Ukip’s new deputy leader supports complete ban on smoking
Wednesday, October 19, 2022 at 11:20
Simon Clark

Oh to be a fly on the wall when Ukip leader Neil Hamilton discusses the party’s policy on smoking with his new deputy Rebecca Jane.

Remember Ukip?

In the 2014 European Parliament election the Nigel Farage-led party won the largest number of seats (24) in the UK with 27 per cent of the vote.

The result forced David Cameron to commit the Conservative party to a referendum on Britain’s membership of the European Union if he won a majority in the subsequent general election and the rest, as they say, is history.

Today, sans Farage, Ukip is unrecognisable from the party whose vibrant conference I attended on behalf of Forest in September 2014.

(The Hands Off Our Packs campaign had a stand in the exhibition area that Farage had promised to visit. He did but 24 hours after we expected him and I missed his show of support because I had nipped out of the hall for a sandwich!)

A few months earlier I was one of millions who voted for Ukip in the 2014 European election but it’s the first and only time I voted for the party because I never bought the idea that Ukip represented a more liberal (or libertarian) form of conservatism.

I knew for example that any commitment to amending the smoking ban or opposing plain packaging and other punitive tobacco control measures was driven almost entirely by Farage, not the party at large.

This became clear the first time he stood down as leader in 2009 because it was obvious that his successor Lord Pearson had absolutely no interest in the subject.

Truth is Ukip has never been a libertarian party and the idea that it was or could have been is one of the great political myths.

To be fair to Neil Hamilton, a very good friend of the late Lord Harris (chairman of Forest from 1986 until his death in 2006), he has been a consistent opponent of the smoking ban hence my fly on the wall comment because the first time I saw Rebecca Jane was on Good Morning Britain in 2018 when she was calling for smoking in the street to be made illegal.

Whether she actually believed that or was just fulfilling the GMB producers’ brief to be controversial I don’t know, but it wasn’t the only time she’s taken a pop at smoking.

In June 2021, again on Good Morning Britain, she called for a complete ban on smoking in public. “One hundred per cent smokers should just be banned in general,” she said.

The following month I was invited to discuss the subject ‘Should smoking be banned in the UK?’ with Mark Dolan on GB News. I was on one side of the debate, Rebecca Jane was on the other.

This week her mission is to #UniteTheRight by bringing together various fringe parties that purport to be on the right.

They include the Reclaim Party led by Laurence Fox (a smoker), and Reform led by former Brexit Party MEP Richard Tice. She’s even reached out to Farage, another smoker (via Twitter of course).

So far only the Reclaim Party has accepted her invitation to talk but it all seems a bit desperate to me.

I can only imagine that by appointing Rebecca Jane as deputy leader Ukip hope to benefit from her media profile, such as it is.

They’ve nothing to lose in terms of their current credibility but it might help if the leader and deputy leader were on the same page with something as fundamental as choice and civil liberties.

Article originally appeared on Simon Clark (http://taking-liberties.squarespace.com/).
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