United Kingdom Independence Party

The United Kingdom Independence Party (usually shortened to UKIP or Ukip, commonly pronounced "YOU-kip"; the members may be kippers) is a far-right hard-Eurosceptic UK political party. Founded in 1993, the party originated as a center-right single issue party to get UK to leave the EU; by the mid-late 2000s the party had become right-wing populist under the leadership of Nigel Farage, which gradually saw the party rise in opinion polls and win the 2014 UK European Parliament election, with 27% of the overall vote and 24 MEPs. Arguably the sharp increase in support for UKIP caused the Brexit referendum of June 2016, however after UKIP achieved its raison d'être for Britain to leave the EU, the party post-referendum has massively declined in its voter-base and membership, while also losing most of its MEPs via resignations and defections. In 2017, UKIP began flirting with Islamophobia for the first time in their policies and under the leadership of Gerrard Batten (April 2018), UKIP became widely perceived as a far-right anti-Islam party with Batten having made ex-EDL leader Tommy Robinson his advisor. Batten's anti-Muslim views and association with extremists led to Nigel Farage and several other MEPs  leaving UKIP to join the Brexit Party in February 2019. Ironically the founder of the latter, Catherine Blaiklock, is an Islamophobe, who posted inflammatory comments about Muslims online and made controversial statements about race.

Under Farage (2006-2009, 2011-2016), political scientists considered UKIP to be a right-wing populist party. While often using anti-immigration rhetoric, with Farage becoming the main face of UKIP and spearheading its anti-multiculturalism and anti-political-correctness brand of populism - Farage's UKIP wasn't labelled far-right or fascist, but "polite xenophobes" and Farage "trod a mostly careful line between dog-whistle politics and demonstrable racism". In contrast, UKIP under/post-Batten is thought to be "radical right" or "far-right" similar to the National Rally in France and the Alternative für Deutschland in Germany; Batten also controversially aligned UKIP with the former in the EU Parliament by joining Marine Le Pen's ENF group.

Despite doing well in European Parliament elections, UKIP has always struggled to win seats in UK General elections because of the first past the post (FPTP) electoral system as well as the fact in the mid-late 2000s they were in competition with the British National Party for anti-immigration voters; in 2008 Farage rejected a UKIP-BNP electoral pact. By 2012, the BNP had collapsed electorally, and UKIP clearly benefited. Under Farage, UKIP at its height in March-June 2016 reached around 15% in General election opinion polls, but only ever won a single seat in the, although secured nearly 4 million votes (13% overall). Had the electoral system been proportional representation, UKIP would have won at least 80 seats. Post-referendum, UKIP plummeted in General election opinion polls under 3%, but briefly managed in July 2018 to recover to 6-8%, as a consequence of a backlash to Theresa May's Chequers plan. This recovery however was short-lived and UKIP within a few months began polling lower again because the far-right direction of the party was alienating Eurosceptic voters who don't feel comfortable with UKIP's Muslim-bashing.

After Farage stepped down as leader immediately after the Brexit referendum, UKIP struggled to find a serious successor; Putin-admirer Diane James won the 2016 leadership election, but only lasted 18 days and shortly afterwards quit the party. Paul Nuttall became leader in November 2016 and resigned in June 2017. He was replaced by, but party members voted Bolton out of this position in February 2018, replaced by Gerard Batten in April. In 2019, former leader Nigel Farage formed a new party, the Brexit Party, which rapidly overtook UKIP in the polls: if the results of the 2019 European parliament elections are any guide, when the Brexit Party got 31.6% of the vote and won 29 seats against UKIP's 3.3% and 0 seats, UKIP's days are numbered.

In August 2019 Richard Braine replaced Batten. In October, Braine quit as leader and was suspended from UKIP.

As of 2020, UKIP is polling so low (under 0.5%) it doesn't appear listed in General election opinion surveys.

Alan Sked, Anti-Federalist League
UKIP was founded in 1993 by Dr Alan Sked, a historian and lecturer at the London School of Economics; it has its origins two years earlier with the Anti-Federalist League, a small pressure-group, that was formed to campaign against the when the European Economic Community became the European Union. Sked was a former member and candidate for the Europhile Liberal Party, but had apparently become a Eurosceptic after teaching the European Studies programme at LSE in the early 1990s and discovering the EU is undemocratic and bureaucratic. On 3 September 1993, the Anti-Federalist League changed its name to the United Kingdom Independence Party. In the early years of its existence, UKIP lost potential voters and members to the rival of James Goldsmith, but by November 1997, the latter ceased to exist and UKIP increased its donors, voter-base and membership (160 members joined from the Referendum Party ), although it never came close to winning a UK parliamentary seat it contested for example in the  the UKIP candidate polled only 521 votes (1%), a typical low result at the time. Sked was leader until 1997, when Michael Holmes took over.

1999 European election success, infighting
Sked wanted UKIP to remain a centre-right single issue party campaigning for UK to leave the EU and would focus on winning seats at Westminster than European parliament. Nigel Farage in contrast wanted to shift UKIP into a right-wing populist direction and focus on lowering immigration; Sked has described Farage as being "obsessed with immigration" and he quit the party in protest, warning UKIP had been infiltrated by racists as extreme as the BNP. Sked accused Farage of referring to black people as "niggers" and "nig-nogs". Farage was criticized by the media for being spotted dining with two senior BNP party officials, yet denied any wrongdoing; he said he didn't know their party affiliation.🇱🇮

In 1999, UKIP had their first success in the UK European Parliament election which introduced proportional representation, winning three seats with 696,057 votes (7%) including Farage getting elected as an MEP. However, soon after that triumph, the party again descended into infighting and the UKIP national executive passed a motion of no confidence in its leader, Michael Holmes, who quit the party in 2000; he was replaced by former Conservative councillor Jeffrey Titford. Furthermore, UKIP's success in the 1999 European election wasn't followed up at the 2001 UK General election: they contested 438 parliamentary seats, but won none and scored a mere 2% of the overall vote, coming fifth behind the SNP. The party also had little interest contesting local council seats; Farage later realised this was a mistake and "UKIP's Achilles' heel had been a reluctance to engage in locally focused pavement politics" that could build up a base of support in other elections. The party was still widely regarded by the general public as a fringe-group and a laughing-stock thanks to a motley roster of lesser-known celebrities including TV chef Rusty Lee, the lately-disgraced ex-Conservative MP Neil Hamilton, cricketer and wife-beater Geoffrey Boycott, eccentric astronomer Patrick Moore, and Roy Wood from 70s pop act Wizzard ("I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day") but gradually electoral success began to come its way.

2005 General Election, Veritas
Roger Knapman, a former Conservative MP, replaced Titford as leader in 2002, and UKIP increased their seats and vote share percentage (16%) in the 2004 UK European parliament election, beating the Liberal Democrats into third place with 12 MEPs, including Farage being re-elected. This was achieved after Farage exploited fears about uncontrolled immigration from the EU; UKIP began for the first time campaigning to reduce immigration by distributing xenophobic leaflets that led them to be called "BNP in blazers", i.e. "Under the headline 'Immigration soaring', a cartoon depicts 'overcrowded Britain', a shanty-town jumble of houses: across the sea, streams of eastern European immigrants pour into an entrance labelled 'Channel Funnel'." UKIP also benefited since the and local elections were held on the same day, winning two seats on the London Assembly by proportional representation and their first local council seat in Derby.

In 2004 the party paid £100,000 to publicist Max Clifford, who was later sentenced to 8 years in jail for a string of sexual assaults. The next year, the party faced a new party rival: former Labour MP Robert Kilroy-Silk had contested the UKIP leadership in 2004 unsuccessfully and quit soon after, setting up a new party called Veritas; he was joined by a defecting UKIP London Assembly member in February 2005. Led by the charismatic Kilroy-Silk, Veritas was founded on an "[anti]-immigration ticket" and shared Farage's right-wing populism; at this time Farage had not taken control of UKIP to fully radicalise the party, and Roger Knapman was leader. Knapman was disliked by many in UKIP for being regarded as a "mainstream" politician and refusing to contest parliamentary seats where there were Conservative Eurosceptic candidates, hence the party continued to be seen as too single-issue. After Kilroy-Silk's defection, UKIP's membership declined and it had to face competing against Veritas in the 2005 General election. Both focused on trying to win over anti-immigration voters, but suffered from the rise of the British National Party who were performing much better than UKIP/Veritas in local council elections and parliamentary by-elections. In the 2005 General election, while fielding fewer candidates than UKIP, but more than Veritas, the BNP did better than both (in terms of vote %) in seats they contested. This is despite the fact Kilroy-Silk's immigration policy for Veritas was almost as extreme as the BNP's: "immigrants must speak English, pass health tests, have no criminal convictions and integrate into the British way of life"; a 3-year moratorium (temporary ban) on immigration, while deporting all illegal immigrants. During Veritas' manifesto launch in April 2005, Kilroy-Silk bizarrely described multiculturalism as "liberal fascism".

Competing with the BNP for votes
Neither UKIP, BNP nor Veritas won a parliamentary seat in 2005, but BNP continued to perform well in local elections and won 33 councillors in 2006. When Farage was elected leader of UKIP in September 2006 he began to change the electoral strategy of the party to focus on local electioneering and made UKIP into an anti-immigration populist competitor of the BNP. UKIP no longer had to complete with Veritas since Kilroy-Silk resigned in July 2005 and the party ceased contesting elections soon after; most its members rejoined UKIP. In the 2007 local elections Farage fielded many more candidates with the purpose of trying to shred UKIP's single-issue image. However, to Farage's frustration, UKIP failed to win a single councillor. UKIP only held a handful of council seats, mostly by defections from the Conservative Party; in contrast the BNP in 2007 had 50 councillors, including twelve on Barking and Dagenham council. The BNP also easily won more votes than UKIP in parliamentary by-elections e.g. in the the BNP candidate received 2,494 (9%), UKIP, only 536 (2%). In 2008 some UKIP and BNP members proposed an electoral pact to avoid splitting the anti-immigration vote, but this was refused by Farage.

UKIP gained its first ever MP by defection, when Bob Spink in April 2008 resigned from the Conservative Party. It also had gained two ex-Conservatives in the House of Lords, Lord Pearson of Rannoch and Lord Willoughby de Broke, who both defected to UKIP. Farage however wished to attract more than just ex-Tory's to UKIP, and changed the party's electoral strategy to try to win over disaffected white working-class voters by its populist messages on immigration. Both UKIP and BNP were targeting this same voter demographic, yet BNP continued to perform better in the 2008 and 2009 local elections than UKIP, despite UKIP making small gains. The BNP also did considerably better than UKIP in the. Farage temporarily stepped down as leader before the 2010 General election; UKIP under Lord Pearson fielded 558 candidates, while the BNP, 338. In most of the seats contested by both, BNP won more votes than UKIP; neither though won a single seat and lost over £100,000 in deposits. BNP lost all their local councillors in Barking.

By 2011, it was clear UKIP was replacing the BNP and picking up wide support from voters who are hostile to immigration but thought UKIP was a "polite[r] alternative" to the far-right British National Party. In the 2011 local elections, while UKIP won only a few council seats, they "chalked up over a hundred second placed showings and established themselves as the main opposition" in many local councils across England; they also took control of Ramsey Town council which is a lower-tier Parish. Despite Nick Griffin modernising the BNP and cosmetically distancing it from its fascist past, it was always overtly racist and UKIP benefited from the fact BNP massively declined in number of local candidates it fielded. UKIP could also succeed where the BNP failed because "it's not tainted by a violent, fascist past". Farage has said UKIP tried to "thrash the BNP" electorally at the 2011 by-election in, when UKIP polled 2,029 votes (6%), slighter higher than BNP's 1,560 (5%) after both parties campaigned to heavily restrict immigration:

What we did, starting with the Oldham by-election in the North of England is for the first time ever try to deal with the BNP question by going out and saying to BNP voters, if you are voting BNP because you are frustrated, upset with the change in your community, but you are doing it holding your nose because you don't agree with their racist agenda, come and vote for us. I would think that we have probably taken a third of the BNP vote directly from them.

In the 2012 local elections, UKIP made a modest net gain of councillors, increasing their vote percentage share in 694 contested seats to a record 14% and also scored significantly more votes than the BNP, whose overall vote had declined from their heyday in the late 2000s. By 2013 the BNP had electorally collapsed loosing all but two of their councillors, while UKIP won 147 councillors and received over a million votes (averaging 24% in contested seats), compared to the BNP's mere 13,000 votes. Farage calculated UKIP took a "third of the BNP's support" and admitted UKIP specifically targeted BNP voters who were "frustrated" and "upset" by demographic change in their communities by immigration, but who were formerly "holding their nose" when voting because they didn't agree with the BNP's racist agenda; instead he offered a "patriotic, but not racist alternative" to the BNP.

Political scientists agree that UKIP under Farage was not as extreme as the BNP, however they point out both parties shared a lot of similarities and that they have "drawn their strongest support from the 'left behind' in Britain: older, white working class voters who have few or no educational qualifications", furthermore that neither BNP nor UKIP had hardly any "appeal among minorities". UKIP had though more appeal to middle-class traditional Conservative Party voters than the BNP and prior to Farage leading UKIP, the party almost exclusively targeted Eurosceptic Conservative voters who thought "David Cameron is an out of-touch liberal, too-far removed from their idea of what a Conservative leader should be”. Cameron had once described UKIP as "fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists". UKIP's success therefore was that Farage managed to win over both middle class Conservative and working class Labour voters, as well as protest voters who felt disconnected from the "political elite" in Westminister and Farage's populism led UKIP voters to be labelled the "People's Army". In 2013, Farage in an attempt to distance UKIP's image from the BNP's, imposed a ban on former members of the BNP from joining the party.

One ideological distinction between UKIP and BNP emphasised by Farage is that UKIP is a civic nationalist party, opposed to the BNP's ethnic nationalism, thus according to UKIP's 2010 General election manifesto, the party is "open and inclusive to anyone who wishes to identify with Britain, regardless of ethnic or religious background". However, the latter has been criticized by some academics who highlight Farage has a long history of making xenophobic statements and that UKIP's hardline opposition to immigration is not inclusive and has been stoking tensions between different communities. Farage has controversially said he opposes multiculturalism, but accepts a multi-ethnic society where immigrants fully adopt British culture, promoting what he calls "uniculturalism". In 2014 he was criticized for saying he wouldn't personally want to live next door to Romanian immigrants. Farage has controversially argued for lowering immigration on cultural issues, rather than just economic and overcrowding anxieties caused by immigrants, for example he has claimed he feels "uncomfortable" about the unwillingness of some immigrants to learn and speak English, complaining of "many parts of England you don't hear English spoken any more".

2014 UK European Parliament election
Net immigration to the United Kingdom increased from 177,000 in 2012, to 209,000 in 2013 to 313,000 in 2014; according to Ipsos MORI research, 34% of the British electorate in mid-2013 thought immigration was the main issue facing the country, increasing to 41% in early 2014. Farage based UKIP's electoral strategy for the 2014 UK European Parliament election by focusing on immigration; speaking to party members in Torquay in February 2014 he said that "open door, mass immigration" had made parts of UK "unrecognisable" and that UKIP would lead a "patriotic fightback" and could pull off the "biggest political shock" in years by beating Labour and the Conservatives in May's European elections. Farage's prediction came true, and UKIP came first with 4,376,635 votes (27%), winning 24 MEPs. UKIP was awarded "major party" status by Ofcom, entitling the party to more frequent TV coverage. Research on UKIP voters showed that over three-quarters (76%) want to see immigration largely reduced, followed by dissatisfaction (47%) with mainstream parties.

Research by Ford (2009) and Ford & Goodwin (2014) has shown somewhere between 1/5 and 1/4 of British voters can be described as "anti-immigration" and are prepared to vote for a party that wants to sharply reduce immigration at a General election. UKIP had already met this maximum threshold in local and European elections, but in early-mid 2014 it still had no MPs; Bob Spink who had earlier defected to UKIP, lost his seat in the 2010 General election. Unlike BNP, UKIP could realise its full election potential at a General election in winning over anti-immigration voters because it has a less "toxic" image. While flirting with xenophobia under Farage's leadership, UKIP wasn't considered fascist or anti-Semitic; knowing this, Farage tried to professionalise the party for the 2015 General election in an attempt to maximise its votes and win seats in Westminster for the first time: "Farage has centered his party’s [2015] manifesto and many policy announcement on immigration, which he argued could not be controlled so long as Britain remained in the EU".

On 9 October 2014, UKIP unexpectedly won its first MP by the ballot;, defected from the Conservative Party and resigned his seat to stand as a UKIP candidate, retaining his seat in a subsequent by-election. However, the win was largely seen as a personal vote for Carswell because of his popularity, rather than a party victory; in contrast when UKIP had put up new candidates in parliamentary by-elections the same year such as, and  they failed to win the seats, despite scoring a large percentage of votes and coming second in each. In November 2014, UKIP gained another Conservative MP by defection, Mark Reckless.

The end of UKIP's Walter Mittys… 2015 General election
In 2014-2015 Farage criticised some in UKIP as "Walter Mittys" who had let him down by their lack of professionalism or having embarrassed the party; for example, a number of UKIP councillors had to be suspended or disciplined for making foolish comments on social media or in interviews, including UKIP Oxfordshire councillor David Silvester who said that changing the law to allow gay people to marry had caused floods, as a punishment by God. Farage vowed to remove these so-called "Walter Mittys" from the party to make the party disciplined and professional. In General election opinion polls, UKIP on average managed to increase their vote percentage from 4-5% in 2012, to 8% in 2013 to 14% in 2014. In the, UKIP stood 624 candidates, winning 3,881,099 votes (13%), but won only one seat in Clacton by Carswell. Farage came second in South Thanet scoring 32% of the vote and the party scored second places in over a hundred more seats. UKIP won only one seat by FPTP, but under proportional representation would have won 80 seats. UKIP had further success in local elections held on the same day and gained a net of 176 councillors, taking control of its first district council, Thanet in Kent.

Referendum and early post-referendum


On 5th May 2016, UKIP won two seats in the London Assembly election, 7 seats in the (receiving 132,138 votes, 13% of the overall vote) and gained an additional net of 25 councillors in the local elections. Farage hailed these "breakthroughs" as a major success. The party peaked in General election opinion polls at around 15% from March to June 2016 in the run up to the on 23 June 2016 and at that time had a total of over 500 local councillors. However, immediately afterwards, support for the party declined, gradually dropping to 10% by April 2017 and then quickly plummeting to 1-3% by June during the 2017 United Kingdom General election; UKIP councillors then began defecting in significant numbers to the Conservative party as well as becoming independents. In January 2018, all 17 of UKIP's Thurrock councillors left the party to create the new group.

The rising political force of UKIP (2014-2016) is widely regarded as the main reason David Cameron called for a referendum on UK's EU membership. However, the referendum result was the trigger for UKIP's decline since after "leave" won, UKIP's raison d'être for Britain to leave the EU was achieved and many now considered UKIP to serve no other purpose. In the 2017 General election this was demonstrated by the fact the party received only 594,068 votes (1.8% of the overall vote) and won no seats.

In 2017 and early 2018 UKIP lost several of their MEPS by resignations; their MP Carswell also resigned, while losing 145 councillors in the local elections and one of their elected Welsh AMs defected to the Conservatives. The party at this time also suffered from severe infighting and multiple leadership contests took place (Farage stood down shortly after the referendum); Paul Nuttall became leader in November 2016, but resigned in June 2017. He was replaced by Henry Bolton in September, but party members voted Bolton out of this position in February 2018. The party under Nuttall had for the first time began to flirt with Islamophobia and move into a BNP-sort of territory; millionaire ex-UKIP donor Arron Banks complained in April 2017 that UKIP is going in "entirely the wrong direction" after it unveiled a controversial "Integration Agenda" concerning Muslims. More extreme Islamophobes were though denied running the party when Bolton claimed he had stopped "Nazis" taking over UKIP when he defeated Anne Marie Waters, an openly anti-Islam candidate in the 2017 leadership election, who later set up her own party, For Britain. Bolton however was extremely unpopular after a scandal involving his girlfriend sending racist text messages; 63% of UKIP members voted to back a no confidence motion in him at an EGM. At this time UKIP had around 23,000 members, down from 40,000 in 2016.

2019 - The (even more) far-right era
After Gerard Batten became leader in April 2018 large numbers of far-right sympathisers joined the party, including the YouTubers Luke Nash-Jones, Carl Benjamin and Paul Joseph Watson (the latter two ran for European Parliament a year later). In August 2018 several high profile members of the party trashed a left-wing bookshop in central London screaming 'Free Tommy Robinson', a political gesture with a lot of historical precedent in far right movements. The former Tory Neil Hamilton, an Enoch Powell fetishist who was found guilty of receiving bribes from Mohamed Al-Fayed in 1997, also joined the party in 2018. Hamilton had been UKIP’s Welsh assembly leader from 2016 until May 2018, when he was fired for calling Leanne Wood a ‘concubine in a Hareem’ in literally his first ever speech to the assembly.

On 12 April, 2019 UKIP officially put Carl Benjamin and forward as candidates for the Southwest and Scottish regions respectively. To say this has been catastrophic for UKIP is understatement of the year.

Continuing to do great in the, the all six leaders of UKIP's Gloucestershire Branch have resigned in protest of Carl Benjarmin's candidacy, and have taken their website down and replaced it with a protest message and refusal to support Carl.

On 10 August 2019, Richard Braine was unveiled as the latest captain of the sinking ship, after party grandees on the National Executive Committee prevented Batten from standing for re-election. Only 25% of party members bothered to vote, but Braine, a close ally of Batten, was the clear victor, ahead of Freddy Vachha, Ben Walker, and last of all the former deputy leader Mike Hookem. Business as usual continued when 12 days later he was in trouble for comparing Muslims to Nazis, in an old email which said in part: "There is no moderate Islam. Get used to it. It’s a fact. When people talk about moderate Muslims they are making an error. It is like saying Hitler wasn’t such a bad fellow, quite a laugh actually". Within a couple of months the party was feuding again, with the National Executive Committee trying to remove Braine, and Braine's supporters (including Batten) saying the NEC was abusing its powers and illegally staying on beyond its agreed term of office. As a result, Braine resigned in October 2019.

2020 to present
From June to September 2020 UKIP was led by an eccentric businessman of Indian Parsi heritage. Vaccha's intention was to move the party away from its anti-Islam direction into a libertarian party, saying the party had gone “astray,” and focussed on things that were “just wrong”. On September 2020, Vachha was suspended from the party and Neil Hamilton became interim leader. The main focus of UKIP under Hamilton appears to be opposing coronavirus lockdown and restrictions.

The near collapse of UKIP can be seen in the small number of candidates they are fielding in the 2021 local elections. Since the 2020 local elections were cancelled because of the coronavirus lockdown - there are around 5000 local seats up for election, double the ordinary number. UKIP is fielding only 121 local candidates. UKIP claims it is boycotting the 2021 Police and Crime Commissioner elections but a more likely explanation is it has failed to find candidates. Nevertheless the party is contesting the 2021 London mayoral election, Greater London Assembly election and 2021 Senedd election. UKIP's mayoral candidate is Peter Gammons whose name has attracted widespread ridicule.

Party splits and spin-off parties
With many members and activists leaving UKIP - the following parties have emerged in recent years:


 * Heritage Party: led by David Kurten a member of the London Assembly (since 2016) who left UKIP in 2020. The party is socially conservative, anti-LGBT, with a focus on "family values" and has a strong Christian basis (Kurten is a self-described anti-abortion Christian). Membership of Kurten's party is estimated at ~100 (mostly former UKIP members).
 * Five Star Direct Democracy Party
 * Alliance for Democracy and Freedom Party: mostly based around ex-MEP Mike Hookem who quit UKIP in June 2019 having lost the that year. The micro party was created in 2020 and has a Twitter account. The ADF Party seems to be more moderate than UKIP and its main policy focuses on reforming post-Brexit fishing.

Policies
As their name implies, they want Britain to leave the European Union, and they were originally a single-issue party dedicated to that goal (although how the transition would be effected was not a point of discussion). A significant cross section of the British population is antipathetic towards the EU, and a competent party will one day convert that fuel into electoral success, but UKIP has to date avoided this trap by being careful not to convey any appearance of moderation or sensibility. They do manage to steal some votes from the Conservative Party (who are too "mainstream" and pro-free market) and the BNP (who are a bit too overtly racist).

Their hardcore stances toward immigration (legal or otherwise), climate skepticism, a flat tax, and social conservatism essentially made them the British Tea Party, operating as a separate party to drag the Tories further right. Following Britain's vote to leave the European Union, many UKIPers (some of whom are former Conservative MPs) have defected to Theresa May's side, now that the Tories have switched off Cameron's dream of a socially-liberal party. In spite of all the other stances, Brexit was still their main platform, and it's because of this that its success was political suicide, with UKIP plummeting from the mainstream due to not having Euroscepticism to rely on anymore, and their other stances making them too radical for Conservatives, but not radical fascist enough for BNPers.

Science
They are more-or-less completely scientifically illiterate, as demonstrated by an interview published in The Guardian, in which Christopher Monckton, their science spokesman at the time (and former deputy leader), proposed that they would cut funding for climate science unless, as they see it, sufficient evidence should arise to change their mind on anthropogenic global warming, which he claims "large sums now squandered on addressing." In the same interview Monckton went on to say that health risks associated with excessive salt consumption are merely "unjustifiable fears" in regards to just one example. When asked on stem cell research, Monckton compared it to "the killing of very small children."

The UKIP Policy Statement on Health from 2010 endorsed a number of alternative medicine practices including herbal medicine, homeopathy and traditional Chinese medicine, and calls for the repeal of bans on herbal medicine. On homeopathy, the policy argues against the House of Commons Science and Technology select committee report which blasted homeopathy on the NHS as running counter to the practice of evidence-based medicine:

UKIP have responded to criticism of this policy by arguing that it is a 2010 statement, while the 2012 policy makes no mention of alternative medicine.

Immigration
The party led by Alan Sked (1993-1997) never campaigned against lowering legal immigration; UKIP's 1997 general election manifesto only noted their policy was to prevent illegal immigration: "Its [UKIP's] policy is therefore to retain and indeed tighten UK borders in order to prevent illegal immigration." By 2001 through the influence of Farage, UKIP had started talking about lowering the number of legal immigrants into UK; although set no limit or target since at the time it was not a major issue for the party. In their 2005 General election manifesto UKIP campaigned for zero net-immigration, meaning a reduction of over 200,000 legal immigrants into UK a year by "imposing far stricter limits on legal immigrants". In their 2010 general election manifesto, UKIP called for moratorium on legal immigration for 5 years, also opposing multiculturalism:

UKIP's 2015 general election manifesto somewhat changed their 2010 policy to freeze legal immigration for 5 years to a "five-year moratorium on immigration for unskilled workers", so that immigrants with skills and professions could still enter the country. Furthermore, UKIP in 2015 no longer claimed they would deport illegal immigrants, but detain them by increasing holding and accommodation arrangements. Although the latter seems to have been reversed by Batten in 2018 who talks about deporting illegals.

Gay rights
Sensing an opportunity to attract the traditionalist wing of the Conservative Party over to UKIP, in 2012, Nigel Farage and co. decided to strongly oppose plans to implement equal marriage rights for same-sex partners.

A number of UKIP members have expressed some rather homophobic views:


 * In 2004, Kellie Maloney, a UKIP candidate for London mayor said she would not campaign in the borough of Camden because it had "too many gays," that gay people don't do a lot for society and "there is a problem with gay parades." Ironically she later came out as transgender.
 * In the European Parliament, the UKIP MEP Godfrey Bloom decided to call former UKIP MEP Nikki Sinclaire "a queer."
 * In 2012, while campaigning in Soho (the hub of London's gay community), UKIP's press officer Gawain Towler tweeted a photo of a man setting light to a photograph of the openly gay candidate Liberal Democrat candidate Brian Paddick.
 * Winston McKenzie, UKIP candidate for Croydon North, saying gay adoption is "unhealthy," is a form of "child abuse" and that children adopted by gay parents are "thrown away to the dogs."
 * Another then-UKIP candidate — Julia Gasper — suggested that gay people should "stop complaining and start thanking straight people," because apparently gay people need to show a bit more gratitude for being born in the first place. Dr Gasper also claimed on a private UKIP forum that gay people frequently engaged in sex with animals, and "[a]s for the links between homosexuality and paedophilia, there is so much evidence that even a full-length book could hardly do justice to the ­subject", a statement agreed to by UKIP member Jan Zolyniak.
 * In the run up to the 2013 local elections, candidate John Sullivan was found to have published on Facebook a post claiming that "Victorian" physical exercise regimes in schools would prevent people from being gay (completely oblivious to the 'gym bunny' stereotype in gay culture) and praising the Russian government for banning Pride marches.
 * In January 2014 Henley on Thames UKIP councillor and Fred Phelps wannabe David Silvester was suspended from the party after writing a letter to the local paper laying the blame for the winter 2013/2014 floods in the UK on the legalisation of gay marriage.
 * In May 2014, Dave Small, UKIP's councillor for Redditch borough council, was discovered to have posted racist and homophobic comments on Facebook including the following: "Why on earth is this useless Government pandering to Puffs? I refuse to call them gays, as what has gay to do with Perverts like Elton John and Clair Balding who get their jollies in such disgusting ways. To sum up, they should not allowed to be married, they should go back to the closet." Small's Facebook posts also concluded that Muslim immigrants were responsible for the spread of tuberculosis and that Muslims in Birmingham were "jabbering in an alien voice". Small was dropped by the party, but not before it was revealed that he used to edit 'Blues Zulu' magazine, a Birmingham City fanzine. In this capacity, he was arrested for inciting racial hatred following an article entitled "Fucking foreigners" which criticised various foreign-born football players and managers.
 * In 2015, despite being the only major political party not to address LGBT issues within its manifesto (claiming the party is not "driven by the needs of differing special interests groups"), the party has stated that it will not "un-marry" same-sex couples, despite opposing same-sex marriage in the first place. The party's mini-manifesto for Christians also supported a religious conscience clause, not dissimilar to the anti-LGBT "religious freedom" laws in the US.

In 2015 it was reported that then UKIP leader Nigel Farage supported Father Tadeusz Rydzyk, a Polish priest who has been described as both homophobic and anti-Semitic (note the irony when you look in the next section) and who said of the election of the first openly gay Polish MP "the sodomites are coming; this is a very serious matter."

Despite Farage's claim that UKIP is a "party of freethinkers," in January 2013, UKIP fired Olly Neville, leader of UKIP youth organisation ('Young Independence') after he stated that he supported gay marriage. Richard Lowe, UKIP candidate for Chester, also had to resign after he supported gay marriage. Homophobia also occasionally seeps from the UKIP official forums.

Despite originally being allowed to participate in 2015 Pride in London, UKIP were banned from the celebrations due to safety concerns as many in the LGBT community rightly questioned why UKIP should be allowed to march, given their anti-gay views. Despite this, a handful of LGBTQ* in UKIP members did get involved in the event.

Perhaps to clean up their image following the parade of homophobic nutjobs (sorry "freethinkers") who have stood for election on the UKIP ticket, UKIP approved an 'LGBTQ* in UKIP' group, who thus far seem to have done very little other than grumble about how there aren't enough sane "socially liberal" people in UKIP and has revelled in the Tory homophobia over the Sadiq Khan/Zac Goldsmith mayoral campaign in London, accusing him of being an "Islamist scumbag" and saying voting for Khan is "like cutting our own heads off" – not a subtle reference to DAESH's beheadings at all.

Race relations
The general attitude to foreigners and racial/ethnic minorities is summed up by this quote from Paul Wiffen, the now-former UKIP London chairman:

Don't let UKIP critics fool you into thinking that the party is racist though. Consider this:

Upon reading this, you might think that the man whose Facebook account this appeared on — that of Chris Pain, UKIP leader of Lincolnshire council — is a raving racist nutjob. But obviously it's because his Facebook got hacked.

Disgraced TV presenter Robert Kilroy-Silk was elected as a UKIP MEP in 2004 (he later left the party); his comments on anyone who isn't English are particularly telling.

Of course, one must avoid jumping to conclusions. For instance, a former UKIP candidate for Somerset, Alex Wood, came under sharp fire in the press after he had been tagged on a photo in which many people thought he was giving a Nazi salute, but it later turned out that he had been (in context with other photos) "imitating a pot[ted] plant". Police also confirmed that other racist comments ostensibly on his Facebook, which suggested that all Africans lived in mud huts, had not been posted by Wood and, in fact, never existed on his actual account in the first place, having been hoaxed through photoshop or a puppet account. Suspicions currently lie on Joshua Bonehill-Paine, a notorious troll and sockpuppeteer who was more recently arrested for imitating Wood during a Twitter abuse scandal in April 2015. The Mirror, which originated the accusations of racism, subsequently apologized for the error. Wood has since left the party.

On the other hand, East Sussex candidate Anna-Marie Crampton faced a hailstorm of criticism in 2013 after posts were made on her Facebook citing a falsified book to defend the existence of the Illuminati and a Zionist conspiracy behind WWII, which she also claimed were made by Facebook hackers. While there hasn't seemed to have been an investigation into the matter, perhaps a lesson in good password etiquette is in order.

In a May 2014 interview Farage claimed that he would feel "concerned" if Romanian people moved next door to him. When asked what the difference is between the Romanian people and his German national wife and children, he jokingly answered "you know the difference." The day after the interview, he expanded on this assertion, discussing the high crime rate in the Romanian community. He then double tracked on both of these assertions, claiming his mistake was due to tiredness.

Ukip MEP Bill Etheridge is a fan of golliwogs, widely considered a racist caricature of black people.

Disability
Geoffrey Clark, UKIP candidate for Kent County Council has some intriguing plans to help the disabled:

After the revelation of Clark's mandatory-abortions-for-disabled-foetuses plan, he was promptly dropped as UKIP candidate. Good to see that the party rigorously checks the quality and sanity of their candidates before they stand for election.

"Drivel!"
Nigel Farage, in an attempt to wash away the shit-my-dad-says-grumblesponge image of UKIP, claimed the 2010 manifesto was "drivel", citing that "he didn't read it". Ignoring both (A) the fact that Nigel Farage wrote the foreword to the UKIP 2010 Manifesto, as well as co-authored some of the policies and (B) the more problematic issue of implying that he approved a list of policies to campaign on for both his party and as a man trying to become Prime Minister, without reading (or much caring for) exactly what it was he was campaigning for.

EU Parliament
UKIP's European Parliament members are often moderately entertaining, when they bother to show up. Highlights include:


 * Nigel Farage referring to Belgium as a "non-country" and telling EU President Herman Van Rompuy that he has "a loathing for the very concept of the existence of nation states" and stated that Van Rompuy had "the charisma of a damp rag."
 * Godfrey Bloom interrupting a German politician to shout "Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer."
 * MEP Steven Woolfe getting into a fight with another UKIP MEP (allegedly, m'lud) during a party meeting and spending the night in hospital.

2010 UK General Election

 * Having a candidate, John Boakes, die too close to the election, forcing a by-election at a later date.
 * Farage being flown around in a light aircraft towing a banner on election day: the plane crashed injuring pilot and passenger.
 * Nicking enough votes from the Tories' troglodyte wing to significantly reduce the number of seats the Tories won — possibly depriving them of a clear majority — thus driving Dave into Nick's arms.

2014 EU Parliament Election
UKIP won the largest share of the votes (27.5%) in the election, followed by the Labour (25.4%) and the Conservative party (23.9%). This increased the number of their MEPs to 24. While the eurosceptic bloc is still a long way from power, it will unfortunately force people to take them a teensy bit more seriously.

2014 UK by-elections
UKIP won its first seat in the House of Commons when Clacton's incumbent MP, Douglas Carswell, defected from the Conservative Party (UK) and won 59.75 percent of the vote.

UKIP then went on to win their second seat in the House of Commons when the incumbent MP for Rochester and Strood, Mark Reckless, also defected from the Conservative Party (UK) and won 42.1 percent of the vote.

2015 UK General Election
Mark Reckless lost his seat to his conservative rival Kelly Tolhurst, leaving only Douglas Carswell in the Commons. However, the party increased its share of the vote to 3,881,129, a swing of +9.5% on 2010. Nigel Farage had repeatedly said that he would stand down from the leadership if he failed to win his South Thanet seat. He didn't win the seat and made a video saying he would stand down as leader, but later said that the UKIP Executive had not accepted his resignation and he would remain as leader. He also suggested that even if his leadership resignation had been allowed, he would have run for leadership again in the autumn of 2015. This caused an embarrassing internal spat for UKIP, after which most of Farage's opposition (of former aides) was quietly purged.

2015 UK by-elections
If the British media were to be believed, UKIP seemed to have a serious claim on taking the safe Labour seat of Oldham West and Royston at the by-election in December 2015. Reality then emerged and Labour won the seat with an increased majority. At first Farage blamed this on an "Asian bloc vote" and that too many constituents did not speak English. Later it was apparently due to crooked postal votes. A good loser is Nigel.

2016 elections
In 2016 they failed to win a seat in the Scottish parliament, but won 7 seats in the Welsh assembly, including one for disgraced ex-Tory Neil Hamilton.

Brexit referendum
UKIP naturally campaigned for the UK to leave the EU during the 2016 Brexit referendum, their biggest stunt being the sailing of a group of fishing vessels up the Thames, and their most vile being the notorious "breaking point" poster.

Diane James
Nigel Farage quit the leadership after the 2016 Brexit referendum, and in September 2016 he was replaced by Diane James, a member of the European Parliament for South East England since 2014. Before then, she had served as an Independent councillor and made a strong showing for Ukip in the 2013 Eastleigh by-election but came second to the Lib Dems. In 2015 she attracted some controversy for expressing admiration for Vladimir Putin's fierce nationalism. She also defended Farage's possibly racist election posters, but in her favour she doesn't like the odious Welsh Ukip assembly member Neil Hamilton. She failed to advance any policies during her leadership campaign so it's hard to know exactly what she stands for other than nationalism and opposition to immigration. She has a degree in business and before entering politics she worked in private healthcare. James resigned from the role of leader of the party after a mere 18 days, which begs the question, why even bother? No worries though, a new leader will be elected soon enough. Steven Woolfe, the party favourite, has thrown his hat into the ring and is sure to succeed James as leader - provided, of course, that he manages to get his forms in on time this time. You'd think he wouldn't let anything stand in his way this time around. Right?

2017 Stoke byelection
Party leader Paul Nuttall made himself a national laughing stock in February 2017 while running as a candidate in the byelection for the Stoke-on-Trent Central parliamentary seat. His claim on his website that he lost friends in the Hillsborough football stadium disaster in 1989 were queried by his former school, who said he hadn't been there; and he stated (again on his website) to have been invited onto the board of a charity - he hadn't. His Hillsborough comments caused two UKIP members in Merseyside to quit the party, citing his "crass insensitivity" - which is rather odd as UKIP have been all about crass insensitivity from the outset.

Nuttall stepped down as UKIP leader in June 2017, following the party's failure to win any seats in the general election. Steve Crowther became acting leader.

Henry Bolton
Bolton, a former soldier and police officer who received an OBE for work in Afghanistan, became leader of UKIP on 29 September 2017. He rapidly became more known for his personal life than any political success, when he left his Russian wife Tatiana Smurova-Bolton after starting a relationship with 25 year old model Jo Marney (Bolton was 54). This became even more controversial when it was revealed that before they met, Marney had made racist comments about Meghan Markle, the mixed-race fianc&eacute;e of Prince Harry. Bolton broke off the relationship but still faced calls to quit from the party's governing national executive committee and other party members. He was removed from his position in February 2018.

Gerard Batten
Batten became leader of Ukip in February 2018. He previously worked as a salesman and has served as a Member of the European Parliament from 2004 until whenever Brexit happens. He was the party's candidate for Mayor of London in 2008, and Spokesman for Exiting the European Union until he resigned in January 2018 in protest against Henry Bolton's uselessness as leader. Batten's leadership is notable for his pandering to the far right, to the extent that even Nigel Farage attacked him for taking Ukip in the "shameful direction" of white identity politics. Sargon of Akkad, Paul Joseph Watson, Count Dankula and Milo Yiannopoulos joined UKIP and turned the party further to the right and made it even more islamophobic. Batten then appointed alt-right activist and Sargons Daddy Tommy Robinson as an advisor, making many famous UKIP politicians like Suzanne Evans, Caroline Jones, William Dartmouth, Paul Nuttall and even the alt-rights god Nigel Farage leave the party. Farage called Batten "obsessed" with Islam and said "UKIP wasn't founded to be a party based on fighting a religious crusade". Batten resigned his leadership on 2 June 2019, after having said he would only stay in office for a year, and after the party's humiliation in the May 2019 European parliament elections when Nigel Farage's Brexit Party stole all their votes.

Richard Braine
On 10 August 2019 Richard 'Dick' Braine took over as UKIP Leader. He appointed is predecessor Gerard Batten as his Deputy Leader. On 30 October 2019, less than 3 months into the job, Braine resigned as leader. Shortly before he was suspended as he was accused of stealing data from UKIP. UKIP has now had 8 leaders since 2016.

Other criticism
Amongst the party's current critics is its original founder Alan Sked, who called it "morally dodgy" and accused it of focusing too much on opposing Islam and immigration rather than on other issues such as the economy.

UKIP is also one of the only parties to receive substantial criticism on aesthetic grounds, largely as a result of its unfortunate decision to pick deep purple (rather appropriate for a group that wishes it was still 1972) as an official colour. Reading their garish, multicoloured campaign material can cause temporary blindness. It is also questionable that UKIP is an anti-EU party, with seats in the EU Parliament. This becomes doubly bizarre when you consider the possibility of them causing mischief with their far-right friends in the Europe of Freedom and Democracy group.

In 2010, Lord Pearson, then a UKIP leader, told voters in Somerset to avoid UKIP candidates and vote for Conservatives instead. It's quite a feat when your own Lords are telling people not to vote for you...

In the run up to the elections in May 2014, UKIP released a leaflet which exploited D-Day war dead for their own political gain. This was in bad taste even by The Sun's standards.

UKIP and the BNP, EDL etc.
The BNP hate UKIP for stealing their anti-EU thunder and devoted considerable effort in UKIP's early days to messing them up. Fortunately, UKIP were sufficiently incompetent to do quite a good job all on their own. UKIP and BNP's stated policies are very similar, the difference being that the BNP are Nazi chancers and UKIP are horribly sincere about everything.

UKIP attempts to distance themselves from other British extremists were somewhat undermined when their Thanet South branch followed in the footsteps of the EDL and mistook Westminster Cathedral, no less, for a mosque. "The people's army are not all wholly trained," responded Farage.

Since the departure of Nigel Farage, the party has struggled for a direction, but under Gerard Batten seems to have decided that being virulently Islamophobic is the way to keep the party relevant. He has courted the Football Lads Alliance and its offshoot the Democratic Football Lads Association. In May 2018 he spoke at a rally in London alongside far-right anti-Islam campaigners Tommy Robinson and Anne Marie Waters, as well as YouTuber Sargon of Akkad and ex-Breitbart alt-right writer and provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos. Farage criticised Batten's support for Robinson, saying, "I think this gets to the heart of not just the positioning of a political party, but of judgment too. And judgment really, really matters."

In spring 2018 it was announced that some prominent alt-right or far-right figures had joined the party: Mark Meechan (aka Count Dankula) who had shortly before been convicted of breaking the law over a dark-humoured “antisemitic” YouTube video; Paul Joseph Watson of far-right conspiracy theory website InfoWars; and Carl Benjamin (Sargon of Akkad) who amongst many provocations had joked about raping a British Labour Party MP. In November 2018 the party was condemned by the The Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Community Security Trust for its links to InfoWars.

Batten doubled down on the Islamophobia on 14 July 2018 at a rally in support of anti-Islam campaigner Tommy Robinson, calling the prophet Muhammed "a paedophile who kept sex slaves".

Trivia

 * Dave Cameron described UKIP in 2006 as "fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists, mostly."
 * Margaret Thatcher met with the then-leader of the party to give them tips, apparently finding the Conservative Party too pro-European in her later years. Thatcher had been suffering from dementia since at least 2005