Difference between revisions of "United Kingdom Independence Party"

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[[Image: United Kingdom Independence Party.png|right|160px]]
 
[[Image: United Kingdom Independence Party.png|right|160px]]
The [[United Kingdom Independence Party]] was formed on 03 September 1993 at the [[London School of Economics]] by several members of the [[Anti-Federalist League]] (AFL). Currently, [[Nigel Farage]] (MEP) is the leader, and [[Paul Nuttal']] is the Deputy Leader of the party. [[David Campbell Bannerman]] who has since rejoined the [[Conservative Party]] was previously deputy leader.
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The [[United Kingdom Independence Party]] was formed on 03 September 1993 at the [[London School of Economics]] by several members of the [[Anti-Federalist League]] (AFL). Currently, [[Nigel Farage]] (MEP) is the leader, and [[Paul Nuttall]] is the Deputy Leader of the party. [[David Campbell Bannerman]] who has since rejoined the [[Conservative Party]] was previously deputy leader.
  
 
===Romano Prodi allegations===
 
===Romano Prodi allegations===

Revision as of 11:32, 24 December 2014

United Kingdom Independence Party.png

The United Kingdom Independence Party was formed on 03 September 1993 at the London School of Economics by several members of the Anti-Federalist League (AFL). Currently, Nigel Farage (MEP) is the leader, and Paul Nuttall is the Deputy Leader of the party. David Campbell Bannerman who has since rejoined the Conservative Party was previously deputy leader.

Romano Prodi allegations

UKIP MEP Gerard Batten was implicated in an attmept to smear Romano Prodi as a former Sovet agent which involved Mario Scaramella and Alexander Litvinenko. According to the Guardian:

Litvinenko had no compunction in recalling a piece of gossip he had been told by a former KGB deputy director as he fled Russia. In 2000, General Anatoly Trofimov had warned Litvinenko not to go to Rome since "Prodi is our man in Italy". He was referring to Romano Prodi, the former Italian prime minister who went on to become president of the European Commission. Now Litvinenko regurgitated the unfounded claim to Scaramella who persuaded him to write it down.[1]

On 29 March 2006, Litvinenko met UKIP MEP Gerard Batten at the Itsu restaurant in London. Four days later, with an Italian general election imminent, Batten called for an Inquiry into Prodi in the European Parliament.

In his one-minute speech during Strasbourg plenary, Gerard Batten (UK, IN/DEM) told how Alexander Litvinenko, a former Lieutenant Colonel in the FSB, the successor to the KGB, and currently living under political asylum in the UK, was informed by FSB deputy chief, General Anatole Trofimov of the high amount of communist activity operating in Italy. With reference to the KGB, Litvinenko was told, “Romano Prodi is our man there”.[2]

Prodi responded by threatening to sue Litvinenko and Scaramella. In the resulting controversy, Silvio Berlusconi was forced to wind up the Mitrokhin Commission, and Prodi won the election.[3]

Links with Islamophobic organisations

On September 11 2007, Batten accepted a petition from Anders Gravers protesting a ban on a Brussels demonstration by Stop Islamisation of Europe.[4]

People

Advisors

Donors

  • UKIP treasure Stuart Wheeler revealed that in 2012-3 the lyricist Sir Tim Rice had donated £7500. Rice declined to confirm or deny the claim.[6]

Notes

  1. Why a spy was killed, by Cathy Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy, The Guardian, 26 January 2008.
  2. Prodi accused of being former Soviet agent, EU Reporter, 3 April 2006.
  3. Why a spy was killed, by Cathy Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy, The Guardian, 26 January 2008.
  4. Scores arrested in anti-Islam protest in Belgium, Agence France Presse, 11 September 2007.
  5. Nick Assinder Political Correspondent, BBC News website UKIP's secret weapon? Interview BBC Online, Last Updated: Friday, 14 January, 2005, 12:54 GMT
  6. Christopher Hope, Don't cry for me, David Cameron! Sir Tim Rice emerges as Ukip donor, The Telegraph, 23 Feb 2014, acc same day
EU Insigna.png This article is part of the MEPedia project of Spinwatch.