Tuesday 26 May 2015

Toby on Tuesday

 ‘Less European?…’


 


There have been some wonderful lies cooked up by the Eurofanatics who have caused such havoc to our country during the past generation. The most lurid of course is the old threat that, if Britain left the EU, somehow 3 million jobs would instantly disappear. This presumes that all trade with the EU would cease overnight, even though we import infinitely more from the rest of the EU than they buy from us and they would be desperate for a trade agreement. Of course this was the mantra of the late Nick Clegg and his now departed, if not regretted, LibDem friends. But perhaps the most colourful is the claim that Britain would, after Brexit, somehow cease to be European and therefore could no longer take part in the high camp annual ritual of the Eurovision Song Contest.

I chuckled over this to myself last week when I read through the list of Eurovision contestants. 40 nations entered of which only 28 were actual EU members and just 19 were trapped in the downward spiral of the doomed Euro currency. So over half the nations entering Eurovision do not actually use the Euro and they are the ones likely to survive the existential crisis caused by this doomed project. Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, which wisely stayed outside the EU in the 1970’s, do not see themselves as any less “European” for having escaped its clutches, while the entries also included Armenia, from where Kim Kardashian’s family come and whose genocide at the hands of the Turks in the 1920’s is only now being acknowledged, Israel, Russia and even Australia! In fact of the first five winning entries, only three (Sweden, Italy and Belgium) are even in the EU and only two (Italy and Belgium) actually use the Euro currency. So UKIP’s claim to love Europe and European culture while detesting the EU and all its works is well-founded when you see the Eurovision line-up.

And for those trapped inside the prison of the Euro currency, with all its dreadful consequences, their songs sounded like cries for help. The beautiful Maria Elena Kyriakou stunned us all with her voice and the words of her song,

“I’m begging you take me
out of this firing hell
Come back and save me -
What happened wasn’t fair.
Nothing left. All that I have
is one last breath.
Only one last breath!”

If that isn’t a cry for help from a suffering country martyred by Euro membership, I don’t know what is. In truth, Eurovision is a wonderful image of what the future of the Continent could look like. A shared civilisation, stretching (in David Cameron’s words) from the Atlantic to the Urals, without the failing grip of the so-called “European Union”, but including Russia, even Israel and with strong ties to Britain’s own Commonwealth – Australia and the rest – on which Ted Heath so foolishly turned his back in 1972. This is the great prize that UKIP is seeking as work starts on our In/Out referendum. On Saturday, the UK’s entry finished 24th. Who knows, if we ultimately left the EU we might even, like Russia and Australia, find ourselves in the top five!

Until next Tuesday!
Toby

 

Tuesday 19 May 2015

Toby on Tuesday 

'And the dust settles…'


 



 


If, as they say, there is no such thing as bad publicity, then UKIP has had a truly wonderful ten days since the General Election. With nearly 4 million votes in the bag, the commitment to an in/out EU referendum from the Government, the most professional of all the parties’ manifestos, 120 second places and an outstanding elected MP in Douglas Carswell, there is much to celebrate. There is also much to build on if wise heads are allowed to prevail. As William Hague’s Constituency Chairman in Richmond during his leadership of the Conservative Party, I well remember turmoil and in-fighting in a disappointed party. Yet the Conservative Party in 1997 had suffered a devastating setback from which it has only just recovered 18 years later. UKIP in 2015 has enjoyed an astonishing advance and, when the dust settles, its full extent will become clear.

What is also clear is that the Government is now determined to rush through the EU referendum with no Treaty amendments and only cosmetic changes to certain welfare and other benefits. The existential questions of border controls, the security implications of Turkish accession, the Common Fisheries Policy (once a Conservative priority), financial contagion as the Eurozone plunges into recession, will simply not get a mention. No doubt the EU itself will help fund the “In” campaign and every trick in the book will be used to ensure its success. It is to these great issues that all UKIP’s energies must be focussed in the coming months.

And the reality is that in Nigel Farage we have most effective Eurorealist campaigner of our time and in Douglas Carswell the most original and creative Parliamentarian. As well as these two, we have outstanding MEP’s in our own Jane Collins and Mike Hookem, in Paul Nuttall our Deputy Leader, in Stephen Woolfe, in William Dartmouth and many more, and we have the truly excellent Suzanne Evans, who did such a superb job with our manifesto, and many others. The simple frustration of finding ourselves under first-past-the-post with so many votes for just one MP is understandable, but once the dust settles the sheer scale of our achievement on 7th May will become clear. We can then regroup and go forward to fight a staged referendum on EU membership, led by Nigel and our MEP’s across the country and, in Parliament itself, by Douglas Carswell, on whom great responsibility now rests. They will have the support of all our members in this, the country’s greatest challenge of our time!

Until next Tuesday!
Toby

Tuesday 12 May 2015

Toby on Tuesday

 Thank you, 7805 times.


 


First the numbers. In Britain as a whole, UKIP won nearly 4 million votes, around 13% of the total share. In England alone, the percentage was nearer 17%. Here in Thirsk and Malton, our vote soared from 2,502 in 2010 to 7,805 (15%), against 27,545 votes (53%) for the Conservatives and 8,089 (15.5%) for Labour. We also had fine results for our excellent local candidates, Janine Robinson, Kevin Anderson, Peter Ash, Chris Cooper, Trevor Golding, Philip Mooring and Barry Waite. In terms of votes, UKIP is now clearly the country’s third largest political party and even if that did not translate into seats won, we gained a great moral victory.

Next, the thanks. A huge thank you to the whole UKIP Thirsk and Malton team, who should be immensely proud to have achieved so much with such limited resources. Our team has true star quality and to Emma, Janine, Dave, Eric and all involved in the campaign I offer my heartfelt gratitude. UKIP should be immensely proud of your truly superb contribution to the great cause of regaining our nation and our democracy.

Finally, the future. Of course, UKIP’s greatest achievement has been to force our Prime Minister to concede a referendum in 2017 on Britain’s membership of the European Union. Legislation to provide for this should be enacted later this year. And over the coming months, the terms of Britain’s membership of the whole project will be reviewed with the European Commission. UKIP’s task will be to present a positive picture of a Britain released from the tentacles of this doomed venture. On the morning after polling day, I spoke to my old friend William Dartmouth MEP, UKIP’s Trade Spokesman, who told me that he was rewriting his “Out of Europe – Into the World”, a compelling account of how our economy would benefit from EU exit. And we need to use our new strength to increase pressure on the Conservative Party to up the terms of its renegotiation strategy, not forgetting that when Michael Howard was its leader, repatriation of the truly appalling Common Fisheries Policy was a Conservative objective, an undertaking that was quietly and characteristically dropped by David Cameron. If we were to recover our 200-mile fishing limit again, it would underscore the truth that we are a maritime, trading nation and not just one more colony of a failing Continental state.

So we have much to be proud of. In particular, we should be proud of the manifesto on which we fought the General Election. This was the best of all the manifestos and the only one independently audited and verified. In great measure, it was the work of Suzanne Evans, UKIP’s excellent Deputy Chairman, and for my part it will be my bible in the years ahead. So congratulations and thanks to all involved in our campaign. Now let’s brace ourselves for the challenges that we face and ensure that in 2017 under UKIP’s inspirational leadership, both past and future, Britain can become a sovereign and independent nation once more, looking confidently out to the wider World!

Until next Tuesday!
Toby

Tuesday 5 May 2015

Toby on Tuesday 

'Inequitable Life'


 


7.00pm this evening will see the very last public event of our campaign when we hold our pre-Eve of Poll Meeting at Malton’s Milton Rooms. Let’s hope for a good turnout for a vintage occasion at which everyone, including the Press, will be welcome. We can all celebrate the birth of our new Princess, have a traditional election speech and, all being well, some lively questions. With the help of our truly superb UKIP Thirsk and Malton team, what I have tried to do all through this campaign is to combine the new social media, like this blog and our website, with very traditional electioneering, speaking at countless hustings and actually meeting and talking to people.

High points of the past few days have included visits to Malton’s Jack Berry House, an astonishing new facility for injured jockeys and the wider Malton community, inspired by the legendary racehorse trainer, Jack Berry, to a centre in Easingwold enabling the severely disabled to enjoy productive work run by the inspirational Mark Johnson, to Colin Badgery’s fascinating Thirsk Birds of Prey Centre, among the constituency’s most remarkable visitor attractions, and of course last Wednesday to Leeds Arena for BBC1’s Yorkshire television debate.

But the meeting that has in many ways made the deepest impression, as evidence of the cynical way in which we are governed, has been with the representatives of the Equitable Life Assurance Society’s policy holders. As a direct result of Government maladministration, they have effectively had a total of some £2.8 billion stolen from their pensions. The background to this is that, despite holding some £26 billion of savers’ funds, the Society, like the banks, had accumulated immense unhedged liabilities that it was unable to meet. In 2000, it closed to new business and slashed payouts to its million or so policy holders, of whom several hundred live in the constituency. As the regulator of the Society, the Treasury was directly responsible for this fiasco but from the start was determined to evade responsibility.
A series of public enquiries and Parliamentary debates followed. In July 2008 the Parliamentary ombudsman, Ann Abraham, published her report in which the Treasury was found guilty of regulatory maladministration. It also emerged that on “data protection grounds” the Treasury had destroyed the details of 353,000 policy holders, rather as in an entirely separate scandal potentially embarrassing files had gone missing from the Home Office. At the 2010 Comprehensive Spending Review, George Osborne accepted her finding that the total loss suffered by the Society’s policy holders amounted to £4.3 billion. However, due to “affordability constraints”, their compensation was limited to £1.5 billion only, leaving the balance due of £2.8 billion in the greedy hands of the Treasury.

The truth is that the Treasury saw the Society’s policy holders as elderly, respectable people unlikely to make a fuss. They were not, unlike the bankers who obtained 100% support from the Government, “too big to fail”. By virtue of their being pensioners, time would in due course take its toll and relieve the Treasury of its responsibilities. They had been prudent, careful and thrifty and so could go hang in the warped world of modern politics, where those who shout loudest and cause most trouble actually prevail. I was pleased to be able to tell the policy holders’ representatives that, if successful on 7th May, I would take their cause to my heart and make it my own. But then we are surrounded by instances of bad government – we will see this on a global scale tomorrow when Greece, bankrupted by its membership of the Euro, is due to pay a further $200 million to the IMF, a sum that it just does not have. We must brace ourselves for the contagion that, as night follows day, will surely occur throughout the Eurozone.

Perhaps the only wise decision made by our own politicians in the past generation has been to keep the Pound and avoid the Euro. The presence of UKIP has in large measure secured this policy and our influence will only grow in the years ahead. And on Thursday, let’s get the vote out and ensure that the whole constituency is painted purple. So until next Tuesday, when we’ll know the result and there’ll be a chance to thank our truly wonderful team at UKIP Thirsk and Malton!

Until next Tuesday!
Toby