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Page last updated at 22:28 GMT, Friday, 8 May 2009 23:28 UK

UKIP braced for tough Euro test

By Ross Hawkins
Political correspondent, BBC News

Nigel Farage
UKIP faces competition from new Eurosceptic parties

The leader of UKIP Nigel Farage thinks he can beat Labour into fourth place at the European elections.

At the launch of his party's Euro campaign he said the humiliation could bring down the prime minister.

Some in Westminster and Brussels will scoff at that, but UKIP has form.

At the last European elections in 2004 it won 12 seats in the European Parliament.

Overnight the former TV presenter - Robert Kilroy-Silk - became Britain's best-known MEP.

Then, as now, the party's suggestion was a simple one - Britain should withdraw from the European Union.

It said that would save the country money and give the government more control of immigration.

Difficulties

Since its election triumph, life has been difficult for UKIP.

One of its MEPs, Ashley Mote, was convicted of benefit fraud.

I think we will have another big surge towards UKIP over the course of the next month
UKIP leader Nigel Farage

Another - Tom Wise - was charged with false accounting and money laundering. He has denied the charges.

Neither now sits as a UKIP MEP.

Robert Kilroy-Silk has long since walked away from the party, having failed to become its leader.

At the launch of UKIP's European campaign Nigel Farage said the party had a policy of not employing any more daytime television stars.

Election target

Like many political leaders who struggle for attention outside election times, he thinks this campaign could give him all the publicity he needs without Kilroy's celebrity firepower.

He said: "If we have this national debate, if we are able to discuss European issues and their impact on people's lives, then I think we will have another big surge towards UKIP over the course of the next month."

Nigel Farage's political future depends on that surge. He told a magazine he would resign if UKIP won fewer than 10 seats in the European Parliament.

It will not be easy to meet his target. Voters with doubts about the EU may turn to the Conservatives or one of the other smaller parties concerned about Britain's position in Europe.

Next month's elections will show whether UKIP still has potential to be a giant-killer, or whether it has been weakened by growing competition and difficult headlines.



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EUROPEAN ELECTION RESULTS

MEP Seats

 VotesMEPs
Party%+/- %Total+/-
EPP33.4-1.4264-18
Socialists23.2-4.1183-26
Liberal11.0+1.684+5
Green7.4+1.350+9
Left5.3-0.634-2
UEN3.4+1.628+2
Ind/Dem2.7-1.821-15
No Group13.6+3.472+3.4
0 of 27 countries declared.

UK Total MEP Seats

PartyVotesMEPs
%+/- %Total+/-
CON27.71.0*261
UKIP16.50.3131
LAB15.7-6.913-5
LD13.7-1.2111
GRN8.62.420
BNP6.21.322
SNP2.10.720
PC0.8-0.110
OTH8.52.400
SF10
DUP10
72 of 72 seats declared. Vote share figures exclude Northern Ireland as it has a separate electoral system to the rest of the UK
* Includes UCUNF MEP elected in Northern Ireland
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