With Success Comes Conflict for U.K. Independence Party

The U.K. Independence Party (UKIP) is in
prime position
to win its second seat in the House of Commons,
with the Rochester and Strood by-election set to take place
Thursday. This could be a significant victory for UKIP, but it
comes at a time of increasing discord between the left and right—or
populist and libertarian-leaning—wings of the party.

The latest controversy surrounds the party’s economic spokesman,
Member of the European Parliament Patrick O’Flynn. O’Flynn has
angered libertarian-leaning members of UKIP by vocally supporting
increased taxes and opposing some of the party’s free market
policies­, culminating in a move to oust him from his position as
economic spokesman.
Breitbart London
reports:

Senior members of UKIP are campaigning behind the scenes to have
Patrick O’Flynn MEP removed as economic spokesman after his
appearance on the BBC’s Newsnight programme last Monday night. In
the interview O’Flynn called for higher taxes on business, having
previously called for a tax on the turnover of companies so they
would pay even if they did not make a profit.

Political intrigue can be found in all political parties, but
this attempted ouster is the symptom of a much larger divide within
UKIP—a conflict The
Daily Telegraph
has described as being “far deeper and more
divisive than anything currently going on inside the Conservative
Party, or even in Ed Miliband’s Labour Party.”

The roots of this division lie in UKIP’s attempt to represent
two conflicting strains of thought. On the one hand, UKIP gained
most of its initial support from disaffected members of the
Conservative Party. These supporters look back at Thatcher for
inspiration and support more libertarian-leaning policies,
especially when it comes to economics. In conflict with this group
are people who were attracted to UKIP by the party’s more populist
policies, such as its opposition to large scale immigration. The
populists, who represent a growing proportion of the party base,
are far less interested in free market reforms.

These two perspectives were able to coexist in relative harmony
when UKIP was focused predominantly on opposing the European Union.
But tensions have increased as the party has slowly
abandoned its libertarianism
in pursuit of domestic electoral
success.

The problem for the libertarian-leaning section of UKIP is that
the electoral
strategy is working
, and the makeup of the party is changing as
a result. YouGov’s Peter Kellner recently highlighted UKIP’s
changing demographics in
The Guardian
, writing:

Ukip is now building support in traditional working-class Labour
areas. Initially, Ukip was a far greater threat to the Tories, for
it took nine votes from the Conservatives for every vote it took
from Labour. Since early last year, for every nine votes it has
taken from the Tories it has taken six from Labour.

The growing proportion of disaffected Labour voters is likely to
further weaken the influence of libertarian-leaning
UKIP members. This is not just because the free marketeers
will be increasingly outnumbered, but also because the populists’
success will make UKIP politicians wary of taking hard line stances
that might alienate their new supporters.

UKIP’s pivot toward populism will likely continue regardless of
whether O’Flynn remains the party’s economic spokesman. To reverse
course now would represent a monumental change in strategy, and an
electorally risky one. It seems this is a battle
libertarian-leaning UKIPers are destined to lose.

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