Nearly a third of voters prepared to support Ukip
Observer/Opinium
poll shows 31% of voters would back Nigel Farage’s party if they believed it
could win in their constituency
Toby Helm and Daniel Boffey
The Observer, Saturday 25 October 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/oct/25/nearly-third-of-voters-prepared-to-support-ukip
The phenomenal rise in support for Ukip is
underlined by a new Opinium/Observer poll which shows almost one-third of
voters would be prepared to back Nigel Farage’s party if they believed it could
win in their own constituency.
While the survey, which puts the
Conservatives and Labour neck-and-neck on 33%, shows a substantial boost for
the Tories (up five points on a fortnight ago), the rise of Ukip will be deeply
alarming to the main parties.
With just over three weeks to go before a
crucial byelection in the normally safe Tory seat of Rochester and Strood,
which Ukip threatens to seize, the poll puts Ukip on 18% of the national vote,
with the Lib Dems on 6% and the Greens on 4%.
If the Ukip candidate Mark Reckless, who
defected from the Tories last month, wins the byelection, the Conservatives
fear there could be a rush of defections as MPs conclude that their chances of
re-election are higher under Ukip colours.
When asked to respond to the statement “I
would vote for Ukip if I thought they could win in the constituency I live in”,
31% of voters said they agreed. This includes 33% of Tory voters, 25% of
Liberal Democrats and 18% of Labour supporters. Voters were equally divided on
whether a vote for Ukip was a wasted one, with 40% saying it was, and 37%
saying it was not.
The poll also shows all four main party
leaders on negative net ratings, with Nigel Farage the most popular on just
-1%, David Cameron on -6%, Ed Milband on -23% and Nick Clegg on -43%.
On Saturday night, Robert Ford, who
co-authored a recent academic analysis of Ukip support with Matthew Goodwin,
Revolt on the Right, said the findings raised new questions about next year’s
general election, and suggest Ukip could be even more of a threat in subsequent
ones.
“These figures could have serious
implications for all the main parties. In seats where Ukip are already
well-established thanks to local election and byelection success, there will be
a large pool of voters they can appeal to in their attempts to build a winning Westminster coalition in 2015.”
The biggest effect of the Ukip surge could
be in subsequent national elections. “In many seats, Ukip support may currently
be suppressed by the perception that they are a ‘wasted vote’ – a perception
which a party with little electoral track record will find it hard to combat,”
he said.
“Yet if Ukip perform in line with current
polling, they will secure strong second-place finishes in a wide range of seats
next year, and then, like the Liberal Democrats before them, they can take
their case to voters as the party of local opposition. The large swath of the
electorate willing to seriously consider the party will make this a viable
option in a wide range of seats, potentially opening a wide swath of
constituencies to an unprecedented challenge.”
The latest sign of the rise of Ukip – which
campaigns for the UK to leave the EU – follows an unexpected attempt by the
European commission to get the UK to pay £1.7bn more into European coffers
following a budgetary readjustment, based on the gross national incomes of
member countries.
The commission said the budget was always
adjusted to take account of countries’ gross national incomes but provoked a
furious response from David Cameron, who said he would block the payment by the
due date of 1 December. The prime minister will make a Commons statement on
Monday spelling out his intentions.
Farage has said Cameron will have no option
but to pay up and cited the row as further evidence that the UK should leave
the EU as soon as possible.
In a sign Tory MPs may call on Cameron to
block any extra payment, Nick de Bois, Enfield North MP and secretary of the
backbench 1922 committee, said he believed the UK should stand firm and pay
nothing extra.
He said: “The prime minister is absolutely
right to set out that he won’t pay it – and I have every confidence that is
exactly what will happen.”
Chris Leslie, the shadow chief secretary to
the Treasury, wrote to George Osborne demanding to know how long the government
had known about the possibility of a higher EU budget surcharge. Cameron said
he only found out earlier this week, but the Treasury had known of the demand
for some days before that.
Leslie said in his letter there was
evidence that the Office for National Statistics, which approved the data used
for the calculation, had known for some time about the pending charge. “The ONS
published a report over four months ago detailing the changes made to UK growth
figures which it stated were for use in the calculation of a member state’s
contribution to the EU budget.
“These surcharges are the conclusion of a
process launched in 2011 by the European statistics agency Eurostat, and cited
by the ONS in 2012, which was designed to harmonise the GNI calculations for EU
nations.”
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