Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 14, 2014
Both Labour and Conservative were knocked for six last week as UKIP were able to score their first Member of Parliament in Douglas Carswell, who defected from the Conservatives and was then voted in again by his constituents as a UKIP candidate. At the same time, another UKIP candidate stood against Labour in one of their safe seats, where the opinion polls showed Labour winning by a landslide, yet they only managed to win by 600 votes, not by the 6,000 that they were expecting. All of this has got the Lib/Lab/Con running scared and UKIP are firmly on course for taking the third position away from the Liberal Democrats at the next election.
Predictably Labour are desperately trying to put people off voting for them by claiming UKIP are racist and anti-feminist, yet the more they do that, the more people support them. People are sick of being called racists for wanting the best for their own people and are sick of being forced to go along with the feminist agenda. The worm has turned, the more the general public get called ‘racist,’ the less power it is that the word will actually have and the more sympathy will be gained for those who are being called it now.
Nigel Farage today faced calls from Labour to tackle the ‘racists’ in the UK Independence Party.
Shadow business secretary Chuka Umunna claimed elements in UKIP were racist and said ‘terrible things’ about women and some sections of society.
But the remarks risk backfiring coming just as Ed Miliband scrambles to try to win back votes from Nigel Farage’s party, which came close to taking a safe seat from Labour last week.
It came as new UKIP MP Douglas Carswell urged his party to show ‘humanity’ in its approach to immigration and offer a more optimistic vision for Britain.
Opponents of UKIP have repeatedly highlighted offensive comments made by the party’s elected politicians and candidates.
But Mr Farage has vowed to root out anyone whose views might embarrass UKIP in the future.
Labour has been rocked by the rise of UKIP, only narrowly holding its safe seat of Heywood and Middleton by 617 votes last week.
Mr Umunna is seen as a rising star in the Labour party and a frontrunner to replace Mr Miliband after the next election.
Quizzed about the views of some in UKIP, Mr Umunna told Sky News: ‘Of course there are racists in UKIP.
‘And that is unfortunate and that’s something they need to address. They say terrible things about women, they say terrible things about different parts of our society.