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Conservatives turn on anti-EU rival before vote

Published: 29 Apr 2013 - 04:26 am | Last Updated: 02 Feb 2022 - 02:30 pm

LONDON: Britain’s ruling Conservatives derided the rival UK Independence Party as a “collection of clowns” yesterday as they tried to stop supporters switching to the surging anti-European Union movement in local elections this week.

Thursday’s vote in England and Wales offers parties a chance to test the political climate before a national election in 2015 at a time when Conservative strategists fear UKIP will split the centre-right vote.

Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservatives, the senior partner in a two-party national coalition, trail the opposition Labour party by up to 10 percentage points in opinion polls.

Ken Clarke, a prominent Conservative and government minister, said he agreed with Cameron’s assertion that UKIP had “fruitcakes and closet racists” in its ranks and that it tried to exploit voters’ fears. 

“These are very difficult times. The political class is regarded as having got us into a mess and the last government left chaos behind them,” he told Sky News. “It’s very tempting to vote for a collection of clowns.”

Battling to kick-start a tepid economy and to cut a big budget deficit, Cameron is banking on a rebound before 2015. But with no strong recovery in sight he faces losing hundreds of the more than 2,000 council seats his party is contesting.

A bad result in the vote - held largely in rural English counties and in one Welsh area - could prompt some Conservative MPs to question Cameron’s leadership, though he has ridden out such dissent before.    

Campaigning on a promise to take Britain out of the EU and to end “open-door” immigration, UKIP has seen its poll rating oscillate between 11 and 17 percent, overtaking Cameron’s junior Liberal Democrat coalition partner at times.

Reuters