Note:
The substance of the following article is what should be focused  upon.
However, this is one more example of where there needs to be reforms
in web design.  Translation: Don't  publishers  care about others copying 
their articles and making good use of their material? Its often a  nightmare
to copy an essay or article. Accidentally pause a cursor over "blue  words"
and -presto-  you suddenly find yourself looking at a whole new  page
that you don't want to look at. Wikipedia is really bad but the  effect
is general and near-universal. It is one area where a far better  
alternative
is old-fashioned footnotes, where there is little chance that you  will
end up on a new page unless you deliberately want to.
 
Actually the NRO article below has no blue words, but the author's  name
is in a little box and trying to copy just his name and avoid all the  crap
about twitter etc that is in the vicinity of his name and   -damn-  
what I got was redirection to a page about the author. So it  isn't
merely blue words or names in little boxes, but all the useless
apparatus that clutters most sites. RSS, facebook, g+1, etc.
that kind of junk gets in the way of serious research.
 
my two centavos worth
 
Billy
 
 
-------------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
NRO
 
 
 
May 26, 2014 5:00  PM 
UKIP Rising in  the United Kingdom 
David Cameron, now in a difficult position, might make a  deal to support 
UKIP candidates
 
Thursday’s local elections were hailed as heralding a new  four-party 
electoral system in Britain. This verdict was put beyond question  last night 
when UKIP — the United  Kingdom Independence Party — emerged in the European 
elections as the largest  single party in terms of the popular vote. It is no 
small earthquake when a  small insurgent party with not a single 
Westminster member of Parliament wins  more votes nationwide — across all three 
nations in Great Britain and all the  regions of England — than the established 
behemoths of Labour and the Tories.  This almost unprecedented success (the 
last time that a party other than Labour or the Tories  came top in a national 
election was 1910!) might just shatter all conventional  notions of the 
politically possible and lift UKIP to the point  where it wins seats as well as 
votes in next May’s UK general election. For the  moment, however, caution 
suggests that Thursday’s local elections — also a  strong UKIP performance 
but  short of an earthquake — are probably more reliable indicators to next  
May
 
So it is curious that almost all the commentaries underplay or even miss  
the big story: This is the threat, long- and short-term, that UKIP poses for 
the  Tories.  
To judge from the headlines, the big losers in these elections are Labour 
and  the Liberal Democrats and in particular their respective leaders, Ed 
Miliband  and Nick Clegg. Both men are being blamed for the poor performance of 
their  parties, and there is much speculation that they will face 
leadership  challenges. 
In Clegg’s case, this criticism is amply justified. Support for his party 
is  now hovering around 10 percent both in opinion polls and in two 
sophisticated  calculations of what the local-election results would mean for a 
general  election. That’s less than half the Liberal Democrat national total in 
the 2010  election. And not only did Clegg decide that the Lib-Dems would 
fight as  unabashed devotees of the European Union, but he debated the UKIP 
leader, Nigel  Farage, in two televised debates, and Farage soundly beat him on 
both occasions.  Clegg wagged his face in Farage’s fist and got a bloody 
nose. He will probably  survive, though, because his removal might bring down 
the Tory–Lib-Dem coalition  at a moment when the Lib-Dems would be 
slaughtered at the polls. Even so, the  Lib-Dem future looks bleak. If the 
current 
economic recovery continues, Clegg  and his party are apt to derive much less 
benefit from it than are the Tories,  who are seen as the senior partner in 
the coalition. So they will lose the  “compassionate” votes to Labour on 
their left while also losing the “efficient”  votes to the Tories on their 
right. 
The obloquy directed toward Miliband needs a little more explaining. It  
really arises because the government and the Blairite Labour Right both have 
an  interest in painting the Labour leader as a weird alien super-geek who 
cannot  possibly be prime minister. Tories make this argument for the 
straightforward  partisan reason that they think it is a plausible way to win 
an 
election.  Blairites make this case because they want to displace Miliband 
before the  election, some because he might lose it, others because he might 
win 
it and take  Britain and their party too far to the left. So there is a 
coalition of odd  bedfellows who agree that Miliband will make a hash of 
everything. Unfortunately  for this argument, Labour won more votes than any 
other 
party in the local  elections. So the message has had to be massaged to the 
effect that Miliband won  an average of only 31 percent of the national 
vote when he needed something like  35 percent to be on course for a victory in 
2015. Opinion polls seem to confirm  these figures, showing Labour one or 
two percentage points ahead of the Tories  nationally. 
But this argument has two flaws. First, it is rooted in the past of a  
two-and-a-half-party system, when any opposition needed a strong lead in 
midterm 
 opinion polls in order to survive a likely government recovery. That 
happened  time and again from about 1955 to 1997. But a four-party system is 
much 
less  predictable: For instance, as we saw above, a government recovery 
might drive  Labour voters to the Tories while diverting Lib-Dem votes to 
Labour. Besides, in  such a system, a party can win power with a far smaller 
percentage of the vote  than was needed throughout the 20th century. Second, 
the 
anti-Miliband analysis  glosses over Labour’s advance in London. With 38 
percent of the London vote,  Labour won a slew of Tory councils. The Tories 
were five points behind Labour in  the capital, and their sole gain was 
Kingston-upon-Thames, which, significantly,  had previously been held by the 
Lib-Dems. Commentary on the London results has  focused on the fact that UKIP 
did 
badly here — 10 percent overall — but the  Tories fell sharply, too. 
London is now voting very differently from the rest of  Britain because it is 
culturally very different as a result of mass immigration  in recent years. And 
Labour is the clear beneficiary.
 
And this brings me to the position of the Tories. If their poor results in  
London were simply the latest example of the swings and roundabouts of 
electoral  politics, they could shrug their shoulders and press on. That in 
fact 
is what  they are doing: David Cameron’s spin-meisters are letting it be 
known that those  voters who have defected to UKIP will return by the next 
election in London and  elsewhere. Nothing to fret about. Steady as she goes. 
But these results are  merely the latest evolution of a very ominous 
long-term trend for the Tories. As  Anthony Scholefield and Gerald Frost 
pointed out 
in their 2011 study _Too Nice to  Be Tories_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=0743220765) , the 
Conservative Party has been steadily 
losing one region  of the United Kingdom after another in the last 40 years. 
It used to be able to  depend on nine to twelve Unionist votes from 
Northern Ireland for its  parliamentary majority; it gets none now. It won half 
the 
Scottish seats in  1955; the last three general elections each returned one 
Scottish Tory to  Parliament. It wins eight seats out of 40 in Wales. And 
from the 158 MPs elected  from the North of England, the Tories got 53.
 
This is a dreadful record, but it could get worse. UKIP is now starting to  
replace the Tories as the main challenger to Labour in northern 
working-class  constituencies. The new party takes votes in particular from 
culturally  
conservative and patriotic working-class men whom both major parties have  
abandoned in their pursuit of urban middle-class progressives. UKIP may  
therefore be a threat to both parties, but the local elections suggest that it  
is a bigger threat to the Conservative party. Its advance is real enough, 
but in  most northern constituencies its success so far consists of coming in 
second to  Labour and of pushing the Tories down into their southern 
redoubt. But if London  is going Labour — and the swing gave Labour control of 
once true-blue Redbridge,  which is halfway to Brighton — then the South of 
England is a much smaller Tory  redoubt than it used to be.  
Some of these past trends explain why Tory leader David Cameron cultivated  
his relationship with the Liberals. He calculated that the Tories would 
find it  hard to win power on their own, and by cultivating a more progressive 
image, he  thought to make himself a more acceptable coalition partner for 
the Lib-Dems.  Unless things change, however, there will be too few Lib-Dems 
in the House of  Commons to provide either Cameron or Miliband with an 
effective coalition  partner. So Cameron has to win more votes and 
parliamentary 
seats on his own  next year. 
Can he do so? One cannot rule it out entirely. Short-term factors sometimes 
 overwhelm long-term trends. An economic recovery that has not (yet) 
overheated  and gone bust. The “Miliband feel-bad factor,” rising house prices 
leading to a  massive “feel-good factor”: These and other unforeseeable 
events might carry  Cameron home to Number Ten. But it is very unlikely. In 
2010, 
UKIP won 3 percent  of the vote; it is currently pulling in between 17 and 
29 percent (depending on  the region and on the election.) It is difficult 
to see UKIP’s falling to below  the 6–7 percent total that would ensure 
Cameron’s defeat. At the same time,  because it lacks even a single seat today, 
UKIP is unlikely to win more than a  handful of seats even if it scores 
double the vote of the Lib-Dems. So a  minority Tory government could not rely 
on UKIP for either a formal coalition or  informal parliamentary support. 
That leaves Cameron with a difficult choice. 
Either he does the electoral deal with UKIP that he now says he  won’t do, 
in which the Tories agree to support UKIP candidates in a given number  of 
seats in return for UKIP’s not fielding candidates elsewhere. In London, for  
instance, that would give UKIP an electoral base of something just above 40 
 percent — in Britain as a whole an even larger one. 
Or he contrives to lose the Scottish referendum on independence,  which 
would remove only one Tory from the House of Commons but 41 Labourites and  11 
Lib-Dems. 
My guess is that he’ll wait to see how the second option pans out before  
deciding on the first.

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