Nigel Farage launches Ukip campaign amid criticism of
'racist' rhetoric
Party leader
unveils posters for European elections campaign and pledges to tighten access
to benefits of EU migrants in UK
Patrick Wintour and Hatty Collier
The Guardian, Tuesday 22 April 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/apr/22/nigel-farage-ukip-european-elections-campaign
The Ukip leader, Nigel Farage, said that he
wanted to restrict access to benefits of 2 million existing EU migrants staying
in the UK
but admitted that he could not throw them out of the country.
He was speaking at the launch of a Ukip
campaign in Sheffield where he was inundated by criticisms of posters alleging
that nearly 2 million EU unemployed were seeking jobs in the UK .
Labour claimed the posters were redolent of
the Nazi's propaganda chief Goebbels' big lie, and Keith Vaz, chairman of the
home affairs select committee, said they were hypocritical since Ukip had
criticised the Home Office's "Go Home" van advertisements last
summer.
Vaz said Farage was lowering the tone of
debate in the UK
and the shadow international development secretary, Jim Murphy, said they were
a desperate cry for attention.
The Tory peer Lord Eden said: "Ukip
stands for the worst in human beings: our prejudice, selfishness, and
fear."
The posters are being funded by Paul Sykes,
one of Ukip's biggest donors. Sykes said he had no idea what the cost of the
posters had been and he had not stopped spending yet. He added: "I am
going to spend whatever it takes to make the British people aware that we are
no longer governed from this great nation of ours."
He later added that he thought the cost
might be in the region of £1.4m but there had been many contributions.
Farage said he wanted to refrain from saying
anything about Ukip's domestic policies until after the European elections, but
said he would not throw out existing EU migrants.
He said: "You can't change the law
retrospectively – anyone who's come here legally, you can't say you can't be
here legally. You might say there's a slight change to your long-term benefit
entitlement but you can't say to people who have legally come that you can't be
here."
Farage insisted the campaign launch would
strike up a debate between ordinary people across the country.
He said: "The posters are going to
wake people up and they're going to get people talking. I'll have a little bet
with you that there'll be pubs and clubs and restaurants up and down this
country tonight where a big conversation will be going on." Farage plans
to spend as long as two weeks in the north targeting the Labour vote. He said
he chose Sheffield for the launch because Yorkshire held a lot of symbolism for
the party, after they came second in a byelection in Barnsley
two years ago.
He said: "The majority of seats here
in Yorkshire are held by Labour MPs. We are
going to put maximum pressure on Yorkshire , on
this part of the world.
"If we're going to win, we can only do
it by getting a big labour vote in these northern cities. So that's the
symbolism."
Farage was forced again to explain why he
was employing his German wife as a secretary, claiming that "nobody
else" could do the job, with its long hours. He said: "I don't think
anybody else would want to be in my house at midnight, going through emails and
getting me briefed for the next day."
Pressed on whether his wife was an example
of a European person taking a British person's job, he replied: "Nobody
else could do that job – not unless I married them. It's a very different
situation to a mass of hundreds of thousands of people coming in and flooding
the lower ends of the labour market in Britain ."
There was a mixed reaction from the crowd
who witnessed the launch, including 73-year-old Margaret Bullivant from Sheffield .
Bullivant, who is retired but works
part-time at York
racecourse, said: "I am absolutely going to vote for Ukip. My husband and
I have worked every bit of our lives. I worked for 44 years and I'm still doing
a part-time job so we've paid into the system.
"But there are people coming in that
get houses and benefits, and I think it was time it was stopped. It's not the
people we're against and if there were enough jobs then fair enough but we
haven't the jobs."
Chaz Lockett, 22, who will be standing in Sheffield 's local council elections for the Trade
Unionist and Socialist Coalition, said Ukip were using the election campaign
launch to scaremonger and gain political advantage.
Lockett, who is also a student at the University of Sheffield , said: "Ukip are playing
on the fears of ordinary people, in a situation where we're having massive cuts
to local services and where there's huge unemployment.
"Ukip have come along today and are
giving easy answers to the fears that people have, whipping up racism against
migrants and people who come to this country. They're using that to gain
political advantage out of a horrendous situation. I don't think Farage
believes a word he says."
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