism, and in its manifesto explicitly rejects ethnic nationalism by encouraging support from Britons of all ethnicities and religions.[191] Rejecting claims that it is racist, both Sked and later Farage described UKIP as a "non-racist, non-sectarian party".[192] In UKIP's literature, the party has placed an emphasis on "restoring Britishness" and counteracting what it sees as a "serious existential crisis" exhibited by the "Islamification" of Britain, the "pseudo-nationalisms" of Wales, Scotland, and Ireland, and the multicultural and supranational policies promoted by "the cultural left", describing its own stance as being "unashamedly unicultural".[188] It has been suggested that this attitude compromises the party's claim that its form of British nationalism is civic and inclusive.[188]

UKIP considers itself to be a British unionist party,[193] although its support base is centred largely in England.[188] Farage has characterised his party's growth as "a very English rebellion",[194] and has described UKIP as "unashamedly patriotic, proud to be who we are as a nation".[195] The political scientist Richard Hayton argued that UKIP's British unionism reflects "Anglo-Britishness", a perspective that blurs the distinction between Britain and England.[178] With Mycock, Hayton argued that in conflating Englishness with Britishness, UKIP exhibited an "inherent Anglocentrism" that negates the distinct culture of the Scottish, Welsh, and Northern Irish peoples of the United Kingdom.[188] Hayton suggests that UKIP tap into "a vein of nostalgic cultural nationalism" within England,[196] and it has been noted that UKIP's discourse frames the image of Englishness in a nostalgic manner, harking back to the years before the collapse of the British Empire.[197]

UKIP has emphasised the need to correct what it perceives as the United Kingdom's imbalance against England resulting from the "West Lothian question" and the Barnett formula.[198] The party has mobilised English nationalist sentiment brought on by English concerns following the devolution within the UK and the rise of Welsh and Scottish nationalisms.[199] The party initially opposed federalism in the UK,[178] criticising the establishment of the Welsh Assembly and Scottish Parliament.[200] However, in September 2011 Farage and the NEC announced their support for the establishment of an English Parliament to accompany the other devolved governments.[198] In its 2015 manifesto, it promised to make St. George's Day and St. David's Day bank holidays in England and Wales, respectively.[201] Similarly, UKIP's 2017 manifesto pledged to declare 23 June British Independence Day and observe it annually as a national holiday.[202]

Euroscepticism, immigration, and foreign policy

UKIP embraces the ideology of hard Euroscepticism,[203] also known as "Eurorejectionism".[204] Opposition to the United Kingdom's continued membership of the European Union has been its "core issue" and is "central to the party's identity".[205] UKIP characterises the EU as a fundamentally undemocratic institution and stresses the need to regain what it describes as the UK's national sovereignty from the EU.[206] It presents the EU as being an exemplar of non-accountability, corruption, and inefficiency, and views it as being responsible for the "flooding" of the UK with migrants, in particular from Eastern Europe.[207] UKIP emphasises Euroscepticism to a far greater extent than any of Western Europe's other main radical right parties,[208] and it was only post-2010 that it began seriously articulating other issues.[209] Hayton nevertheless suggested that Euroscepticism still remains "the lens through which most of its other policy positions are framed and understood".[189]

 
UKIP placard on the side of the road in Starcross, Devon, declaring: "Say NO to European Union"

The party opposed the 2004 enlargement of the European Union into eastern Europe.[210] UKIP advocated leaving the European Union, stopping payments to the EU, and withdrawing from EU treaties, while maintaining trading ties with other European countries.[211] Initially, UKIP's policy was that, in the event of them winning a general election, it would remove the UK from the EU without a referendum on the issue.[98] The party leadership later suggested a referendum, expressing the view that in the case of an exit vote, it could negotiate favourable terms for the country's withdrawal, for instance through ensuring a free trade agreement between the UK and EU.[212][213] UKIP eventually committed to a referendum in their 2015 manifesto.[98] In contrast to involvement in the EU, UKIP has emphasised the UK's global connections, in particularly to member states of the Commonwealth of Nations.[214] UKIP rejected the description that they were "Europhobes", maintaining that its stance was anti-EU, not anti-European.[214]

UKIP has placed great emphasis on the issue of immigration to the UK,[215] and in 2013 Farage described it as "the biggest single issue facing this party".[216] UKIP attributes British membership of the EU as the core cause of immigration to the UK, citing the Union's open-border policies as the reason why large numbers of East European migrants have moved to Britain.[216] On their campaign billboards, UKIP have presented EU migrants as a source of crime, as well as a pressure on housing, the welfare state, and the health service.[217] Farage has emphasised not only the economic impact of migration but also the public anxieties regarding the cultural changes brought by immigration.[217] In its 2009 electoral manifesto, UKIP proposed a five-year ban on any migrants coming to the UK.[207] By 2015, it had modified this to the view that the five-year ban should apply only to unskilled migrants.[218] To regulate the arrival of skilled migrants, it called for the UK to adopt a points-based system akin to that employed by Australia.[219] It advocated the establishment of a watchdog to help curb immigration, and bring the levels of net annual immigration down from the hundreds of thousands to between 20,000 and 50,000, which was the average level in the UK between 1950 and 2000.[218] UKIP calls for all immigrants to require compulsory health insurance,[218] and proposes that migrants be barred from claiming any state benefits until they had been resident in the UK for at least five years.[220]

 
UKIP poster in Exeter in 2009: "Say NO to Unlimited Immigration"

UKIP gained traction from the fact that post-2008, immigration had come to the forefront of many Britons' minds as a result of increased EU migration and its concomitant social changes.[221] By the 2015 general election, the political scientists James Dennison and Matthew Goodwin argued, UKIP had secured "ownership" of the immigration issue among British voters, having secured it from the Conservatives.[222] However, the party's campaign against immigration has been accused of using racism and xenophobia to win votes.[223] Political scientist David Art suggested that in its campaign to restrict immigration, UKIP had "flirted with xenophobia",[224] while Daniel T. Dye stated that part of the party's appeal was its "sometimes-xenophobic populism",[225] and the journalist Daniel Trilling stated that UKIP tapped into the "anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim populism" that was popular in the late 2000s.[226] The political scientist Simon Usherwood stated that UKIP's hardening of immigration policy "risked reinforcing the party's profile as a quasi-far-right grouping",[227] elsewhere stating that the party was only held together by its opposition to the EU and immigration, suggesting that it had "no ideological coherence" beyond that.[100]

In its 2015 campaign, UKIP called for the foreign aid budget to be cut.[228] It has also advocated a 40% increase in the UK's national defence budget.[216] It opposes British military involvement in conflicts that are not perceived to be in the national interest, specifically rejecting the concept of regime change wars through humanitarian interventionism.[216] For instance, in 2014 it opposed the Cameron government's plans to intervene militarily against the government of Bashar al-Assad in the Syrian civil war.[229] In 2018, UKIP pledged to work with anti-EU populist group The Movement.[230] The party was known for its pro-Russia stance on foreign policy.[231]

Economic policy

"So what kind of party is UKIP? Ideologically, the party combines a mix of old-style liberal commitments to free markets, limited government and individual freedom with conservative appeals to national sovereignty and traditional social values."

— Political scientist Stephen Driver, 2011[232]

On economic policy, UKIP shares the main three parties' acceptance of the core principles of a capitalist market economy,[233] and the party is generally at ease with the global free market.[234] The academics Simon Winlow, Steve Hall, and James Treadwell commented that on economic issues, "UKIP wants to have its cake and eat it. It wants to retain the best bits of the market economy while discarding what it considers the negative outcomes of 21st-century neoliberalism."[235] They noted for instance that it wanted "free movement of capital" yet wanted to curtail "the free movement of workers across borders".[236]

On economic issues, UKIP's original activist base was largely libertarian, supporting an economically liberal approach.[237] Its economic libertarian views have been influenced by classical liberalism and Thatcherism, with Thatcher representing a key influence on UKIP's thought.[238] Farage has characterised UKIP as "the true inheritors" of Thatcher, claiming that the party never would have formed had Thatcher remained Prime Minister of the UK throughout the 1990s.[238] Winlow, Hall, and Treadwell suggested that a UKIP government would pursue "hard-core Thatcherism" on economic policy.[236] UKIP presents itself as a libertarian party,[239] and the political scientists David Deacon and Dominic Wring described it as articulating "a potent brand of libertarian populism".[240] However, commentators writing in The Spectator, The Independent, and the New Statesman have all challenged the description of UKIP as libertarian, highlighting its socially conservative and economically protectionist policies as being contrary to a libertarian ethos.[241][242][243]

UKIP would allow businesses to favour British workers over migrants,[244] and would repeal "much of" Britain's racial discrimination law, which was described as "shocking" by the Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government[245] and viewed as discriminatory by others.[246] However, Farage insisted that his comments regarding his party's policies on these matters had been "wilfully misinterpreted".[244] Although the party did not have an official stance on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, the party's former international trade spokesperson (Lord Dartmouth) and former health and social care spokesperson (Louise Bours) stated that they did wish the National Health Service to be included in the trade deal, according to the International Business Times.[247]

Social policy

In The Guardian, commentator Ed Rooksby described UKIP's approach to many social issues as being "traditionalist and socially conservative",[248] while political scientist Stephen Driver has referred to the party's appeals to "traditional social values".[232] UKIP opposed the introduction of same-sex marriage in the United Kingdom.[249] UKIP wants to repeal the Human Rights Act,[250] and remove Britain from both the European Convention on Refugees and the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).[251][252] On the repeal of Britain's signatory to the ECHR, UKIP would like to see a referendum on the reintroduction of the death penalty in the UK.[253]

In 2015, Farage attracted widespread press attention for suggesting that HIV positive patients who were not British citizens should not receive treatment on the NHS.[254] In that same speech he stated that the UK should put the NHS "there for British people and families, who in many cases have paid into the system for years".[254] Farage has spoken in favour of an insurance-based system in the past, which he said would resemble the French and Dutch style system rather than an American style private system, but this was rejected by the party. He has commented, "we may have to think about ways in the future about dealing with health care differently".[255] Critics of UKIP have claimed that the party's real desire is to dismantle and privatise the NHS,[256] a claim bolstered by the publication of leaked documents showing that in 2013 the UKIP NEC privately spoke positively of NHS privatisation.[257]

 
A UKIP candidate campaigning in the run-up to the 2010 general election

Although Farage had long been reticent about focusing on public anxieties surrounding Muslims in Britain, he spoke out following the Charlie Hebdo shooting, claiming that there was a "fifth column" of Islamists in the UK who—while "mercifully small" in number—were "out to destroy our whole civilisation".[258] At the same time he called for Western states to do more to promote their Judeo-Christian heritage,[258] and criticised state multiculturalism for promoting social segregation, discouraging integration, and generating a "tick-box approach" to identity politics.[258] In its 2017 manifesto, UKIP pledged to abolish the existence of sharia courts in the UK and ban the wearing of the niqab and burka in public; it claimed that these were needed to promote the integration of Muslims with wider British society.[259]

UKIP is the only major political party in the United Kingdom that does not endorse renewable energy and lower carbon emissions,[260] and its media output regularly promotes climate change denial.[261] Farage and other senior UKIP figures have repeatedly spoken out against the construction of wind farms, deeming them a blot on the rural landscape.[262] UKIP's media present renewable energy as inefficient and unaffordable,[261] and they promote the use of fossil fuels, nuclear energy and fracking.[263] UKIP has announced that it would repeal the Climate Change Act 2008 and has placed an emphasis on protecting the Green Belt.[264]

 
UKIP poster in Egham, Surrey, for the 2009 European elections

In its 2015 election manifesto, UKIP promised to teach a chronological understanding of "British history and achievements" in schools,[201] and it calls for the scrapping of sex education for children under 11.[265] UKIP would introduce an option for students to take an apprenticeship qualification instead of four non-core GCSEs which can be continued at A Level.[265] Schools would be investigated by OFSTED on the presentation of a petition to the Department for Education signed by 25% of parents or governors.[265] UKIP have promoted the scrapping of the government target that 50% of school leavers attend university, and present the policy that tuition fees would be scrapped for students taking approved degrees in science, medicine, technology, engineering or mathematics.[265]

Farage argued that British Overseas Territories like Gibraltar should have representatives in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, akin to the privileges given to French overseas territories in France. Farage believes that all citizens for whom the British Parliament passes legislation, whether in the United Kingdom or its territories, deserve democratic representation in that Parliament.[266]

Support

Financial backing

 
Tadley Town councillor and UKIP candidate for the Hampshire Police and Crime Commissioner, Stephen West, campaigning in Newport high street on the Isle of Wight in 2012.

In 2008, Usherwood noted that UKIP relied heavily on a small number of major financial backers.[267] According to The Guardian, a leaked internal report to UKIP's executive committee dated to September 2012 shows that the party's leader argued that "the key to money for us will be the hedge fund industry".[268]

According to UKIP's annual returns to the Electoral Commission,[269] in 2013 the party had a total income of £2,479,314. Of this, £714,492 was from membership and subscriptions, £32,115 from fundraising activities and £1,361,640 from donations. By law, individual donations over £7,500 must be reported.[270]

UKIP has several high-profile backers. In March 2009, the Conservative Party's biggest-ever donor, Stuart Wheeler, donated £100,000 to UKIP after criticising Cameron's stance towards the Treaty of Lisbon. He was then expelled from the Conservatives and in 2011 appointed treasurer of UKIP.[271] In October 2014, Arron Banks, who previously gave £25,000 to the Conservatives, increased his UKIP donation from £100,000 to £1 million after Hague said he had never heard of him.[272][273] The multi-millionaire Paul Sykes has helped finance the party, donating over £1 million to their 2014 campaign at the European Parliament.[274]

In December 2014, Richard Desmond, proprietor of Express Newspapers, donated £300,000 to UKIP.[73] Desmond had previously made the UKIP peer David Stevens his deputy chairman.[220][273] The donation indicated that Desmond's papers, the Daily Express, Sunday Express, Daily Star and Daily Star Sunday, would back UKIP in the 2015 general election.[275] Three weeks before the election, Desmond gave the party a further £1 million.[73][276]

In September 2016, the major UKIP donor, Arron Banks, said that UKIP would be "dead in the water" if Diane James did not become leader.[277] Following her departure after 18 days, Banks said that he would leave UKIP if Steven Woolfe was prevented from running for leader, and if two other members remained in the party: "If Neil Hamilton and Douglas Carswell [UKIP's only MP] remain in the party, and the NEC decide that Steven Woolfe cannot run for leader, I will be leaving Ukip".[278]

Membership

UKIP's membership numbers increased from 2002 to the time of the 2004 European Parliament election, before hovering around the 16,000 mark during the late 2000s.[17][279] In 2004, the party claimed 20,000 members, with this remaining broadly stable, and in June 2007 it had a recorded 16,700 members.[280] By July 2013, the figure had grown to 30,000[281] before ending the year at 32,447.[282] In 2014, the number was 36,000 on 22 April,[283] by 7 May reached 37,000[284] and on 19 May, less than a fortnight later and only three days before the 2014 European Parliament election, rose to 38,000.[285] In January 2015, UKIP membership was the fifth highest of British parties.[286][287]

Membership was 45,000 in May 2015, but since then has fallen to 32,757 in November 2016,[288] and as low as 18,000 under Henry Bolton by January 2018.[289]

In June 2018, four political activists known through social media – Paul Joseph Watson, Mark Meechan, Carl Benjamin, and Milo Yiannopoulos – joined the party. This was followed by the party gaining around five hundred members.[290]

In July 2018, it was reported the party had attracted 3,200 new members, a 15% increase.[291]

The party's report to The Electoral Commission of its accounts as of 31 December 2020 stated the party had a membership of 3,888.[4]

Voter base

UKIP's voters are not single-issue Europhobes or political protesters, they share a clear and distinct agenda, mixing deep Euroscepticism with clear ideas about immigration, national identity and the way British society is changing. The conflict between UKIP's voters and the political mainstream reflects a deep-seated difference in outlook among voters from different walks in life. Those who lead and staff the three main parties are all from the highly educated, socially liberal middle classes, who are comfortable in an ethnically and culturally diverse, outward looking society... Those who lead and staff UKIP, and those who vote for them, are older, less educated, disadvantaged and economically insecure Britons, who are profoundly uncomfortable in the 'new' society, which they regard as alien and threatening.

— Political scientists Robert Ford and Matthew Goodwin, 2014.[292]

In its early years, UKIP targeted itself towards southern English, middle-class Eurosceptic voters, those who had been supporters of the Conservative Party until John Major's Conservative government signed the Maastricht Treaty.[293] This led to the widespread perception that UKIP's supporters were primarily middle-class ex-Conservative voters, with commentator Peter Oborne characterising UKIP as "the Conservative Party in exile".[294]

After 2009, UKIP refocused its attention to appeal primarily to white British, working-class, blue-collar workers; those who had traditionally voted Labour or in some cases for Thatcher's Conservatives but who had ceased voting or begun to vote BNP since the emergence of the New Labour project in the 1990s.[293] In this way, UKIP's support base does not line up with the historical left-right divide in British politics, instead being primarily rooted in class divisions.[295] This mirrored the voting base of other radical right parties across Western Europe which had grown since the early 1990s.[296] This scenario had come about following the rapid growth of the middle-classes and the concomitant decline of the working-class population in Western Europe; the centre-left, social-democratic parties who had traditionally courted the support of the working classes largely switched their attention to the newly emergent middle-classes, leaving their initial support base increasingly alienated and creating the vacuum which the radical right exploited.[297]

On the basis of their extensive study of data on the subject, in 2014 the political scientists Matthew Goodwin and Robert Ford concluded that "UKIP's support has a very clear social profile, more so than any of the mainstream parties. Their electoral base is old, male, working class, white and less educated".[298] They found that 57% of professed UKIP supporters were over the age of 54, while only one in ten were under 35, which they attributed to the fact that UKIP's socially conservative and Eurosceptic platform appealed far more to Britain's older generations that their younger counterparts, who were more socially liberal and less antagonistic towards the EU.[299]

57% of UKIP supporters were male, which Ford and Goodwin suggested was due to women voters being put off by a number of high-profile sexist remarks made by UKIP candidates.[300] 99.6% of UKIP supporters identified as white, reflecting the fact that ethnic minorities tended to avoid the party.[301] 55% of UKIP supporters had left school aged 16 or under, with only 24% having attended university, suggesting that the party primarily appealed to the least educated voters in society.[302] Ford and Goodwin also found that UKIP's support base was more working-class than that of any other party, with 42% of supporters in blue-collar jobs.[303] Ford and Goodwin described UKIP's voters as primarily comprising the "left behind" sector of society, "older, less skilled and less well educated working-class voters" who felt disenfranchised from the mainstream political parties which had increasingly focused on attracting the support of middle-class swing voters.[304]

Ford and Goodwin nevertheless noted that UKIP was "not a purely blue-collar party but an alliance of manual workers, employers and the self-employed."[305] Geoffrey Evans and Jon Mellon highlighted that UKIP receive "a greater proportion of their support from lower professionals and managers" than from any other class group.[306] They highlighted that polls repeatedly demonstrated that UKIP drew more votes from Conservative voters than Labour ones.[307] They suggested that the assumption that working-class voters who supported UKIP had previously been Labour voters was misplaced,[308] suggesting that these people had ceased voting for Labour "a long time before UKIP were an effective political presence", having been alienated by Labour's "pro-middle class, pro-EU and, as it eventually turned out, pro-immigration agenda".[309] In 2011, Goodwin, Ford, and David Cutts published a study that identified Euroscepticism as the main causal factor for voters supporting UKIP, with concern over immigration levels and distrust of the political establishment also featuring as important motives.[310] They noted, however, that during elections for the European Parliament, UKIP was able to broaden its support to gain the vote of largely middle-class Eurosceptics who vote Conservative in other elections.[311]

Ukip has become more than the single issue on which it was founded: under Farage's leadership it has become a welcoming home for the many in British society who feel that 'the system' isn't working for them, or has left them behind, economically, socially or politically. In so doing, it has gained supporters from across the political spectrum, including many old Labour voters in economically distressed regions of the country.

— Political scientist Simon Usherwood, 2016.[100]

From their analysis of the data, Ford and Goodwin stated that UKIP's support base has "strong parallels" both with that of Western Europe's other radical right parties and with the BNP during their electoral heyday.[312] Conversely, an earlier study by Richard Whitaker and Philip Lynch, based on polling data from YouGov, concluded that UKIP voters were distinct from those of far-right parties. The authors found that voter support for UKIP correlated with concerns about the value of immigration and a lack of trust in the political system, but the biggest explanatory factor for their support of UKIP was Euroscepticism.[313] A further study by the same authors suggests that UKIP voters' core beliefs align very closely to those of the UKIP candidates; particularly so on issues surrounding European integration, which has resulted in Conservative voters switching to UKIP due to Conservative divisions on this issue.[314] One study found that 63% of UKIP voters considered themselves to be right-wing, while 22% thought centrist and 16% thought leftist.[315] 81% believed that immigration undermined British culture, a view shared by only half the wider British population.[316] On economic issues, there was a divide between UKIP voters and the party itself.[317] In contrast to the party's economic liberalism, UKIP supporters often held more leftist attitudes to the economy, with almost 80% opining that big business took advantage of working people and almost 70% thinking that privatisation had gone too far.[318]

UKIP has been most successful along England's eastern and southern coasts, in parts of south-west England, and in the Labour heartlands of Northern England and Wales.[319] It has not done well in London and in university towns and urban areas with younger populations like Oxford, Cambridge, Manchester, and Brighton.[320] It has done well in areas with large numbers of old, white, and poorer people, and weaker in areas with larger numbers of younger, more ethnically and culturally diverse, and financially secure people.[319] Ford and Goodwin noted that UKIP "barely registers" with young Britons, graduates, ethnic minorities, and pro-EU voters.[321] According to an Opinium poll in December 2014 on the views of 17- to 22-year-olds, Farage was the least popular political leader. Only 3% of young people questioned said that they intended to vote for UKIP, compared with 19% among voters of all ages.[322] The 17% who said they would vote outside the three main parties were four times more likely to vote for the Green Party than for UKIP.[323] Conversely, a March 2015 Ipsos Mori poll found among 18- to 34-year-olds UKIP was polling nearly as well as the Green Party, somewhat contradicting the idea that Farage lacked appeal for younger voters.[324] On the basis of their fieldwork among supporters of the English Defence League (EDL), an anti-Islam social movement, Winlow, Hall, and Treadwell noted that most EDL supporters whom they encountered intended to vote for UKIP in the build-up to the 2015 general election.[325]

UKIP supporters are sometimes nicknamed "kippers". In May 2017, in response to large defections from the party, Goodwin said "Former Kippers did not walk but literally sprinted over to the Conservatives."[326]

Organisation

Leadership

Leader of the UK Independence Party
 
Incumbent
Neil Hamilton
since 18 October 2021
Term lengthFour years
Inaugural holderAlan Sked
Formation3 September 1993
DeputyPat Mountain

According to Part VII of the UKIP constitution, the party leader is voted for by postal ballot by all paid-up party members "in good standing". The winner is the candidate with the simple majority of votes cast. If there is only one valid candidate for the position, they are elected without the need for a ballot. While the default term length is four years, the leader can obtain an extension of up to a year if there is an imminent General or European Parliament election; this must be approved by at least two-thirds of the 12-person National Executive Committee (NEC). If at least nine NEC members endorse a vote of no confidence in the leader, an Emergency General Meeting (EGM) will be called. When the leadership becomes vacant unexpectedly, the NEC has fourteen days to name an interim leader who exercises all leadership functions until the next leadership election. The leader has the power to name a Deputy Leader of their own choice and assign them whatever duty they choose.[327]

Leader Took office Left office Notes
1 Alan Sked 3 September 1993 July 1997 Party founder; left party in 1997
Craig Mackinlay was acting leader during this interim
2 Michael Holmes September 1997 22 January 2000 MEP 1999–2002; left party in 2000
3 Jeffrey Titford 22 January 2000 5 October 2002 MEP 1999–2009
4 Roger Knapman 5 October 2002 12 September 2006 MEP 2004–2009
5 Nigel Farage 12 September 2006 27 November 2009 Former chairman; MEP from 1999; left party in 2018
6 The Lord Pearson of Rannoch 27 November 2009 2 September 2010 Member of House of Lords; left the party in 2019
Jeffrey Titford was acting leader during this interim
(5) Nigel Farage 5 November 2010 16 September 2016
7 Diane James 16 September 2016 4 October 2016[N 1] Leader-elect, MEP 2014–2019; left party in 2016
Nigel Farage was acting leader during this interim
8 Paul Nuttall 28 November 2016 9 June 2017 Deputy leader 2010–2016; MEP 2009–2019; left party in 2018
Steve Crowther was acting leader during this interim
9 Henry Bolton 29 September 2017 17 February 2018 Left party in 2018
Gerard Batten was acting leader during this interim
10 Gerard Batten 14 April 2018 2 June 2019 MEP 2004–2019
Piers Wauchope was acting leader during this interim
11 Richard Braine 10 August 2019 30 October 2019 Suspended from party in October 2019; subsequently resigned as leader
Patricia Mountain was acting leader during this interim until 25 April 2020[153]
Leadership was vacant until 22 June 2020
12 Freddy Vachha 22 June 2020 12 September 2020 Chairman of UKIP London, Leadership candidate in 2019. Suspended from party on 12 September 2020
13 Neil Hamilton 12 September 2020 Incumbent Initially served as interim leader:[329] substantiated on 19 October 2021[173]

Timeline

Neil HamiltonFreddy VachhaPatricia MountainRichard BrainePiers WauchopeGerard BattenHenry BoltonSteve CrowtherPaul NuttallDiane JamesThe Lord Pearson of RannochNigel FarageRoger KnapmanJeffrey TitfordMichael HolmesCraig MackinlayAlan Sked

Deputy leadership

Deputy Leader Tenure Notes
1 Craig Mackinlay 1997–2000 Left party in 2005
2 Graham Booth 2000–02 MEP 2002–2008; died 2011
3 Mike Nattrass 2002–06 MEP 2004–2014; left party in 2013
4 David Campbell Bannerman 2006–10 MEP since 2009; left party in 2011
5 The Viscount Monckton of Brenchley Jun–Nov 2010 Leader of UKIP in Scotland, 2013
6 Paul Nuttall 2010–16 MEP since 2009; left party in 2018
7 Peter Whittle 2016–17 London AM since 2016; left party in 2018
8 Margot Parker 2017–18 MEP 2014–2019; left party in 2019
9 Mike Hookem 2018–19 MEP 2014–2019
10 Pat Mountain 2020 Interim Leader 2019, NEC Member
12 Rebecca Jane 2022–

Party chairman

Chairman Tenure Notes
1 Nigel Farage 1998–2000 Later became Party Leader
2 Mike Nattrass 2000–02
3 David Lott 2002–04
4 Petrina Holdsworth 2004–05
5 David Campbell Bannerman 2005–06
6 John Whittaker 2006–08
7 Paul Nuttall 2008–2010 Later became Party Leader
8 Steve Crowther 2010–2016
9 Paul Oakden 2016–18
10 Tony McIntyre 2018
11 Kirstan Herriot 2018–2019
12 Ben Walker 2020–

Spokespersons

The front bench team is divided into departmental sub-units, the principal ones being the economy, foreign policy and immigration. Sometimes the front bench team consists of more than just the principal positions.

Regions

UKIP's organisation is divided into twelve regions: London, South East, South West, Eastern, East Midlands, West Midlands, Yorkshire, North East, North West, Wales, Northern Ireland, and Scotland.[330] An additional, thirteenth branch, operates in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar; it held its first public meeting at the Lord Nelson pub in April 2013.[331]

At the end of 2013, UKIP Scotland was dissolved after infighting tore the regional party apart; the party's administrative body was dissolved, Mike Scott-Hayward (the chairman and chief fundraiser) quit, and Farage fired Lord Christopher Monckton via email.[332] The national party and UKIP Scotland focused on supporting the candidates for the 2014 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom.[332] After David Coburn won an MEP seat in Scotland in those elections, he was elected as leader of UKIP Scotland.[333]

Veteran and former long-serving Antrim and Newtownabbey-based councillor, Robert Hill was appointed by Gerard Batten as UKIP's Spokesman for Northern Ireland in May 2018.[334] In August 2018, Welsh Assembly Member Gareth Bennett was elected as leader of UKIP in Wales after a membership ballot.[335]

Representatives

House of Commons

 
 
Douglas Carswell and Mark Reckless, UKIP's only elected MPs. The former represented UKIP from 2014 to 2017; the latter from 2014 to 2015.

In the UK, the first-past-the-post voting system for electing MPs to the House of Commons was a significant barrier to UKIP, whose support was widely distributed across different areas rather than being strongly focused in particular constituencies.[336] Further, the system encouraged tactical voting, with many UKIP supporters believing that a vote for the party would be a wasted vote.[337] Recognising this, Farage believed that the best way to win a seat in the House of Commons was to win a by-election, with UKIP contesting a number of these from 2010 onward.[338] Over the next few years, it contested a number of by-elections around the country, coming second in both Barnsley Central and Rotherham.[339] In 2008, Bob Spink, the MP for Castle Point, resigned the Tory whip (becoming an Independent), but in April that year joined UKIP.[340] However, in November he appeared again as an Independent in Commons proceedings,[341] ultimately losing the seat to a Conservative in 2010.

In 2014, two Conservative MPs changed allegiance to UKIP and resigned their seats to fight by-elections for UKIP. Douglas Carswell won the Clacton by-election on 9 October, making him the first MP to be elected representing UKIP.[342] Mark Reckless was also victorious in the Rochester and Strood by-election on 20 November.[84] At the 2015 general election, Carswell kept his seat in Clacton but Reckless lost Rochester to the Conservative Kelly Tolhurst.[343] UKIP had 3,881,129 votes (12.6%) and was the third largest party on vote share, yet it won only one seat.[344] Because of this, there were calls from some in UKIP for a voting reform in favour of proportional representation.[345] Carswell quit the party in March 2017 to become an independent, leaving UKIP without any MPs in the Commons.[104] In the 2017 election, a snap election initiated by PM Theresa May and scheduled for 8 June 2017, UKIP got 1.9% of the votes (after 12.6% in the 2015 election) and no seats in the House of Commons.

House of Lords

On 24 June 1995, UKIP gained its first member of the House of Lords, The Lord Grantley, who had joined the party in 1993 from the Conservatives and had recently succeeded to his father's titles. However, with the coming House of Lords Act 1999, he decided not to stand for election as a continuing member, and so left the House in November 1999. Earlier in 1999, UKIP had gained a second peer in the House of Lords, The Earl of Bradford, but he, too, left the House in November 1999 because of the House of Lords Act. The Lord Pearson of Rannoch and The Lord Willoughby de Broke both defected to UKIP in 2007,[346] giving the party its first representation in the House of Lords since the departure of Lord Grantley and Lord Bradford.[347] The Lord Pearson of Rannoch went on to serve as party leader from November 2009 to September 2010. On 18 September 2012, The Lord Stevens of Ludgate joined UKIP, having sat as an Independent Conservative since his expulsion from the Conservatives in 2004.[348] In Autumn 2018, Lord Willoughby de Broke left UKIP, reducing the party's representation in the upper house back down to two.[349] Lord Stevens also left the party, in December 2018, leaving former leader Lord Pearson as UKIP's sole peer.[350] In October 2019, Lord Pearson resigned his membership of the party.

Devolved parliaments and assemblies

UKIP competes electorally in all four parts of the United Kingdom.[178]

Northern Ireland

In October 2012, UKIP gained its first representation in a devolved Assembly the Northern Ireland Assembly in David McNarry, MLA for Strangford, who had left the Ulster Unionist Party.[351] The party however failed to continue its representation at the 2016 election, coming within a hundred votes of taking a seat in East Antrim.[352] This seat was unsuccessfully contested in the 2017 election.

Scotland

UKIP's support has been particularly weak in Scotland, where it has no representatives in the devolved parliament.[353] UKIP fielded candidates at the Scottish Parliament election on 5 May 2011, when its platform included a commitment to keep the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh, while replacing the separately-elected Members of the Scottish Parliament with the Members of the House of Commons elected in Scotland.[354] The party fielded candidates on the regional lists in the 2016 election without any success.[355] In the 2021 Scottish Parliament election candidates were again fielded on regional lists.[356]

Wales

The party also fielded candidates for the Senedd.[357] In the 2016 election, it entered the Assembly for the first time, winning seven of 60 seats.[358] However, following the resignations of Caroline Jones, Mark Reckless, Nathan Gill and Michelle Brown, by March 2019 the party's representation had fallen to three AMs.[359] UKIP ceased to have a formal Welsh Assembly group after David Rowlands resigned in May 2019 to form a new Brexit Party group with Reckless, Jones and Mandy Jones (who had replaced Nathan Gill on his resignation as an AM).[360] UKIP were left without any Senedd members after the 2021 Senedd election[361]

Local government

 
UKIP office in Tunbridge Wells

UKIP initially paid little attention to local government elections. However, this changed after Farage observed that building localised strongholds of support in various parts of the country had been the process by which the Liberal Democrats had entered the House of Commons, and that this was a strategy that could benefit UKIP.[362] UKIP subsequently focused on the 2011 local elections, in which it fielded over 1,100 candidates, winning seven seats and becoming the main opposition in over 100.[363]

The first UKIP local council election win occurred when one of its members was elected to South Cambridgeshire District Council in 2000. A number of Conservative, Liberal Democrat, Labour and Independent local councillors in all four constituent nations of the UK defected to UKIP over subsequent years, with the most recent defections to date (May to July 2013) coming from former Conservative councillors in the London Boroughs of Merton, Richmond upon Thames and Havering, and from Labour in Northampton and North-East Lincolnshire. In May 2013, 33 English and one Welsh council held local elections, with UKIP gaining 139 seats for a total of 147, with significant gains in Lincolnshire, Norfolk and Kent.[364]

In the 2013 local elections, UKIP won 147 seats and established itself as the largest opposition party in six English county councils.[365] At the 2013 and 2014 local elections, UKIP made significant gains to become the fourth largest party in terms of councillors in England, and fifth largest in the UK, with over 300 seats (out of about 21,000). In the 2015 local elections, UKIP took control of Thanet District Council, its first majority control of a council.[366] However, the party lost control later in the year after several of its councillors defected and it lost its majority. UKIP later took back control as a majority after winning the 2016 Northwood ward by-election, taking its number of councillors up to 29. In the 2016 local elections, UKIP won 58 council seats, an increase of 25.[367] In the 2017 United Kingdom local elections, UKIP lost all of the seats it was defending but gained one from Labour on Lancashire County Council.[106] in the 2018 United Kingdom local elections, UKIP lost all but 3 of the 126 seats it was defending.[368] In the 2019 United Kingdom local elections, UKIP suffered severe losses, with its number of councillors collapsing by 145 to 31, in the districts where votes were held that year. Its worst result was in Thanet where it lost 33 councillors.[369]

In the 2021 United Kingdom local elections the party's support fell away and all the 48 council seats in England the party were defending were lost. No seats were won in the London Assembly, Police and Crime Commissioners or elections for Mayors.[370] The 2022 local elections saw the party lose all three seats it was defending from 2018.[371]

European Parliament

As a result of its hard Eurosceptic approach, UKIP does not recognise the legitimacy of the European Parliament, and under Sked's leadership refused to take any of the EP seats that it won.[372] This changed after 1997, when the party decided that its elected representatives would take such seats to publicise its anti-EU agenda.[372] As a result of the 1999 European parliament election, three UKIP MEPs were elected to the European Parliament. Together with Eurosceptic parties from other nations, they formed a new European parliamentary group called Europe of Democracies and Diversities (EDD).[373]

 
Farage with France Arise leader Nicolas Dupont-Aignan in Strasbourg, February 2013

Following the 2004 European parliament election, 37 MEPs from the UK, Poland, Denmark and Sweden founded a new European Parliamentary group called Independence and Democracy as a direct successor to the EDD group.[374] After the 2009 European parliament election, UKIP was a founder member of a new right-wing grouping called Europe of Freedom and Democracy (EFD) comprising Eurosceptic, radical right, nationalist, national-conservative and other political factions.[375] This group was more right-wing than the previous term's Independence and Democracy group.[376]

Following the 2014 European parliament election, the EFD group was reconstituted as the Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy (EFDD or EFD2) group on 24 June 2014, with a significant changes to group composition, including the Five Star Movement of Italy, a total of 48 members.[377][378] The EFDD group lost official status in October 2014 when the defection of the Latvian MEP Iveta Grigule meant its membership no longer met the required number of states for Parliamentary groups (at least seven different member states).[379][380] On 20 October, the EFDD announced it had restored the requisite seven state diversity by recruiting Robert Iwaszkiewicz, one of four representatives of the far-right Polish party Congress of the New Right.[379][381] In December 2014 UKIP co-founded the Alliance for Direct Democracy in Europe, a European political party whose membership is composed of several member parties of the EFDD parliamentary group.[382]

In the 2009–14 parliament, UKIP ranked 76th out of 76 for attendance, took part in 61% of votes, and had three of the six lowest attending MEPs,[383] which led to criticism from other parties and ex-UKIP MEPs that low participation may damage British interests.[384] Between July 2014 and May 2015, its 23 MEPs maintained their record as the least active, participating on average in only 62.29% of votes.[385] In response to criticism of low participation by UKIP MEPs in the EU Parliament, Farage has said that "Our objective as MEPs is not to keep voting endlessly for more EU legislation and to take power away from Westminster."[386]

Members of the European Parliament

UKIP had no members in the European Parliament following the 2019 EU election. Twenty-four UKIP representatives were elected in the 2014 election, but twenty subsequently defected, one was expelled[387] and three lost their seats in the 2019 election.[388] For a full list of defections see here.

James Carver left UKIP to sit as an independent on 28 May 2018.[389] William Dartmouth left the party on 26 September 2018 to sit as an independent, accusing Batten of "hijacking the party to campaign against Islam as a religion" and associating himself with "outlandish people and extreme right-wing groups".[390] Bill Etheridge followed shortly afterwards, on 2 October 2018, saying that the party under Batten's leadership "is seen by voters as a vehicle of hate towards Muslims and the gay community".[391]

In November 2018, Patrick O'Flynn resigned to join the Social Democratic Party in protest over UKIP's move to the "hard right",[392] and Louise Bours became an independent MEP.[393] Former leader Nigel Farage quit on 6 December 2018,[394] as did Scottish MEP David Coburn.[395] Another former leader, Paul Nuttall, quit the party the following day, as did London Assembly Member Peter Whittle.[396] It was reported that Tim Aker had also quietly quit the party earlier in 2018.[397] Julia Reid announced her resignation from UKIP on 8 December 2018,[398] with Jonathan Bullock following the next day.[399] Jill Seymour, Jane Collins and Margot Parker left for the Brexit Party on 15 April 2019, with the first of those three citing the party's current direction and occupation of 'the extreme right of politics'[400] and the second citing Batten's 'sick' defence of Carl Benjamin's rape comments.[401] On 17 April, Jonathan Arnott and Ray Finch both defected to The Brexit Party and, along with Seymour, Collins and Parker, sat in the EFDD group.[402]

As of April 2019, Batten and Agnew were members of the Europe of Nations and Freedom group in the European Parliament[403] while Hookem was Non-Inscrit (unattached). All lost their seats in the European Parliament in June 2019.

Election results

European Parliament elections

Election year Leader # of total votes % of overall vote # of seats won Outcome
1994 Alan Sked 150,251 #8th   1.0%  
0 / 87
 
No seats
1999 Jeffrey Titford 696,057 #4th   6.5%  
3 / 87
 
Opposition
2004 Roger Knapman 2,650,768 #3rd   15.6%  
12 / 87
 
Opposition
2009 Nigel Farage 2,498,226 #2nd   16%  
13 / 87
 
Opposition
2014 Nigel Farage 4,352,251 #1st   27.5%  
24 / 87
 
Opposition
2019 Gerard Batten 554,463 #8th   3.2%  
0 / 87
 
No seats

General elections

During the 2010–15 Parliament, two Conservative MPs defected to UKIP and were re-elected in subsequent by-elections. At the 2015 general election, UKIP retained one of these seats (Clacton) and received over 30% of the vote in Boston and Skegness, South Thanet, Heywood and Middleton, Thurrock and Rochester and Strood. It lost its only seat in the 2017 election, when Clacton was regained by the Conservatives.

Election year Leader # of total votes % of overall vote # of seats won Outcome
1997[404] Alan Sked 105,722   0.3%  
0 / 659
 
No seats
2001[405] Jeffrey Titford 390,563   1.5%  
0 / 659
 
No seats
2005[406] Roger Knapman 603,298   2.2%  
0 / 646
 
No seats
2010[407] Lord Pearson 919,546   3.1%  
0 / 650
 
No seats
2015[408] Nigel Farage 3,881,099   12.6%  
1 / 650
 
Opposition
2017[409] Paul Nuttall 593,852   1.8%  
0 / 650
 
No seats
2019 Patricia Mountain

(interim leader)[153]

22,817   0.1%  
0 / 650
 
No seats

Reception

Other political groups

In campaigning on emotive issues, UKIP has proved divisive.[410] Popular stereotypes have framed it as a far-right party,[315] and portrayed its activists as old white men holding offensive views.[411] The party has faced vocal opposition from anti-fascist groups such as Hope not Hate, who have accused it of tapping into nationalist and xenophobic sentiment in its campaigns.[412] Writing for The New York Times Magazine, Geoffrey Wheatcroft noted that there had been "a concerted campaign to brand UKIP as racist, an accusation that some of its own activists have done nothing to discourage."[413] Goodwin and Caitlin Milazzo highlighted that Farage had been "routinely ridiculed and dismissed", at best being portrayed as "a beer-swilling populist who wanted to drag Britain back to the 1950s" while at worst depicted as "a racist... would-be demagogue" who secretly wanted to overthrow the UK's liberal parliamentary democracy.[414]

For many years, mainstream political figures derided or demeaned the importance of UKIP, although this did little to obstruct its electoral advances.[415] By 2014, at which point UKIP was securing significant electoral support in the European Parliamentary elections, the main parties began to take it more seriously and devoted more time to countering the electoral threat it posed to them, in turn drawing more journalistic attention to the party.[416] This increased attention gave the party the "oxygen of publicity" which helped bring the party to the attention of previously inattentive voters.[417] Many on Britain's centre-left have been reluctant to accept that UKIP was hindering public support for Labour, instead believing that they were primarily a problem for the Conservatives and would thus help produce a Labour victory.[418][419] Labour found that their campaign strategy of accusing UKIP of racism backfired, as rather than distancing UKIP supporters from the party it contributed to the perception that Labour failed to understand widespread concerns regarding immigration.[420] A December 2014 poll by ComRes found that voters saw UKIP as closer to the centre-ground of politics than the Conservatives.[421]

Media and academia

The British press have publicised statements made by UKIP activists and candidates which have been regarded as racist, sexist or otherwise bigoted.[422] Among the examples of UKIP representatives and supporters embarrassing the party have been an MEP who called for a ban on the construction of mosques and for all British Muslims to sign a code of conduct, a councillor who suggested that shops should be allowed to refuse service to women and homosexuals, and a council candidate who compared Islam to Nazism and told black comedian Lenny Henry to leave Britain after the latter called for greater ethnic diversity within the UK's creative industries.[423] In 2015, a documentary called Meet the Ukippers filmed activists making racist statements; one said "the only people I do have a problem with are negroes".[218] For many years such individuals were internally tolerated within the party, although as part of Farage's push to professionalise the party a number of its members, such as MEP Godfrey Bloom, were expelled for making comments that brought UKIP into disrepute.[424] In 2018, Jo Marney—who was then the girlfriend of the party leader Henry Bolton—was suspended from UKIP after it was revealed that she had sent texts stating that black Africans were "ugly". In these messages, she had criticised Meghan Markle for marrying into the British royal family, stating that Markle was "a dumb little commoner" and "a black American. Pushing their way to the top slowly. Next will be a Muslim PM and a black king."[425]

 
Farage talking to the media in 2012

In a May 2014 YouGov survey, 47% considered the media to be biased against UKIP, which was double the percentage who deemed the media biased against any other party.[426][423] The BBC received almost 1,200 complaints about its coverage of the 2014 European and local elections; 149 claimed that the BBC were biased against UKIP, while the rest claimed that it gave disproportionate attention to the party. The BBC defended its coverage.[427] Farage accused the BBC of a "liberal bias", particularly on issues of immigration, the EU, and climate change.[428]

David Deacon and Dominic Wring's examination of press coverage of UKIP during their 2014 campaign demonstrated that of the elite newspapers, the pro-EU titles The Guardian and The Observer gave the most coverage to perceived racist and intolerant aspects of the party, while the Eurosceptic titles The Times and The Sunday Times instead focused on questioning the propriety and integrity of UKIP representatives.[429] Among the populist tabloids, The Sun/Sun on Sunday and the Daily Mirror/Sunday Mirror were found to contain the most negative coverage of UKIP, while the Daily Express and Sunday Express—owned by UKIP donor Richard Desmond—gave significantly lower coverage to the gaffes and prejudices of UKIP representatives.[429] Deacon and Wring noted that the majority of those right-wing newspapers that share UKIP's views on immigration also share the perspective of more liberal newspapers that many of UKIP's interventions are racist.[430] This right-wing press opposition to UKIP may result from the allegiance that these newspapers have to the Conservatives, and resulting perception of UKIP as an electoral threat.[430]

Academic research has been carried out into UKIP. In 2016, it was noted that most of this had focused on examining the party's electoral support base, its consequences for other parties, and the possibilities and prospects of a referendum on continued EU membership, with little having focused on an examination of the party's policies.[431] Two currents have emerged among those seeking to interpret UKIP: the first, and generally older, current views them as a manifestation of Britain's strong Eurosceptic movement, while the second seeks to explain their position in the British parliamentary system while drawing upon the comparative literature on right-wing populist parties elsewhere in Europe.[432]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Diane James won the September 2016 leadership election but resigned 18 days later, prior to taking office. As the relevant paperwork required by the Electoral Commission was not completed before her resignation, legally Farage remained the leader of UKIP during James's tenure.[328] Farage continued to act as interim leader of UKIP until the November 2016 election.

References

Citations

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independence, party, ukip, juː, eurosceptic, right, wing, populist, political, party, united, kingdom, party, reached, greatest, level, success, 2010s, when, gained, members, parliament, largest, party, representing, european, parliament, party, currently, nei. The UK Independence Party UKIP ˈ juː k ɪ p YOO kip is a Eurosceptic right wing populist political party in the United Kingdom The party reached its greatest level of success in the mid 2010s when it gained two members of Parliament and was the largest party representing the UK in the European Parliament The party is currently led by Neil Hamilton UK Independence PartyAbbreviationUKIPLeaderNeil Hamilton 1 ChairmanBen WalkerGeneral SecretaryTom Harrison 2 FounderAlan SkedFounded3 September 1993 29 years ago 1993 09 03 Preceded byAnti Federalist LeagueHeadquartersHenleaze Business Centre 13 Harbury Road Henleaze Bristol BS9 4PN 3 Youth wingYoung IndependenceMembership 2020 3 888 4 IdeologyEuroscepticism 5 6 Right wing populism 6 7 National conservatism 8 Economic liberalism 6 British nationalism 9 Political positionRight wing 10 to far right 11 European Parliament groupEurope of Democracies and Diversities 1999 2004 Independence Democracy 2004 2009 Europe of Freedom and Democracy 2009 2014 Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy 2014 2018 Alliance for Direct Democracy in Europe 2014 2017 Europe of Nations and Freedom 2019 Colours Purple GoldSlogan People not politics Local government 12 0 19 698Websiteukip wbr orgPolitics of the United KingdomPolitical partiesElectionsUKIP originated as the Anti Federalist League a single issue Eurosceptic party established in London by Alan Sked in 1991 It was renamed UKIP in 1993 but its growth remained slow It was largely eclipsed by the Eurosceptic Referendum Party until the latter s 1997 dissolution In 1997 Sked was ousted by a faction led by Nigel Farage who became the party s preeminent figure In 2006 Farage officially became leader and under his direction the party adopted a wider policy platform and capitalised on concerns about rising immigration in particular among the White British working class This resulted in significant breakthroughs at the 2013 local elections 2014 European Parliamentary elections and 2015 general election After the UK voted to leave the EU in the 2016 Brexit Referendum Farage stepped down as UKIP leader later joining the Brexit Party UKIP subsequently saw its vote share and membership heavily decline losing almost all of its elected representatives amid much internal instability and a drift toward a far right anti Islam message Ideologically positioned on the right wing of British politics UKIP is characterised by political scientists as a right wing populist party UKIP s primary emphasis has been on Euroscepticism calling for the United Kingdom s exit from the European Union EU It promotes a British unionist and British nationalist agenda encouraging a unitary British identity in opposition to growing Welsh Irish and Scottish nationalisms UKIP has also placed emphasis on lowering immigration rejecting multiculturalism and opposing what it calls the Islamification of Britain Influenced by Thatcherism and classical liberalism it describes itself as economically libertarian and promotes liberal economic policies On social issues such as LGBT rights education policy and criminal justice it is traditionalist Having an ideological heritage stemming from the right wing of the Conservative Party it distinguishes itself from the mainstream political establishment through heavy use of populist rhetoric for example through Farage s description of its supporters as the People s Army Governed by its leader and National Executive Committee UKIP is divided into twelve regional groups While gaining electoral support from various sectors of British society psephologists established that at its height UKIP s primary voting base consisted of older working class white men living in England UKIP has faced a critical reception from mainstream political parties much of the media and anti fascist groups Its discourse on immigration and cultural identity generated accusations of racism and xenophobia both of which it denies Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation and early years 1991 2004 1 2 Growing visibility 2004 2014 1 3 Entering mainstream politics 2014 2016 1 4 Decline 2016 present 1 4 1 Downward turn 2016 2018 1 4 2 Association with the far right 2018 2019 1 4 3 Internal instability 2019 present 2 Ideology and policies 2 1 Right wing populism 2 2 Nationalism and British unionism 2 3 Euroscepticism immigration and foreign policy 2 4 Economic policy 2 5 Social policy 3 Support 3 1 Financial backing 3 2 Membership 3 3 Voter base 4 Organisation 4 1 Leadership 4 1 1 Timeline 4 2 Deputy leadership 4 3 Party chairman 4 4 Spokespersons 4 5 Regions 5 Representatives 5 1 House of Commons 5 2 House of Lords 5 3 Devolved parliaments and assemblies 5 4 Local government 5 5 European Parliament 5 5 1 Members of the European Parliament 6 Election results 6 1 European Parliament elections 6 2 General elections 7 Reception 7 1 Other political groups 7 2 Media and academia 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistoryFoundation and early years 1991 2004 The initial UKIP logo UKIP began as the Anti Federalist League a Eurosceptic political party established in 1991 by the historian Alan Sked The League opposed the recently signed Maastricht Treaty and sought to sway the governing Conservative Party towards removing the United Kingdom from the European Union EU 13 A former Liberal Party candidate member of the Bruges Group and professor at the London School of Economics LSE Sked had converted to Euroscepticism while teaching the LSE s European Studies programme 14 Under the Anti Federalist League s banner Sked was a candidate for Member of Parliament MP for Bath at the 1992 general election gaining 0 2 of the vote 15 At a League meeting held in the LSE on 3 September 1993 the group was renamed the UK Independence Party deliberately avoiding the term British so as to avoid confusion with the far right British National Party BNP 16 17 UKIP contested the 1994 European Parliament election with little financing and much infighting securing itself as the fifth largest party in that election with 1 of the vote 18 During this period UKIP was viewed as a typical single issue party by commentators some of whom drew comparisons with the French Poujadist movement 19 Following the election UKIP lost much support to the Referendum Party founded by the multi millionaire James Goldsmith in 1994 it shared UKIP s Eurosceptic approach but was far better funded 20 In the 1997 general election UKIP fielded 194 candidates and secured 0 3 of the national vote only one of its candidates Nigel Farage in Salisbury secured over 5 of the vote and had his deposit returned 21 UKIP was beaten by the Referendum Party in 163 of the 165 seats in which they stood against each other 21 The Referendum Party disbanded following Goldsmith s death later that year and many of its candidates joined UKIP 22 A UKIP campaign bus 2004 After the election Sked was pressured into resigning by a party faction led by Farage David Lott and Michael Holmes who deemed him too intellectual and dictatorial 23 Sked left the party alleging that it had been infiltrated by racist and far right elements including BNP spies 24 25 This connection was emphasised in the press particularly when Farage was photographed meeting with BNP activists 24 Holmes took over as party leader and in the 1999 European Parliament elections the first British election for the European Parliament to use proportional representation UKIP received 6 5 of the vote and three seats in South East England Farage South West England Holmes and the East of England Jeffrey Titford 26 An internal power struggle ensued between Holmes and the party s National Executive Committee NEC which was critical of Holmes after he called for the European Parliament to have greater powers over the European Commission Led by Farage the NEC removed Holmes from power and Titford was elected leader 27 28 In the 2001 general election UKIP secured 1 5 of the vote and six of its 428 candidates retained their deposits It had lost much of its support to the Conservatives whose leader William Hague had adopted increasingly Eurosceptic rhetoric during his campaign 29 In 2002 the former Conservative MP Roger Knapman was elected UKIP leader bringing with him the experience of mainstream politics that the party had lacked 30 Knapman hired the political campaign consultant Dick Morris to advise UKIP The party adopted the slogan say no and launched a national billboard campaign 31 In 2004 UKIP reorganised itself nationally as a private company limited by guarantee 32 Growing visibility 2004 2014 See also 2010s in United Kingdom political history Nigel Farage leader of the party from 2006 to 2009 and again from 2010 to 2016 and an MEP from 1999 to 2020 UKIP s support increased during the 2004 European Parliament elections when it placed third securing 2 6 million votes 16 1 and winning twelve seats This had been made possible through increased funding from major donors and the celebrity endorsement of chat show host Robert Kilroy Silk who stood as a candidate in the East Midlands 33 Kilroy Silk then criticised Knapman s leadership arguing that UKIP should stand against Conservative candidates regardless of whether they were Eurosceptic or not This position was rejected by many party members who were uneasy regarding Kilroy Silk After Farage and Lott backed Knapman Kilroy Silk left the party in January 2005 34 35 Two weeks later he founded his own rival Veritas taking a number of UKIP members including both of its London Assembly members with him 36 After Kilroy Silk s defection UKIP s membership declined by a third and donations dropped by over a half 37 UKIP continued to be widely seen as a single issue party and in the 2005 general election when it fielded 496 candidates it secured only 2 2 of the vote and 40 candidates had their deposits returned 38 Electoral support for the BNP grew during this period with academics and political commentators suggesting that the parties were largely competing for the same voter base a section of about 20 of the UK population 39 Given that the BNP had outperformed UKIP in most of the seats that they both contested many UKIP members including several figures on the NEC favoured an electoral pact with them a proposal that Farage strongly condemned 40 In 2006 Farage was elected leader 41 To attract support he cultivated an image of himself as a man of the people openly smoking and drinking showing disdain for the established parties and speaking in an open manner that appeared unscripted 42 He sought to broaden UKIP s image from that of a single issue party by introducing an array of socially conservative policies including reducing immigration tax cuts restoring grammar schools and climate change denial 43 In doing so he was attempting to attract disenfranchised former Conservatives who had left the party after its leader David Cameron had moved in a socially liberal direction 44 According to Farage Cameron was a socialist whose priorities were gay marriage foreign aid and wind farms 45 Cameron was highly critical of UKIP referring to them as fruitcakes loonies and closet racists 46 The Conservatives largest donor Stuart Wheeler donated 100 000 to UKIP after criticising Cameron s stance towards the Treaty of Lisbon and the EU 47 After trust in the mainstream parties was damaged by the parliamentary expenses scandal UKIP received an immediate surge in support 48 This helped it in the 2009 European Parliament election in which it secured 2 5 million votes 16 5 resulting in 13 MEPs becoming the second largest party in the European Parliament after the Conservatives 49 50 During the election UKIP outperformed the BNP whose electoral support base collapsed shortly after 51 Lord Malcolm Pearson led the party in 2009 In September 2009 Farage resigned as leader 52 53 The subsequent leadership election was won by Lord Malcolm Pearson who emphasised UKIP s opposition to high immigration rates and Islamism in Britain calling for a ban on the burqa being worn in public 54 55 56 Pearson was unpopular with the UKIP grassroots who viewed him as an establishment figure too favourable to the Conservatives 57 In the 2010 general election UKIP fielded 558 candidates and secured 3 1 of the vote 919 471 votes but won no seats 58 59 Pearson stood down as leader in August and Farage was re elected in the leadership election with more than 60 of the vote 60 61 62 63 Farage placed new emphasis on developing areas of local support through growth in local councils 64 Observing that the party had done well in areas dominated by white blue collar workers with no educational attainment and that conversely it had done poorly in areas with high numbers of graduates and ethnic minorities UKIP s campaign refocused directly at the former target vote 65 UKIP support would be bolstered by dissatisfaction with the Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition government and the perception that its austerity policies benefited the socio economic elite while imposing hardship on most Britons 66 During this year UKIP had witnessed far greater press coverage and growing support with opinion polls placing it at around 10 support in late 2012 67 UKIP put up a record number of candidates for the 2013 local elections achieving its strongest local government result polling an average of 23 in the wards where it stood and increasing its number of elected councillors from 4 to 147 68 69 70 This was the best result for a party outside the big three in British politics since the Second World War 71 with UKIP being described as the most popular political insurgency in Britain since the Social Democratic Party during the 1980s 72 Entering mainstream politics 2014 2016 Results of the European Parliament election 2014 in Great Britain Districts where UKIP received the largest number of votes are shown in purple In March 2014 Ofcom awarded UKIP major party status 73 In the 2014 local elections UKIP won 163 seats an increase of 128 but did not take control of any council 74 In the 2014 European Parliament elections UKIP received the greatest number of votes 27 5 of any British party producing 24 MEPs 75 76 The party won seats in every region of Britain including its first in Scotland 77 It made strong gains in traditionally Labour voting areas within Wales and the North of England it for instance came either first or second in all 72 council areas of the latter 78 The victory established Farage and UKIP as truly household names 79 It was the first time since 1906 that a party other than Labour or the Conservatives had won the most votes in a UK wide election 80 UKIP gained its first MP when Conservative defector Douglas Carswell won the seat of Clacton during an October 2014 by election 81 82 In November fellow Conservative defector Mark Reckless became UKIP s second MP in a Rochester and Strood by election 83 84 In the 2015 general election UKIP secured over 3 8 million votes 12 6 of the total replacing the Liberal Democrats as the third most popular party but only secured one seat 85 with Carswell retaining his seat and Reckless losing his 86 87 In the run up to the election Farage stated that he would resign as party leader if he did not win South Thanet 88 89 On failing to do so he resigned 90 91 although was reinstated three days later when the NEC rejected his resignation 92 93 A period of civil war broke out among senior membership between those who favoured Farage s leadership and those seeking a change 94 In the 2015 Oldham West and Royton by election the party attacked Jeremy Corbyn as a security risk but only gained a small increase in support at the expense of the Conservative Party In the 2016 National Assembly for Wales election UKIP nearly tripled their share of votes from 4 7 per cent to 12 5 per cent and won seven seats 95 UKIP had also won control of its first UK council in Thanet in May 2015 it took overall control from Labour and increased its seats on the council from two to 33 96 To counter the loss of further votes to UKIP the governing Conservatives led by David Cameron promised a referendum on the UK s continued membership of the EU 97 Rather than taking part in the official Vote Leave campaign to which various Eurosceptic Conservative and Labour politicians were linked UKIP affiliated itself with the Leave EU campaign group 98 Farage gained regular press coverage during the campaign in which Leave EU emphasised what it characterised as the negative impact of immigration on local communities and public services 98 The June 2016 referendum produced a 51 89 majority in favour of leaving the EU the accomplishment of UKIP s raison d etre raised questions about the party s future 99 The loss of its MEPs would result in the loss of its primary institutional representation and a key source of its funding 100 Decline 2016 present Main articles September 2016 UK Independence Party leadership election November 2016 UK Independence Party leadership election 2017 UK Independence Party leadership election and 2018 UK Independence Party leadership election Downward turn 2016 2018 After the referendum Farage resigned as UKIP leader 101 Diane James was elected as his successor but resigned after 18 days 102 Farage s former deputy Paul Nuttall was elected leader that month 103 In March 2017 the party s only MP Carswell left the party to sit as an independent 104 The next month Reckless also left UKIP 105 In the 2017 local elections UKIP lost all 145 seats it was defending but gained one on Lancashire County Council 106 These results led several prominent former UKIP members to call for the party to be disbanded 107 In the following 2017 general election UKIP received fewer than 600 000 votes and won no seats The following day Nuttall resigned and Steve Crowther took over as interim party leader 108 In July 2017 it lost its majority on Thanet council when Councillor Beverly Martin defected to the Conservatives 109 in September all three UKIP councillors on Plymouth City Council defected to the Conservatives 110 as did Alexandra Phillips who had been UKIP s Head of Media for three years 111 The UKIP logo used briefly by the party from 2017 to 2018In 2017 Henry Bolton a former soldier was elected leader 112 In January 2018 UKIP MEP Jonathan Arnott resigned from the party 113 In December 2017 former UKIP Suffolk County Council member and parliamentary candidate from the general election in Central Suffolk and North Ipswich Stephen Searle murdered his wife Anne Searle at their home in Stowmarket 114 115 116 117 In January 2018 UKIP s NEC delivered a vote of no confidence in Bolton only Bolton voted against the motion 118 He nevertheless refused to resign 118 In protest Margot Parker resigned as deputy leader 119 as did the party s spokesmen for government education immigration and trade and industry 120 A few days later all seventeen UKIP members of Thurrock Council left the party and formed Thurrock Independents 121 In February UKIP members passed a vote of no confidence in Bolton removing him as leader He was replaced by Gerard Batten as interim leader until a new leadership election could be held 122 When the election occurred in April Batten stood unopposed and was elected 123 Association with the far right 2018 2019 Under Gerard Batten s leadership UKIP moved towards a far right stance In the 2018 local elections UKIP lost 124 of the 126 seats it was defending and gained a single seat in Derby for a net loss of 123 124 MEP James Carver left UKIP to sit as an independent on 28 May 2018 becoming the sixth UKIP MEP to leave since 2014 125 Under the leadership of Henry Bolton party membership was understood to have fallen to around 18 000 by January 2018 126 During Batten s interim leadership term the party avoided insolvency after a financial appeal to members 127 As the new permanent leader Batten focused the party more on opposing Islam which he described as a death cult 128 was criticised as an explicitly far right party after they invited Paul Joseph Watson as a spokesman 129 sought closer relations with the far right activist Tommy Robinson and his followers 130 and made Muslim only prisons party policy which was criticised as the first step to Muslim concentration camps 131 The party saw its membership rise by 15 in July 2018 following the publication of the Chequers Agreement and allowing three prominent far right activists to join the party 132 Previous leader Nigel Farage stated he was really upset that Robinson could be allowed into the party and that he believed Gerard Batten was marginalising the party 133 Batten s appointment of Robinson as an advisor was followed by a wave of high profile resignations from the party Farage announced his decision to resign in December 2018 calling Batten obsessed with Islam and saying that UKIP wasn t founded to be a party based on fighting a religious crusade 134 Former Deputy Chair Suzanne Evans had left earlier that week after Batten survived a vote of confidence from the party NEC 135 The former leader of the party in the Welsh Assembly Caroline Jones and the MEP William Dartmouth had also cited the party s trajectory to the right as reasons for leaving the party 136 Another former leader Paul Nuttall also left for the same reason 137 By December 2018 a majority of the party s MEPs had left Others leaving included Peter Whittle the party s top vote winner on the London Assembly On 9 December 2018 before an important vote on Brexit legislation UKIP led a Brexit Betrayal rally in central London fronted by Robinson alongside prominent far right groups 138 By April 2019 of 24 UKIP MEPs elected in the 2014 European Election only 4 remained members of UKIP 139 Ten of these MEPs would later move to Nigel s Farage s new party The Brexit Party whilst O Flynn defected to the SDP Most others continued to sit as Independent MEPs By April 2019 the British government had agreed an extension to EU membership with the EU until 31 October 2019 which would mean the UK would take part in the 2019 European Parliament elections Candidates selected by UKIP to run in the election included right wing YouTube personalities Carl Benjamin and Mark Meechan 140 Benjamin had caused controversy by making inappropriate comments in 2016 about the rape threats to a female Labour MP Jess Phillips with the UKIP Swindon Branch chair calling for him to be deselected 141 Videos made by Benjamin in which he used racist terms also caused controversy 142 In May the 2019 United Kingdom local elections saw UKIP lose around 80 of the seats it was defending The party was criticised for failing to capitalise on the collapse of the Conservatives by commentators 143 In the European elections later that month UKIP received 3 3 of the vote and lost all its remaining seats 144 On 2 June 2019 Batten resigned his post as party leader as he had promised if he lost his MEP position 145 In the 2019 UKIP leadership election Richard Braine was elected UKIP leader and attempted to appoint Batten as deputy leader 146 Braine s attempt to appoint Batten as the party s deputy leader was blocked by its National Executive Committee NEC Braine was criticised in the press for comments he has made which were considered racist and offensive including one incident in which he claimed he often confused London mayor Sadiq Khan with Mohammad Sidique Khan one of the 7 7 terror attackers 147 Braine later further came underfire when he announced he planned to boycott the September 2019 UKIP Party conference in Newport after less than 450 tickets were sold for the conference The Chairman of UKIP Kirstan Herriot stated to members that Braine had attempted to cancel the conference due to the low turnout and was highly critical of this attempted action 148 Internal instability 2019 present The UKIP logo used until 2022 In October 2019 UKIP underwent a leadership crisis in the run up to its NEC elections after it suspended Braine s membership and by extension his eligibility to be party leader over allegations of data theft from party databases Three other members associated with Braine Jeff Armstrong the party s general secretary appointed by Braine NEC candidate Mark Dent and Tony Sharp were also suspended 149 In response Braine accused the NEC of carrying out a purge of members 150 All four members were reported to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau 149 On 30 October 2019 Braine resigned as leader of the party He cited internal conflict and an inability to prevent a purge of good members from the party referring to the NEC s decision to add Integrity an anti Islam faction within UKIP supporting Tommy Robinson Batten and Braine to the party s proscribed list of organisations 151 On 7 November 2019 Welsh Assembly Member and UKIP group leader Gareth Bennett resigned from UKIP and chose to sit as an independent in the Welsh Assembly He stated that he wanted to support Boris Johnson s Brexit deal As a result the sole remaining UKIP member of the Welsh Assembly was Neil Hamilton 152 On 16 November 2019 National Executive Committee member Patricia Mountain was appointed interim leader in preparation for the December general election and the upcoming UKIP leadership election 153 Only 44 UKIP candidates stood in the December 2019 general election 154 targeting constituencies that voted to leave the European Union in which the Brexit Party withdrew their candidates for the Conservatives or where the Conservative candidate was in favour of remaining in the EU On 2 December 2019 Mountain appeared on Sky News for an interview with journalist Adam Boulton as a part of the launch of the election manifesto for UKIP it lasted for eight minutes and the interview was described by the Evening Standard as a car crash 155 and there were reports that she was mistaken for the titular character of Catherine Tate s Nan 156 157 Mountain was unable to name a single seat her party was contending and accidentally called her party racist 158 UKIP failed to win any seats it contested in the election and nationwide the party received only 22 817 votes 0 1 of the vote share This result was the lowest the party had achieved in a general election in the party s history 159 The party also failed to retain any deposits only received more than 1 000 votes in two seats and in another two seats finished behind the satirical Official Monster Raving Loony Party 160 In January 2020 David Kurten UKIP s last remaining London Assembly Member left UKIP to stand as an independent candidate in the 2020 London Assembly election and the 2020 London mayoral election Kurten described the politics of both UKIP and the Brexit Party as needing rebranding once Britain left the EU on 31 January Kurten s departure ended UKIP s presence on the London Assembly 161 In March 2020 according to a tweet by the former leader Gerard Batten the party was reported to be close to insolvency 158 On 25 June 2020 Freddy Vachha was elected unopposed as leader 162 He stated that the party went astray quite a few years ago and that under his leadership it would return to our libertarian freedom loving principles 163 On 12 September 2020 it was reported that Vachha had been suspended from the party following a formal complaint of bullying and harassment Later that day UKIP Wales leader Neil Hamilton was made interim Leader 162 164 Vachha argued a short time later that he was still leader and that his suspension was unconstitutional as he claimed to have appointed Marietta King as chairman in place of Ben Walker a few days earlier 165 Vachha decided to take legal action however in December a judge refused his request to fast track the case Vachha then dropped his legal case and was ordered to pay the party s legal costs 166 In the 2021 Senedd election UKIP performed poorly and suffered a complete collapse of voter support with the Conservative Party gaining a number of voters who had in previous elections voted UKIP The party finished seventh with 1 56 of regional list votes 167 168 Neil Hamilton Interim UKIP leader and UKIP s sole MS in the Welsh Senedd lost his seat ending any representation UKIP had outside of local government in England In the Scottish Parliament election the party received just 3 848 0 14 list votes across the whole country despite standing in every region in Scotland 169 In the 2021 local elections UKIP lost all the seats they were defending from the previous elections in those council areas Furthermore in the London mayoral election the UKIP candidate Peter Gammons achieved 0 6 of the total vote finishing 13th The party finished ninth in the London Assembly election down from fourth in 2016 168 167 170 171 After a period as acting leader Hamilton was elected as leader in October 2021 receiving 498 votes of 631 cast 78 9 against challenger John Poynton 172 173 In the May 2023 local elections they lost all of their remaining council seats leaving the party without representation at any level of UK government 12 Ideology and policiesRight wing populism UKIP is situated on the right wing of the left right political spectrum 174 More specifically academic political scientists and commentators have described UKIP as a right wing populist party 7 and as part of Europe s wider radical right 175 The term populism refers to political groups which ideologically contrast the people against an elite or group of dangerous others whom the populists claim threaten the sovereignty of the people 176 and during its establishment in 1993 UKIP s founders explicitly described it as a populist party 177 At the time its ideological heritage lay within the right wing of the Conservative Party 178 and UKIP was influenced by the Tory populism of Conservative politicians Margaret Thatcher and Enoch Powell 174 Farage at the 2009 UKIP Conference The political scientists Amir Abedi and Thomas Carl Lundberg characterised UKIP as an Anti Political Establishment party 179 The party s rhetoric presents the idea that there is a fundamental divide between the British population and the elite who govern the country 180 UKIP claims to stand up for ordinary people against this political elite 181 UKIP politician Bill Etheridge for instance claimed that his party represented a democratic revolution the people of Britain rising up and fighting to wrestle power from the elite 182 Contributing to this anti establishment message Farage describes the party s supporters as the People s Army 183 and he regularly held photo opportunities and journalistic interviews in a pub thus cultivating an erudite everyman image that contrasted with his past as a commodities trader 184 UKIP uses recurring populist rhetoric for instance by describing its policies as common sense and straight talking in order to present itself as a straightforward alternative to the mainstream parties and their supposedly elusive and complex discourse 181 UKIP presents the UK s three primary parties the Conservatives Labour and Liberal Democrats as being essentially interchangeable referring to them with the portmanteau of LibLabCon 185 Farage accused all three parties of being social democratic in ideology and virtually indistinguishable from one another on nearly all the key issues 186 Farage has also accused the Scottish National Party of being the voice of anti Englishness suggesting that elements of the Scottish nationalist movement are deeply racist with a total hatred of the English 187 Nationalism and British unionism UKIP espouses a form of British nationalism it states that it is a civic rather than an ethnic nationalism although this categorisation has been disputed by political scientists 188 UKIP has always had the politics of national identity at its core 189 The party is nationalist and its basic claim that the highest priority for the British polity is to assure that it is fully governed by the national state is a nationalist one 190 The party describes its position as being that of civic nationalism and in its manifesto explicitly rejects ethnic nationalism by encouraging support from Britons of all ethnicities and religions 191 Rejecting claims that it is racist both Sked and later Farage described UKIP as a non racist non sectarian party 192 In UKIP s literature the party has placed an emphasis on restoring Britishness and counteracting what it sees as a serious existential crisis exhibited by the Islamification of Britain the pseudo nationalisms of Wales Scotland and Ireland and the multicultural and supranational policies promoted by the cultural left describing its own stance as being unashamedly unicultural 188 It has been suggested that this attitude compromises the party s claim that its form of British nationalism is civic and inclusive 188 UKIP considers itself to be a British unionist party 193 although its support base is centred largely in England 188 Farage has characterised his party s growth as a very English rebellion 194 and has described UKIP as unashamedly patriotic proud to be who we are as a nation 195 The political scientist Richard Hayton argued that UKIP s British unionism reflects Anglo Britishness a perspective that blurs the distinction between Britain and England 178 With Mycock Hayton argued that in conflating Englishness with Britishness UKIP exhibited an inherent Anglocentrism that negates the distinct culture of the Scottish Welsh and Northern Irish peoples of the United Kingdom 188 Hayton suggests that UKIP tap into a vein of nostalgic cultural nationalism within England 196 and it has been noted that UKIP s discourse frames the image of Englishness in a nostalgic manner harking back to the years before the collapse of the British Empire 197 UKIP has emphasised the need to correct what it perceives as the United Kingdom s imbalance against England resulting from the West Lothian question and the Barnett formula 198 The party has mobilised English nationalist sentiment brought on by English concerns following the devolution within the UK and the rise of Welsh and Scottish nationalisms 199 The party initially opposed federalism in the UK 178 criticising the establishment of the Welsh Assembly and Scottish Parliament 200 However in September 2011 Farage and the NEC announced their support for the establishment of an English Parliament to accompany the other devolved governments 198 In its 2015 manifesto it promised to make St George s Day and St David s Day bank holidays in England and Wales respectively 201 Similarly UKIP s 2017 manifesto pledged to declare 23 June British Independence Day and observe it annually as a national holiday 202 Euroscepticism immigration and foreign policy UKIP embraces the ideology of hard Euroscepticism 203 also known as Eurorejectionism 204 Opposition to the United Kingdom s continued membership of the European Union has been its core issue and is central to the party s identity 205 UKIP characterises the EU as a fundamentally undemocratic institution and stresses the need to regain what it describes as the UK s national sovereignty from the EU 206 It presents the EU as being an exemplar of non accountability corruption and inefficiency and views it as being responsible for the flooding of the UK with migrants in particular from Eastern Europe 207 UKIP emphasises Euroscepticism to a far greater extent than any of Western Europe s other main radical right parties 208 and it was only post 2010 that it began seriously articulating other issues 209 Hayton nevertheless suggested that Euroscepticism still remains the lens through which most of its other policy positions are framed and understood 189 UKIP placard on the side of the road in Starcross Devon declaring Say NO to European Union The party opposed the 2004 enlargement of the European Union into eastern Europe 210 UKIP advocated leaving the European Union stopping payments to the EU and withdrawing from EU treaties while maintaining trading ties with other European countries 211 Initially UKIP s policy was that in the event of them winning a general election it would remove the UK from the EU without a referendum on the issue 98 The party leadership later suggested a referendum expressing the view that in the case of an exit vote it could negotiate favourable terms for the country s withdrawal for instance through ensuring a free trade agreement between the UK and EU 212 213 UKIP eventually committed to a referendum in their 2015 manifesto 98 In contrast to involvement in the EU UKIP has emphasised the UK s global connections in particularly to member states of the Commonwealth of Nations 214 UKIP rejected the description that they were Europhobes maintaining that its stance was anti EU not anti European 214 UKIP has placed great emphasis on the issue of immigration to the UK 215 and in 2013 Farage described it as the biggest single issue facing this party 216 UKIP attributes British membership of the EU as the core cause of immigration to the UK citing the Union s open border policies as the reason why large numbers of East European migrants have moved to Britain 216 On their campaign billboards UKIP have presented EU migrants as a source of crime as well as a pressure on housing the welfare state and the health service 217 Farage has emphasised not only the economic impact of migration but also the public anxieties regarding the cultural changes brought by immigration 217 In its 2009 electoral manifesto UKIP proposed a five year ban on any migrants coming to the UK 207 By 2015 it had modified this to the view that the five year ban should apply only to unskilled migrants 218 To regulate the arrival of skilled migrants it called for the UK to adopt a points based system akin to that employed by Australia 219 It advocated the establishment of a watchdog to help curb immigration and bring the levels of net annual immigration down from the hundreds of thousands to between 20 000 and 50 000 which was the average level in the UK between 1950 and 2000 218 UKIP calls for all immigrants to require compulsory health insurance 218 and proposes that migrants be barred from claiming any state benefits until they had been resident in the UK for at least five years 220 UKIP poster in Exeter in 2009 Say NO to Unlimited Immigration UKIP gained traction from the fact that post 2008 immigration had come to the forefront of many Britons minds as a result of increased EU migration and its concomitant social changes 221 By the 2015 general election the political scientists James Dennison and Matthew Goodwin argued UKIP had secured ownership of the immigration issue among British voters having secured it from the Conservatives 222 However the party s campaign against immigration has been accused of using racism and xenophobia to win votes 223 Political scientist David Art suggested that in its campaign to restrict immigration UKIP had flirted with xenophobia 224 while Daniel T Dye stated that part of the party s appeal was its sometimes xenophobic populism 225 and the journalist Daniel Trilling stated that UKIP tapped into the anti immigrant and anti Muslim populism that was popular in the late 2000s 226 The political scientist Simon Usherwood stated that UKIP s hardening of immigration policy risked reinforcing the party s profile as a quasi far right grouping 227 elsewhere stating that the party was only held together by its opposition to the EU and immigration suggesting that it had no ideological coherence beyond that 100 In its 2015 campaign UKIP called for the foreign aid budget to be cut 228 It has also advocated a 40 increase in the UK s national defence budget 216 It opposes British military involvement in conflicts that are not perceived to be in the national interest specifically rejecting the concept of regime change wars through humanitarian interventionism 216 For instance in 2014 it opposed the Cameron government s plans to intervene militarily against the government of Bashar al Assad in the Syrian civil war 229 In 2018 UKIP pledged to work with anti EU populist group The Movement 230 The party was known for its pro Russia stance on foreign policy 231 Economic policy So what kind of party is UKIP Ideologically the party combines a mix of old style liberal commitments to free markets limited government and individual freedom with conservative appeals to national sovereignty and traditional social values Political scientist Stephen Driver 2011 232 On economic policy UKIP shares the main three parties acceptance of the core principles of a capitalist market economy 233 and the party is generally at ease with the global free market 234 The academics Simon Winlow Steve Hall and James Treadwell commented that on economic issues UKIP wants to have its cake and eat it It wants to retain the best bits of the market economy while discarding what it considers the negative outcomes of 21st century neoliberalism 235 They noted for instance that it wanted free movement of capital yet wanted to curtail the free movement of workers across borders 236 On economic issues UKIP s original activist base was largely libertarian supporting an economically liberal approach 237 Its economic libertarian views have been influenced by classical liberalism and Thatcherism with Thatcher representing a key influence on UKIP s thought 238 Farage has characterised UKIP as the true inheritors of Thatcher claiming that the party never would have formed had Thatcher remained Prime Minister of the UK throughout the 1990s 238 Winlow Hall and Treadwell suggested that a UKIP government would pursue hard core Thatcherism on economic policy 236 UKIP presents itself as a libertarian party 239 and the political scientists David Deacon and Dominic Wring described it as articulating a potent brand of libertarian populism 240 However commentators writing in The Spectator The Independent and the New Statesman have all challenged the description of UKIP as libertarian highlighting its socially conservative and economically protectionist policies as being contrary to a libertarian ethos 241 242 243 UKIP would allow businesses to favour British workers over migrants 244 and would repeal much of Britain s racial discrimination law which was described as shocking by the Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition government 245 and viewed as discriminatory by others 246 However Farage insisted that his comments regarding his party s policies on these matters had been wilfully misinterpreted 244 Although the party did not have an official stance on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership the party s former international trade spokesperson Lord Dartmouth and former health and social care spokesperson Louise Bours stated that they did wish the National Health Service to be included in the trade deal according to the International Business Times 247 Social policy In The Guardian commentator Ed Rooksby described UKIP s approach to many social issues as being traditionalist and socially conservative 248 while political scientist Stephen Driver has referred to the party s appeals to traditional social values 232 UKIP opposed the introduction of same sex marriage in the United Kingdom 249 UKIP wants to repeal the Human Rights Act 250 and remove Britain from both the European Convention on Refugees and the European Convention on Human Rights ECHR 251 252 On the repeal of Britain s signatory to the ECHR UKIP would like to see a referendum on the reintroduction of the death penalty in the UK 253 In 2015 Farage attracted widespread press attention for suggesting that HIV positive patients who were not British citizens should not receive treatment on the NHS 254 In that same speech he stated that the UK should put the NHS there for British people and families who in many cases have paid into the system for years 254 Farage has spoken in favour of an insurance based system in the past which he said would resemble the French and Dutch style system rather than an American style private system but this was rejected by the party He has commented we may have to think about ways in the future about dealing with health care differently 255 Critics of UKIP have claimed that the party s real desire is to dismantle and privatise the NHS 256 a claim bolstered by the publication of leaked documents showing that in 2013 the UKIP NEC privately spoke positively of NHS privatisation 257 A UKIP candidate campaigning in the run up to the 2010 general election Although Farage had long been reticent about focusing on public anxieties surrounding Muslims in Britain he spoke out following the Charlie Hebdo shooting claiming that there was a fifth column of Islamists in the UK who while mercifully small in number were out to destroy our whole civilisation 258 At the same time he called for Western states to do more to promote their Judeo Christian heritage 258 and criticised state multiculturalism for promoting social segregation discouraging integration and generating a tick box approach to identity politics 258 In its 2017 manifesto UKIP pledged to abolish the existence of sharia courts in the UK and ban the wearing of the niqab and burka in public it claimed that these were needed to promote the integration of Muslims with wider British society 259 UKIP is the only major political party in the United Kingdom that does not endorse renewable energy and lower carbon emissions 260 and its media output regularly promotes climate change denial 261 Farage and other senior UKIP figures have repeatedly spoken out against the construction of wind farms deeming them a blot on the rural landscape 262 UKIP s media present renewable energy as inefficient and unaffordable 261 and they promote the use of fossil fuels nuclear energy and fracking 263 UKIP has announced that it would repeal the Climate Change Act 2008 and has placed an emphasis on protecting the Green Belt 264 UKIP poster in Egham Surrey for the 2009 European elections In its 2015 election manifesto UKIP promised to teach a chronological understanding of British history and achievements in schools 201 and it calls for the scrapping of sex education for children under 11 265 UKIP would introduce an option for students to take an apprenticeship qualification instead of four non core GCSEs which can be continued at A Level 265 Schools would be investigated by OFSTED on the presentation of a petition to the Department for Education signed by 25 of parents or governors 265 UKIP have promoted the scrapping of the government target that 50 of school leavers attend university and present the policy that tuition fees would be scrapped for students taking approved degrees in science medicine technology engineering or mathematics 265 Farage argued that British Overseas Territories like Gibraltar should have representatives in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom akin to the privileges given to French overseas territories in France Farage believes that all citizens for whom the British Parliament passes legislation whether in the United Kingdom or its territories deserve democratic representation in that Parliament 266 SupportFinancial backing Tadley Town councillor and UKIP candidate for the Hampshire Police and Crime Commissioner Stephen West campaigning in Newport high street on the Isle of Wight in 2012 In 2008 Usherwood noted that UKIP relied heavily on a small number of major financial backers 267 According to The Guardian a leaked internal report to UKIP s executive committee dated to September 2012 shows that the party s leader argued that the key to money for us will be the hedge fund industry 268 According to UKIP s annual returns to the Electoral Commission 269 in 2013 the party had a total income of 2 479 314 Of this 714 492 was from membership and subscriptions 32 115 from fundraising activities and 1 361 640 from donations By law individual donations over 7 500 must be reported 270 UKIP has several high profile backers In March 2009 the Conservative Party s biggest ever donor Stuart Wheeler donated 100 000 to UKIP after criticising Cameron s stance towards the Treaty of Lisbon He was then expelled from the Conservatives and in 2011 appointed treasurer of UKIP 271 In October 2014 Arron Banks who previously gave 25 000 to the Conservatives increased his UKIP donation from 100 000 to 1 million after Hague said he had never heard of him 272 273 The multi millionaire Paul Sykes has helped finance the party donating over 1 million to their 2014 campaign at the European Parliament 274 In December 2014 Richard Desmond proprietor of Express Newspapers donated 300 000 to UKIP 73 Desmond had previously made the UKIP peer David Stevens his deputy chairman 220 273 The donation indicated that Desmond s papers the Daily Express Sunday Express Daily Star and Daily Star Sunday would back UKIP in the 2015 general election 275 Three weeks before the election Desmond gave the party a further 1 million 73 276 In September 2016 the major UKIP donor Arron Banks said that UKIP would be dead in the water if Diane James did not become leader 277 Following her departure after 18 days Banks said that he would leave UKIP if Steven Woolfe was prevented from running for leader and if two other members remained in the party If Neil Hamilton and Douglas Carswell UKIP s only MP remain in the party and the NEC decide that Steven Woolfe cannot run for leader I will be leaving Ukip 278 Membership UKIP s membership numbers increased from 2002 to the time of the 2004 European Parliament election before hovering around the 16 000 mark during the late 2000s 17 279 In 2004 the party claimed 20 000 members with this remaining broadly stable and in June 2007 it had a recorded 16 700 members 280 By July 2013 the figure had grown to 30 000 281 before ending the year at 32 447 282 In 2014 the number was 36 000 on 22 April 283 by 7 May reached 37 000 284 and on 19 May less than a fortnight later and only three days before the 2014 European Parliament election rose to 38 000 285 In January 2015 UKIP membership was the fifth highest of British parties 286 287 Membership was 45 000 in May 2015 but since then has fallen to 32 757 in November 2016 288 and as low as 18 000 under Henry Bolton by January 2018 289 In June 2018 four political activists known through social media Paul Joseph Watson Mark Meechan Carl Benjamin and Milo Yiannopoulos joined the party This was followed by the party gaining around five hundred members 290 In July 2018 it was reported the party had attracted 3 200 new members a 15 increase 291 The party s report to The Electoral Commission of its accounts as of 31 December 2020 stated the party had a membership of 3 888 4 Voter base UKIP s voters are not single issue Europhobes or political protesters they share a clear and distinct agenda mixing deep Euroscepticism with clear ideas about immigration national identity and the way British society is changing The conflict between UKIP s voters and the political mainstream reflects a deep seated difference in outlook among voters from different walks in life Those who lead and staff the three main parties are all from the highly educated socially liberal middle classes who are comfortable in an ethnically and culturally diverse outward looking society Those who lead and staff UKIP and those who vote for them are older less educated disadvantaged and economically insecure Britons who are profoundly uncomfortable in the new society which they regard as alien and threatening Political scientists Robert Ford and Matthew Goodwin 2014 292 In its early years UKIP targeted itself towards southern English middle class Eurosceptic voters those who had been supporters of the Conservative Party until John Major s Conservative government signed the Maastricht Treaty 293 This led to the widespread perception that UKIP s supporters were primarily middle class ex Conservative voters with commentator Peter Oborne characterising UKIP as the Conservative Party in exile 294 After 2009 UKIP refocused its attention to appeal primarily to white British working class blue collar workers those who had traditionally voted Labour or in some cases for Thatcher s Conservatives but who had ceased voting or begun to vote BNP since the emergence of the New Labour project in the 1990s 293 In this way UKIP s support base does not line up with the historical left right divide in British politics instead being primarily rooted in class divisions 295 This mirrored the voting base of other radical right parties across Western Europe which had grown since the early 1990s 296 This scenario had come about following the rapid growth of the middle classes and the concomitant decline of the working class population in Western Europe the centre left social democratic parties who had traditionally courted the support of the working classes largely switched their attention to the newly emergent middle classes leaving their initial support base increasingly alienated and creating the vacuum which the radical right exploited 297 On the basis of their extensive study of data on the subject in 2014 the political scientists Matthew Goodwin and Robert Ford concluded that UKIP s support has a very clear social profile more so than any of the mainstream parties Their electoral base is old male working class white and less educated 298 They found that 57 of professed UKIP supporters were over the age of 54 while only one in ten were under 35 which they attributed to the fact that UKIP s socially conservative and Eurosceptic platform appealed far more to Britain s older generations that their younger counterparts who were more socially liberal and less antagonistic towards the EU 299 57 of UKIP supporters were male which Ford and Goodwin suggested was due to women voters being put off by a number of high profile sexist remarks made by UKIP candidates 300 99 6 of UKIP supporters identified as white reflecting the fact that ethnic minorities tended to avoid the party 301 55 of UKIP supporters had left school aged 16 or under with only 24 having attended university suggesting that the party primarily appealed to the least educated voters in society 302 Ford and Goodwin also found that UKIP s support base was more working class than that of any other party with 42 of supporters in blue collar jobs 303 Ford and Goodwin described UKIP s voters as primarily comprising the left behind sector of society older less skilled and less well educated working class voters who felt disenfranchised from the mainstream political parties which had increasingly focused on attracting the support of middle class swing voters 304 Ford and Goodwin nevertheless noted that UKIP was not a purely blue collar party but an alliance of manual workers employers and the self employed 305 Geoffrey Evans and Jon Mellon highlighted that UKIP receive a greater proportion of their support from lower professionals and managers than from any other class group 306 They highlighted that polls repeatedly demonstrated that UKIP drew more votes from Conservative voters than Labour ones 307 They suggested that the assumption that working class voters who supported UKIP had previously been Labour voters was misplaced 308 suggesting that these people had ceased voting for Labour a long time before UKIP were an effective political presence having been alienated by Labour s pro middle class pro EU and as it eventually turned out pro immigration agenda 309 In 2011 Goodwin Ford and David Cutts published a study that identified Euroscepticism as the main causal factor for voters supporting UKIP with concern over immigration levels and distrust of the political establishment also featuring as important motives 310 They noted however that during elections for the European Parliament UKIP was able to broaden its support to gain the vote of largely middle class Eurosceptics who vote Conservative in other elections 311 Ukip has become more than the single issue on which it was founded under Farage s leadership it has become a welcoming home for the many in British society who feel that the system isn t working for them or has left them behind economically socially or politically In so doing it has gained supporters from across the political spectrum including many old Labour voters in economically distressed regions of the country Political scientist Simon Usherwood 2016 100 From their analysis of the data Ford and Goodwin stated that UKIP s support base has strong parallels both with that of Western Europe s other radical right parties and with the BNP during their electoral heyday 312 Conversely an earlier study by Richard Whitaker and Philip Lynch based on polling data from YouGov concluded that UKIP voters were distinct from those of far right parties The authors found that voter support for UKIP correlated with concerns about the value of immigration and a lack of trust in the political system but the biggest explanatory factor for their support of UKIP was Euroscepticism 313 A further study by the same authors suggests that UKIP voters core beliefs align very closely to those of the UKIP candidates particularly so on issues surrounding European integration which has resulted in Conservative voters switching to UKIP due to Conservative divisions on this issue 314 One study found that 63 of UKIP voters considered themselves to be right wing while 22 thought centrist and 16 thought leftist 315 81 believed that immigration undermined British culture a view shared by only half the wider British population 316 On economic issues there was a divide between UKIP voters and the party itself 317 In contrast to the party s economic liberalism UKIP supporters often held more leftist attitudes to the economy with almost 80 opining that big business took advantage of working people and almost 70 thinking that privatisation had gone too far 318 UKIP has been most successful along England s eastern and southern coasts in parts of south west England and in the Labour heartlands of Northern England and Wales 319 It has not done well in London and in university towns and urban areas with younger populations like Oxford Cambridge Manchester and Brighton 320 It has done well in areas with large numbers of old white and poorer people and weaker in areas with larger numbers of younger more ethnically and culturally diverse and financially secure people 319 Ford and Goodwin noted that UKIP barely registers with young Britons graduates ethnic minorities and pro EU voters 321 According to an Opinium poll in December 2014 on the views of 17 to 22 year olds Farage was the least popular political leader Only 3 of young people questioned said that they intended to vote for UKIP compared with 19 among voters of all ages 322 The 17 who said they would vote outside the three main parties were four times more likely to vote for the Green Party than for UKIP 323 Conversely a March 2015 Ipsos Mori poll found among 18 to 34 year olds UKIP was polling nearly as well as the Green Party somewhat contradicting the idea that Farage lacked appeal for younger voters 324 On the basis of their fieldwork among supporters of the English Defence League EDL an anti Islam social movement Winlow Hall and Treadwell noted that most EDL supporters whom they encountered intended to vote for UKIP in the build up to the 2015 general election 325 UKIP supporters are sometimes nicknamed kippers In May 2017 in response to large defections from the party Goodwin said Former Kippers did not walk but literally sprinted over to the Conservatives 326 OrganisationLeadership Leader of the UK Independence Party IncumbentNeil Hamiltonsince 18 October 2021Term lengthFour yearsInaugural holderAlan SkedFormation3 September 1993DeputyPat MountainAccording to Part VII of the UKIP constitution the party leader is voted for by postal ballot by all paid up party members in good standing The winner is the candidate with the simple majority of votes cast If there is only one valid candidate for the position they are elected without the need for a ballot While the default term length is four years the leader can obtain an extension of up to a year if there is an imminent General or European Parliament election this must be approved by at least two thirds of the 12 person National Executive Committee NEC If at least nine NEC members endorse a vote of no confidence in the leader an Emergency General Meeting EGM will be called When the leadership becomes vacant unexpectedly the NEC has fourteen days to name an interim leader who exercises all leadership functions until the next leadership election The leader has the power to name a Deputy Leader of their own choice and assign them whatever duty they choose 327 Leader Took office Left office Notes1 Alan Sked 3 September 1993 July 1997 Party founder left party in 1997Craig Mackinlay was acting leader during this interim2 Michael Holmes September 1997 22 January 2000 MEP 1999 2002 left party in 20003 Jeffrey Titford 22 January 2000 5 October 2002 MEP 1999 20094 Roger Knapman 5 October 2002 12 September 2006 MEP 2004 20095 Nigel Farage 12 September 2006 27 November 2009 Former chairman MEP from 1999 left party in 20186 The Lord Pearson of Rannoch 27 November 2009 2 September 2010 Member of House of Lords left the party in 2019Jeffrey Titford was acting leader during this interim 5 Nigel Farage 5 November 2010 16 September 20167 Diane James 16 September 2016 4 October 2016 N 1 Leader elect MEP 2014 2019 left party in 2016Nigel Farage was acting leader during this interim8 Paul Nuttall 28 November 2016 9 June 2017 Deputy leader 2010 2016 MEP 2009 2019 left party in 2018Steve Crowther was acting leader during this interim9 Henry Bolton 29 September 2017 17 February 2018 Left party in 2018Gerard Batten was acting leader during this interim10 Gerard Batten 14 April 2018 2 June 2019 MEP 2004 2019Piers Wauchope was acting leader during this interim11 Richard Braine 10 August 2019 30 October 2019 Suspended from party in October 2019 subsequently resigned as leaderPatricia Mountain was acting leader during this interim until 25 April 2020 153 Leadership was vacant until 22 June 202012 Freddy Vachha 22 June 2020 12 September 2020 Chairman of UKIP London Leadership candidate in 2019 Suspended from party on 12 September 202013 Neil Hamilton 12 September 2020 Incumbent Initially served as interim leader 329 substantiated on 19 October 2021 173 Timeline Deputy leadership Deputy Leader Tenure Notes1 Craig Mackinlay 1997 2000 Left party in 20052 Graham Booth 2000 02 MEP 2002 2008 died 20113 Mike Nattrass 2002 06 MEP 2004 2014 left party in 20134 David Campbell Bannerman 2006 10 MEP since 2009 left party in 20115 The Viscount Monckton of Brenchley Jun Nov 2010 Leader of UKIP in Scotland 20136 Paul Nuttall 2010 16 MEP since 2009 left party in 20187 Peter Whittle 2016 17 London AM since 2016 left party in 20188 Margot Parker 2017 18 MEP 2014 2019 left party in 20199 Mike Hookem 2018 19 MEP 2014 201910 Pat Mountain 2020 Interim Leader 2019 NEC Member12 Rebecca Jane 2022 Party chairman Chairman Tenure Notes1 Nigel Farage 1998 2000 Later became Party Leader2 Mike Nattrass 2000 023 David Lott 2002 044 Petrina Holdsworth 2004 055 David Campbell Bannerman 2005 066 John Whittaker 2006 087 Paul Nuttall 2008 2010 Later became Party Leader8 Steve Crowther 2010 20169 Paul Oakden 2016 1810 Tony McIntyre 201811 Kirstan Herriot 2018 201912 Ben Walker 2020 Spokespersons The front bench team is divided into departmental sub units the principal ones being the economy foreign policy and immigration Sometimes the front bench team consists of more than just the principal positions Regions UKIP s organisation is divided into twelve regions London South East South West Eastern East Midlands West Midlands Yorkshire North East North West Wales Northern Ireland and Scotland 330 An additional thirteenth branch operates in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar it held its first public meeting at the Lord Nelson pub in April 2013 331 At the end of 2013 UKIP Scotland was dissolved after infighting tore the regional party apart the party s administrative body was dissolved Mike Scott Hayward the chairman and chief fundraiser quit and Farage fired Lord Christopher Monckton via email 332 The national party and UKIP Scotland focused on supporting the candidates for the 2014 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom 332 After David Coburn won an MEP seat in Scotland in those elections he was elected as leader of UKIP Scotland 333 Veteran and former long serving Antrim and Newtownabbey based councillor Robert Hill was appointed by Gerard Batten as UKIP s Spokesman for Northern Ireland in May 2018 334 In August 2018 Welsh Assembly Member Gareth Bennett was elected as leader of UKIP in Wales after a membership ballot 335 RepresentativesMain article UK Independence Party representation and election results House of Commons Douglas Carswell and Mark Reckless UKIP s only elected MPs The former represented UKIP from 2014 to 2017 the latter from 2014 to 2015 In the UK the first past the post voting system for electing MPs to the House of Commons was a significant barrier to UKIP whose support was widely distributed across different areas rather than being strongly focused in particular constituencies 336 Further the system encouraged tactical voting with many UKIP supporters believing that a vote for the party would be a wasted vote 337 Recognising this Farage believed that the best way to win a seat in the House of Commons was to win a by election with UKIP contesting a number of these from 2010 onward 338 Over the next few years it contested a number of by elections around the country coming second in both Barnsley Central and Rotherham 339 In 2008 Bob Spink the MP for Castle Point resigned the Tory whip becoming an Independent but in April that year joined UKIP 340 However in November he appeared again as an Independent in Commons proceedings 341 ultimately losing the seat to a Conservative in 2010 In 2014 two Conservative MPs changed allegiance to UKIP and resigned their seats to fight by elections for UKIP Douglas Carswell won the Clacton by election on 9 October making him the first MP to be elected representing UKIP 342 Mark Reckless was also victorious in the Rochester and Strood by election on 20 November 84 At the 2015 general election Carswell kept his seat in Clacton but Reckless lost Rochester to the Conservative Kelly Tolhurst 343 UKIP had 3 881 129 votes 12 6 and was the third largest party on vote share yet it won only one seat 344 Because of this there were calls from some in UKIP for a voting reform in favour of proportional representation 345 Carswell quit the party in March 2017 to become an independent leaving UKIP without any MPs in the Commons 104 In the 2017 election a snap election initiated by PM Theresa May and scheduled for 8 June 2017 UKIP got 1 9 of the votes after 12 6 in the 2015 election and no seats in the House of Commons House of Lords On 24 June 1995 UKIP gained its first member of the House of Lords The Lord Grantley who had joined the party in 1993 from the Conservatives and had recently succeeded to his father s titles However with the coming House of Lords Act 1999 he decided not to stand for election as a continuing member and so left the House in November 1999 Earlier in 1999 UKIP had gained a second peer in the House of Lords The Earl of Bradford but he too left the House in November 1999 because of the House of Lords Act The Lord Pearson of Rannoch and The Lord Willoughby de Broke both defected to UKIP in 2007 346 giving the party its first representation in the House of Lords since the departure of Lord Grantley and Lord Bradford 347 The Lord Pearson of Rannoch went on to serve as party leader from November 2009 to September 2010 On 18 September 2012 The Lord Stevens of Ludgate joined UKIP having sat as an Independent Conservative since his expulsion from the Conservatives in 2004 348 In Autumn 2018 Lord Willoughby de Broke left UKIP reducing the party s representation in the upper house back down to two 349 Lord Stevens also left the party in December 2018 leaving former leader Lord Pearson as UKIP s sole peer 350 In October 2019 Lord Pearson resigned his membership of the party Devolved parliaments and assemblies UKIP competes electorally in all four parts of the United Kingdom 178 Northern IrelandIn October 2012 UKIP gained its first representation in a devolved Assembly the Northern Ireland Assembly in David McNarry MLA for Strangford who had left the Ulster Unionist Party 351 The party however failed to continue its representation at the 2016 election coming within a hundred votes of taking a seat in East Antrim 352 This seat was unsuccessfully contested in the 2017 election ScotlandUKIP s support has been particularly weak in Scotland where it has no representatives in the devolved parliament 353 UKIP fielded candidates at the Scottish Parliament election on 5 May 2011 when its platform included a commitment to keep the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh while replacing the separately elected Members of the Scottish Parliament with the Members of the House of Commons elected in Scotland 354 The party fielded candidates on the regional lists in the 2016 election without any success 355 In the 2021 Scottish Parliament election candidates were again fielded on regional lists 356 WalesThe party also fielded candidates for the Senedd 357 In the 2016 election it entered the Assembly for the first time winning seven of 60 seats 358 However following the resignations of Caroline Jones Mark Reckless Nathan Gill and Michelle Brown by March 2019 the party s representation had fallen to three AMs 359 UKIP ceased to have a formal Welsh Assembly group after David Rowlands resigned in May 2019 to form a new Brexit Party group with Reckless Jones and Mandy Jones who had replaced Nathan Gill on his resignation as an AM 360 UKIP were left without any Senedd members after the 2021 Senedd election 361 Local government UKIP office in Tunbridge Wells UKIP initially paid little attention to local government elections However this changed after Farage observed that building localised strongholds of support in various parts of the country had been the process by which the Liberal Democrats had entered the House of Commons and that this was a strategy that could benefit UKIP 362 UKIP subsequently focused on the 2011 local elections in which it fielded over 1 100 candidates winning seven seats and becoming the main opposition in over 100 363 The first UKIP local council election win occurred when one of its members was elected to South Cambridgeshire District Council in 2000 A number of Conservative Liberal Democrat Labour and Independent local councillors in all four constituent nations of the UK defected to UKIP over subsequent years with the most recent defections to date May to July 2013 coming from former Conservative councillors in the London Boroughs of Merton Richmond upon Thames and Havering and from Labour in Northampton and North East Lincolnshire In May 2013 33 English and one Welsh council held local elections with UKIP gaining 139 seats for a total of 147 with significant gains in Lincolnshire Norfolk and Kent 364 In the 2013 local elections UKIP won 147 seats and established itself as the largest opposition party in six English county councils 365 At the 2013 and 2014 local elections UKIP made significant gains to become the fourth largest party in terms of councillors in England and fifth largest in the UK with over 300 seats out of about 21 000 In the 2015 local elections UKIP took control of Thanet District Council its first majority control of a council 366 However the party lost control later in the year after several of its councillors defected and it lost its majority UKIP later took back control as a majority after winning the 2016 Northwood ward by election taking its number of councillors up to 29 In the 2016 local elections UKIP won 58 council seats an increase of 25 367 In the 2017 United Kingdom local elections UKIP lost all of the seats it was defending but gained one from Labour on Lancashire County Council 106 in the 2018 United Kingdom local elections UKIP lost all but 3 of the 126 seats it was defending 368 In the 2019 United Kingdom local elections UKIP suffered severe losses with its number of councillors collapsing by 145 to 31 in the districts where votes were held that year Its worst result was in Thanet where it lost 33 councillors 369 In the 2021 United Kingdom local elections the party s support fell away and all the 48 council seats in England the party were defending were lost No seats were won in the London Assembly Police and Crime Commissioners or elections for Mayors 370 The 2022 local elections saw the party lose all three seats it was defending from 2018 371 European Parliament As a result of its hard Eurosceptic approach UKIP does not recognise the legitimacy of the European Parliament and under Sked s leadership refused to take any of the EP seats that it won 372 This changed after 1997 when the party decided that its elected representatives would take such seats to publicise its anti EU agenda 372 As a result of the 1999 European parliament election three UKIP MEPs were elected to the European Parliament Together with Eurosceptic parties from other nations they formed a new European parliamentary group called Europe of Democracies and Diversities EDD 373 Farage with France Arise leader Nicolas Dupont Aignan in Strasbourg February 2013 Following the 2004 European parliament election 37 MEPs from the UK Poland Denmark and Sweden founded a new European Parliamentary group called Independence and Democracy as a direct successor to the EDD group 374 After the 2009 European parliament election UKIP was a founder member of a new right wing grouping called Europe of Freedom and Democracy EFD comprising Eurosceptic radical right nationalist national conservative and other political factions 375 This group was more right wing than the previous term s Independence and Democracy group 376 Following the 2014 European parliament election the EFD group was reconstituted as the Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy EFDD or EFD2 group on 24 June 2014 with a significant changes to group composition including the Five Star Movement of Italy a total of 48 members 377 378 The EFDD group lost official status in October 2014 when the defection of the Latvian MEP Iveta Grigule meant its membership no longer met the required number of states for Parliamentary groups at least seven different member states 379 380 On 20 October the EFDD announced it had restored the requisite seven state diversity by recruiting Robert Iwaszkiewicz one of four representatives of the far right Polish party Congress of the New Right 379 381 In December 2014 UKIP co founded the Alliance for Direct Democracy in Europe a European political party whose membership is composed of several member parties of the EFDD parliamentary group 382 In the 2009 14 parliament UKIP ranked 76th out of 76 for attendance took part in 61 of votes and had three of the six lowest attending MEPs 383 which led to criticism from other parties and ex UKIP MEPs that low participation may damage British interests 384 Between July 2014 and May 2015 its 23 MEPs maintained their record as the least active participating on average in only 62 29 of votes 385 In response to criticism of low participation by UKIP MEPs in the EU Parliament Farage has said that Our objective as MEPs is not to keep voting endlessly for more EU legislation and to take power away from Westminster 386 Members of the European Parliament UKIP had no members in the European Parliament following the 2019 EU election Twenty four UKIP representatives were elected in the 2014 election but twenty subsequently defected one was expelled 387 and three lost their seats in the 2019 election 388 For a full list of defections see here James Carver left UKIP to sit as an independent on 28 May 2018 389 William Dartmouth left the party on 26 September 2018 to sit as an independent accusing Batten of hijacking the party to campaign against Islam as a religion and associating himself with outlandish people and extreme right wing groups 390 Bill Etheridge followed shortly afterwards on 2 October 2018 saying that the party under Batten s leadership is seen by voters as a vehicle of hate towards Muslims and the gay community 391 In November 2018 Patrick O Flynn resigned to join the Social Democratic Party in protest over UKIP s move to the hard right 392 and Louise Bours became an independent MEP 393 Former leader Nigel Farage quit on 6 December 2018 394 as did Scottish MEP David Coburn 395 Another former leader Paul Nuttall quit the party the following day as did London Assembly Member Peter Whittle 396 It was reported that Tim Aker had also quietly quit the party earlier in 2018 397 Julia Reid announced her resignation from UKIP on 8 December 2018 398 with Jonathan Bullock following the next day 399 Jill Seymour Jane Collins and Margot Parker left for the Brexit Party on 15 April 2019 with the first of those three citing the party s current direction and occupation of the extreme right of politics 400 and the second citing Batten s sick defence of Carl Benjamin s rape comments 401 On 17 April Jonathan Arnott and Ray Finch both defected to The Brexit Party and along with Seymour Collins and Parker sat in the EFDD group 402 As of April 2019 Batten and Agnew were members of the Europe of Nations and Freedom group in the European Parliament 403 while Hookem was Non Inscrit unattached All lost their seats in the European Parliament in June 2019 Election resultsFurther information UK Independence Party representation and election results European Parliament elections Election year Leader of total votes of overall vote of seats won Outcome1994 Alan Sked 150 251 8th 1 0 0 87 No seats1999 Jeffrey Titford 696 057 4th 6 5 3 87 Opposition2004 Roger Knapman 2 650 768 3rd 15 6 12 87 Opposition2009 Nigel Farage 2 498 226 2nd 16 13 87 Opposition2014 Nigel Farage 4 352 251 1st 27 5 24 87 Opposition2019 Gerard Batten 554 463 8th 3 2 0 87 No seatsGeneral elections During the 2010 15 Parliament two Conservative MPs defected to UKIP and were re elected in subsequent by elections At the 2015 general election UKIP retained one of these seats Clacton and received over 30 of the vote in Boston and Skegness South Thanet Heywood and Middleton Thurrock and Rochester and Strood It lost its only seat in the 2017 election when Clacton was regained by the Conservatives Election year Leader of total votes of overall vote of seats won Outcome1997 404 Alan Sked 105 722 0 3 0 659 No seats2001 405 Jeffrey Titford 390 563 1 5 0 659 No seats2005 406 Roger Knapman 603 298 2 2 0 646 No seats2010 407 Lord Pearson 919 546 3 1 0 650 No seats2015 408 Nigel Farage 3 881 099 12 6 1 650 Opposition2017 409 Paul Nuttall 593 852 1 8 0 650 No seats2019 Patricia Mountain interim leader 153 22 817 0 1 0 650 No seatsReceptionOther political groups In campaigning on emotive issues UKIP has proved divisive 410 Popular stereotypes have framed it as a far right party 315 and portrayed its activists as old white men holding offensive views 411 The party has faced vocal opposition from anti fascist groups such as Hope not Hate who have accused it of tapping into nationalist and xenophobic sentiment in its campaigns 412 Writing for The New York Times Magazine Geoffrey Wheatcroft noted that there had been a concerted campaign to brand UKIP as racist an accusation that some of its own activists have done nothing to discourage 413 Goodwin and Caitlin Milazzo highlighted that Farage had been routinely ridiculed and dismissed at best being portrayed as a beer swilling populist who wanted to drag Britain back to the 1950s while at worst depicted as a racist would be demagogue who secretly wanted to overthrow the UK s liberal parliamentary democracy 414 For many years mainstream political figures derided or demeaned the importance of UKIP although this did little to obstruct its electoral advances 415 By 2014 at which point UKIP was securing significant electoral support in the European Parliamentary elections the main parties began to take it more seriously and devoted more time to countering the electoral threat it posed to them in turn drawing more journalistic attention to the party 416 This increased attention gave the party the oxygen of publicity which helped bring the party to the attention of previously inattentive voters 417 Many on Britain s centre left have been reluctant to accept that UKIP was hindering public support for Labour instead believing that they were primarily a problem for the Conservatives and would thus help produce a Labour victory 418 419 Labour found that their campaign strategy of accusing UKIP of racism backfired as rather than distancing UKIP supporters from the party it contributed to the perception that Labour failed to understand widespread concerns regarding immigration 420 A December 2014 poll by ComRes found that voters saw UKIP as closer to the centre ground of politics than the Conservatives 421 Media and academia The British press have publicised statements made by UKIP activists and candidates which have been regarded as racist sexist or otherwise bigoted 422 Among the examples of UKIP representatives and supporters embarrassing the party have been an MEP who called for a ban on the construction of mosques and for all British Muslims to sign a code of conduct a councillor who suggested that shops should be allowed to refuse service to women and homosexuals and a council candidate who compared Islam to Nazism and told black comedian Lenny Henry to leave Britain after the latter called for greater ethnic diversity within the UK s creative industries 423 In 2015 a documentary called Meet the Ukippers filmed activists making racist statements one said the only people I do have a problem with are negroes 218 For many years such individuals were internally tolerated within the party although as part of Farage s push to professionalise the party a number of its members such as MEP Godfrey Bloom were expelled for making comments that brought UKIP into disrepute 424 In 2018 Jo Marney who was then the girlfriend of the party leader Henry Bolton was suspended from UKIP after it was revealed that she had sent texts stating that black Africans were ugly In these messages she had criticised Meghan Markle for marrying into the British royal family stating that Markle was a dumb little commoner and a black American Pushing their way to the top slowly Next will be a Muslim PM and a black king 425 Farage talking to the media in 2012 In a May 2014 YouGov survey 47 considered the media to be biased against UKIP which was double the percentage who deemed the media biased against any other party 426 423 The BBC received almost 1 200 complaints about its coverage of the 2014 European and local elections 149 claimed that the BBC were biased against UKIP while the rest claimed that it gave disproportionate attention to the party The BBC defended its coverage 427 Farage accused the BBC of a liberal bias particularly on issues of immigration the EU and climate change 428 David Deacon and Dominic Wring s examination of press coverage of UKIP during their 2014 campaign demonstrated that of the elite newspapers the pro EU titles The Guardian and The Observer gave the most coverage to perceived racist and intolerant aspects of the party while the Eurosceptic titles The Times and The Sunday Times instead focused on questioning the propriety and integrity of UKIP representatives 429 Among the populist tabloids The Sun Sun on Sunday and the Daily Mirror Sunday Mirror were found to contain the most negative coverage of UKIP while the Daily Express and Sunday Express owned by UKIP donor Richard Desmond gave significantly lower coverage to the gaffes and prejudices of UKIP representatives 429 Deacon and Wring noted that the majority of those right wing newspapers that share UKIP s views on immigration also share the perspective of more liberal newspapers that many of UKIP s interventions are racist 430 This right wing press opposition to UKIP may result from the allegiance that these newspapers have to the Conservatives and resulting perception of UKIP as an electoral threat 430 Academic research has been carried out into UKIP In 2016 it was noted that most of this had focused on examining the party s electoral support base its consequences for other parties and the possibilities and prospects of a referendum on continued EU membership with little having focused on an examination of the party s policies 431 Two currents have emerged among those seeking to interpret UKIP the first and generally older current views them as a manifestation of Britain s strong Eurosceptic movement while the second seeks to explain their position in the British parliamentary system while drawing upon the comparative literature on right wing populist parties elsewhere in Europe 432 See alsoEuroscepticism in the United Kingdom Russian interference in the 2016 Brexit referendum 2010s in United Kingdom political historyNotes Diane James won the September 2016 leadership election but resigned 18 days later prior to taking office As the relevant paperwork required by the Electoral Commission was not completed before her resignation legally Farage remained the leader of UKIP during James s tenure 328 Farage continued to act as interim leader of UKIP until the November 2016 election ReferencesCitations UKIP Leadership www ukip org a b UKIP Our People www ukip org UKIP United Kingdom Independence Party Retrieved 30 November 2021 a b United Kingdom Independence Party Limited a company limited by guarantee report and accounts 31 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