Douglas Carswell tells Ukip to stop blaming foreigners
as youth poll shows Nigel Farage is even less popular than Nick Clegg
ADAM WITHNALL Author Sunday 28 December 2014 /
Douglas Carswell,
one of Ukip’s most senior figures, has called on the party to stop making “the
mistake of blaming outsiders” for Britain ’s problems and described
disliking foreigners as “not merely offensive, but absurd”.
The former Tory MP’s comments came as a
damning new poll showed Ukip had failed to win the support of young voters
ahead of the general election in May, who were found to be six times more
likely to choose the Green Party.
Mr Carswell, whose by-election victory over
his former party in October made him one of Ukip’s most influential faces and
one of their two members in the Commons, said it was “interdependence that put
the Great into Great Britain ”.
His comments come after party leader Nigel
Farage defended the language used by Ukip candidate Kerry Smith, who mocked gay
party members as “p******s”, joked about shooting people from Chigwell in a
“peasant hunt” and referred to someone as a “C****y bird”.
Mr Farage also made headlines last month
when he blamed his lateness to a paid-for party event on “immigrants” causing
greater traffic on the M4.
Writing in the Mail on Sunday, Mr Carswell
said: “Far from being a party that tolerates pejorative comments about people's
heritage and background, Ukip in 2015 has to show that we have a serious
internationalist agenda.
“Ahead of May's General Election, we now
have to show the whole country that we have what it takes to win big. That
means an optimistic, internationalist and inclusive agenda for the whole
country.”
Meanwhile, a poll of 502 17-22 year olds by
Opinium for The Observer found that Labour enjoyed an eight-point lead over the
Tories among the age group when it came to May's general election, ahead by 26
per cent to 18 per cent.
But of the 17 per cent who said they would
vote outside the main three Westminster parties, almost seven in ten (69 per
cent) intend to give their support to the Green Party with only 16 per cent
choosing Ukip.
And young people were also found to be
predominantly pro-European, with 67 per cent saying they would vote to remain a
member state.
Finally, they were unimpressed by Mr Farage
as a leader, with only 13 per cent agreeing that he did a good job and 64 per
cent disagreeing – a net negative rating that was even worse than Nick Clegg’s.
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