UK parliament swears in first UKIP lawmaker

Published October 14, 2014
LONDON: Douglas Carswell (centre), the first MP elected on the United Kingdom Independence Party ticket, arrives at the Houses of Parliament on Monday.—AFP
LONDON: Douglas Carswell (centre), the first MP elected on the United Kingdom Independence Party ticket, arrives at the Houses of Parliament on Monday.—AFP

LONDON: The first elected lawmaker for Britain’s anti-EU UK Independence Party was sworn in at the House of Commons on Monday, watched by party leader Nigel Farage.

Douglas Carswell defected from Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservatives but was re-elected in his old seat of Clacton, southeast England, last week with a majority of over 12,000.

Watching from a gallery, Farage grinned broadly as Carswell was sworn in amid silence in the Commons, promising to be “faithful to her majesty Queen Elizabeth, her heirs and successors, according to law, so help me God”.

Carswell later took his seat on the other side of the chamber to his former Conservative colleagues, among members of the main opposition Labour party.

As he arrived at parliament in pouring rain to represent his new party for the first time earlier, Carswell was on cheerful form, posing in front of the Big Ben clock tower with his thumbs up.

“I’m reinvigorated. Democracy works... I think change is coming — people in the country feel let down by the two-party system,” he said.

Meanwhile, Farage was asked by journalists if Carswell’s swearing in felt like an emotional moment for the party. “It does. I think it is a moment,” he said.

But some Conservative lawmakers seemed uneasy at Farage’s presence in the Commons, even though he could join their number if he wins the seat he is standing for at next year’s general election. “Farage is NOT behind glass. Can he be trusted not to hurl something at us?” one Conservative MP, Michael Fabricant, joked on Twitter.

The rise of UKIP, which emerged as victors in Britain in May’s European elections, has sent jitters through Cameron’s centre-right Conservatives as it threatens to split the right-wing vote at the 2015 general election.

Published in Dawn, October 14th , 2014

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