Foundation and early years: 1991–2004 UKIP began as the
Anti-Federalist League, a Eurosceptic political party established in 1991 by the historian
Alan Sked. The League opposed the recently signed
Maastricht Treaty and sought to sway the governing
Conservative Party towards
removing the United Kingdom from the
European Union (EU). A former
Liberal Party candidate, member of the
Bruges Group, and professor at the
London School of Economics (LSE), Sked had converted to Euroscepticism while teaching the LSE's European Studies programme. Under the Anti-Federalist League's banner, Sked was a candidate for member of parliament (MP) for
Bath at the
1992 general election, gaining 0.2% of the vote. At a party meeting held in the LSE on 3 September 1993, the group was renamed the UK Independence Party, deliberately avoiding the term "British" so as to avoid confusion with the far-right
British National Party (BNP). UKIP contested the
1994 European Parliament election with little financing and much infighting, securing itself as the fifth-largest party in that election with 1% of the vote. During this period, UKIP was viewed as a typical
single-issue party by commentators, some of whom drew comparisons with the French
Poujadist movement. Following the election, UKIP lost much support to the
Referendum Party; founded by the multi-millionaire
James Goldsmith in 1994, it shared UKIP's Eurosceptic approach but was far better funded. In the
1997 general election, UKIP fielded 194 candidates and secured 0.3% of the national vote; only one of its candidates,
Nigel Farage in
Salisbury, secured over 5% of the vote and had his deposit returned. UKIP was beaten by the Referendum Party in 163 of the 165 seats in which they stood against each other. The Referendum Party disbanded following Goldsmith's death later that year, and many of its candidates joined UKIP. , 2004 After the election, Sked was pressured into resigning by a party faction led by Farage,
David Lott and
Michael Holmes, who deemed him too intellectual and dictatorial. Sked left the party, alleging that it had been infiltrated by
racist and far-right elements, including BNP spies. This connection was emphasised in the press, particularly when Farage was photographed meeting with BNP activists. Holmes took over as party leader, and in the
1999 European Parliament elections—the first British election for the European Parliament to use
proportional representation—UKIP received 6.5% of the vote and three seats, in
South East England (Farage),
South West England (Holmes), and the
East of England (
Jeffrey Titford). An internal power struggle ensued between Holmes and the party's national executive committee (NEC), which was critical of Holmes after he called for the
European Parliament to have greater powers over the
European Commission. Led by Farage, the NEC removed Holmes from power, and Titford was elected leader. In the
2001 general election, UKIP secured 1.5% of the vote, and six of its 428 candidates retained their deposits. It had lost much of its support to the Conservatives, whose leader
William Hague had adopted increasingly Eurosceptic rhetoric during his campaign. In 2002, the former Conservative MP
Roger Knapman was elected UKIP leader, bringing with him the experience of mainstream politics that the party had lacked. Knapman hired the political campaign consultant
Dick Morris to advise UKIP. The party adopted the slogan "say no" and launched a national billboard campaign. In 2004, UKIP reorganised itself nationally as a
private company limited by guarantee.
Growing visibility: 2004–2014 , leader of the party from 2006 to 2009 and again from 2010 to 2016, and an
MEP from 1999 to 2020 UKIP's support increased during the
2004 European Parliament elections, when it placed third, securing 2.6 million votes (16.1%) and winning 12 seats. This had been made possible through increased funding from major donors and the celebrity endorsement of former chat show host
Robert Kilroy-Silk, who stood as a candidate in the
East Midlands. Kilroy-Silk then criticised Knapman's leadership, arguing that UKIP should stand against Conservative candidates, regardless of whether they were Eurosceptic or not. This position was rejected by many party members, who were uneasy regarding Kilroy-Silk. After Farage and Lott backed Knapman, Kilroy-Silk left the party in January 2005. Two weeks later, he founded his own rival,
Veritas, taking a number of UKIP members—including both of its
London Assembly members—with him. After Kilroy-Silk's defection, UKIP's membership declined by a third and donations dropped by over a half. UKIP continued to be widely seen as a single-issue party and in the
2005 general election—when it fielded 496 candidates—it secured only 2.2% of the vote, and 40 candidates had their deposits returned. Electoral support for the BNP grew during this period, with academics and political commentators suggesting that the parties were largely competing for the same voter base, a section of about 20% of the UK population. Given that the BNP had outperformed UKIP in most of the seats that they both contested, many UKIP members, including several figures on the NEC, favoured an electoral pact with them, a proposal that Farage strongly condemned. In 2006, Farage was
elected leader. To attract support, he cultivated an image of himself as a "man of the people", openly smoking and drinking, showing disdain for the established parties, and speaking in an open manner that appeared unscripted. He sought to broaden UKIP's image from that of a single-issue party by introducing an array of conservative policies, including reducing immigration, tax cuts, restoring
grammar schools, and
climate change denial. In doing so he was attempting to attract disenfranchised former Conservatives who had left the party after its leader,
David Cameron, had moved in a
socially liberal direction. According to Farage, Cameron was "a
socialist" whose priorities were "gay marriage, foreign aid, and wind farms". Cameron was highly critical of UKIP, referring to them as "fruitcakes, loonies, and closet racists". The Conservatives' largest donor,
Stuart Wheeler, donated £100,000 to UKIP after criticising Cameron's stance towards the
Treaty of Lisbon and the EU. After trust in the mainstream parties was damaged by the
parliamentary expenses scandal, UKIP received an immediate surge in support. This helped it in the
2009 European Parliament election, in which it secured 2.5 million votes (16.5%), resulting in 13 MEPs, becoming the second largest party in the European Parliament after the Conservatives. During the election UKIP outperformed the BNP, whose electoral support base collapsed shortly afterward. led the party in 2009. In September 2009, Farage resigned as leader. The subsequent
leadership election was won by
Lord (Malcolm) Pearson, who emphasised UKIP's opposition to high immigration rates and
Islamism in Britain, calling for a ban on the
burqa being worn in public. Pearson was unpopular with the UKIP grassroots, who viewed him as an establishment figure too favourable to the Conservatives. In the
2010 general election, UKIP fielded 558 candidates and secured 3.1% of the vote (919,471 votes), but won no seats. Pearson stood down as leader in August, and Farage was re-elected in the
leadership election with more than 60% of the vote. Farage placed new emphasis on developing areas of local support through growth in local councils. Observing that the party had done well in areas dominated by
white blue-collar workers with no educational attainment, and that conversely it had done poorly in areas with high numbers of graduates and ethnic minorities, UKIP's campaign refocused directly at the former target vote. UKIP support would be bolstered by dissatisfaction with the
Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government and the perception that its
austerity policies benefited the socio-economic elite while imposing hardship on most Britons. During this year, UKIP had witnessed far greater press coverage and growing support, with opinion polls placing it at around 10% support in late 2012. UKIP put up a record number of candidates for the
2013 local elections, achieving its strongest local government result, polling an average of 23% in the wards where it stood, and increasing its number of elected councillors from four to 147. Four years earlier it had averaged 16% of the vote. This was the best result for a party outside the
big three in British politics since the
Second World War, with UKIP being described as "the most popular political insurgency" in Britain since the
Social Democratic Party during the 1980s.
Entering mainstream politics: 2014–2016 in Great Britain. Districts where UKIP received the largest number of votes are shown in purple. In March 2014,
Ofcom awarded UKIP "major party status". In the
2014 local elections, UKIP won 163 seats, an increase of 128, but did not take control of any council. In the
2014 European Parliament elections, UKIP received the greatest number of votes (27.5%) of any British party, which elected 24 MEPs. The party won seats in every region of Britain, including its first in Scotland. It made strong gains in traditionally
Labour voting areas within Wales and the North of England; it for instance came either first or second in all 72 council areas of the latter. The victory established Farage and UKIP as "truly household names". It was the first time since 1906 that a party other than Labour or the Conservatives had won the most votes in a UK-wide election. UKIP gained its first MP when Conservative defector
Douglas Carswell won the seat of
Clacton during an
October 2014 by-election. In November fellow Conservative defector
Mark Reckless became UKIP's second MP in a
Rochester and Strood by-election. In the
2015 general election, UKIP secured over 3.8 million votes (12.6% of the total), replacing the
Liberal Democrats as the third most popular party, but only secured one seat, with Carswell retaining his seat and Reckless losing his. In the run-up to the election, Farage stated that he would resign as party leader if he did not win
South Thanet. On failing to do so, he resigned, although was reinstated three days later when the NEC rejected his resignation. A period of 'civil war' broke out among senior membership between those who favoured Farage's leadership and those seeking a change. In the
2015 Oldham West and Royton by-election the party attacked
Jeremy Corbyn as a security risk, but only gained a small increase in support at the expense of the Conservative Party. In the
2016 National Assembly for Wales election, UKIP nearly tripled their share of votes (from 4.7 per cent to 12.5 per cent) and won seven seats. UKIP had also won control of its first UK council, in Thanet, in May 2015; it took overall control from Labour and increased its seats on the council from two to 33.
2016 Brexit referendum To counter the loss of further votes to UKIP, the governing Conservatives, led by
David Cameron, promised a
referendum on the UK's continued membership of the EU. Rather than taking part in the official
Vote Leave campaign, to which various Eurosceptic Conservative and Labour politicians were linked, UKIP affiliated itself with the
Leave.EU campaign group. Farage gained regular press coverage during the campaign, in which Leave.EU emphasised what it characterised as the negative impact of immigration on local communities and public services. The June 2016 referendum produced a 51.89% majority in favour of leaving the EU: the accomplishment of UKIP's ''raison d'être'' raised questions about the party's future. The loss of its MEPs would result in the loss of its primary institutional representation and a key source of its funding.
Decline: 2016–present Downward turn (2016–2018) After the referendum, Farage resigned as UKIP leader.
Diane James was elected as his successor, but resigned after 18 days. Farage's former deputy,
Paul Nuttall, was elected leader that month. In March 2017, the party's only MP, Carswell, left the party to sit as an independent. The following month, Reckless also left UKIP. In the
2017 local elections, UKIP lost all 145 seats it was defending, but gained one on
Lancashire County Council. These results led several prominent former UKIP members to call for the party to be disbanded. In the following
2017 general election, UKIP received fewer than 600,000 votes and won no seats. The following day, Nuttall resigned and
Steve Crowther took over as interim party leader. In July 2017, it lost its majority on
Thanet council when Councillor Beverly Martin defected to the Conservatives; in September all three UKIP councillors on
Plymouth City Council defected to the Conservatives, as did
Alexandra Phillips, who had been UKIP's head of media for three years. In 2017,
Henry Bolton, a former soldier, was
elected leader. In January 2018, UKIP MEP
Jonathan Arnott resigned from the party. In December 2017, former UKIP
Suffolk County Council member and parliamentary candidate from the general election in
Central Suffolk and North Ipswich, Stephen Searle, murdered his wife
Anne Searle at their home in
Stowmarket. In January 2018, UKIP's NEC delivered a
vote of no confidence in Bolton; only Bolton voted against the motion. He nevertheless refused to resign. as did the party's spokesmen for government, education, immigration, and trade and industry. A few days later, all 17 UKIP members of
Thurrock Council left the party and formed
Thurrock Independents. In February, UKIP members passed a vote of no confidence in Bolton, removing him as leader. He was replaced by
Gerard Batten as interim leader until a new leadership election could be held. When the election occurred in April, Batten stood unopposed and was elected.
Move towards the far right (2018–2019) 's leadership, UKIP moved towards a far-right stance In the
2018 local elections, UKIP lost 124 of the 126 seats it was defending, and gained a single seat in
Derby, for a net loss of 123. MEP
James Carver left UKIP to sit as an independent on 28 May 2018, becoming the sixth UKIP MEP to leave since 2014. Under the leadership of Henry Bolton, party membership was understood to have fallen to around 18,000 by January 2018. During Batten's interim leadership term, the party avoided insolvency after a financial appeal to members. As the new permanent leader, Batten focused the party more on opposing Islam, which he described as a "death cult", sought closer relations with the right-wing activist
Tommy Robinson and his followers, and made Muslim-only prisons party policy (which was criticised as "the first step to Muslim concentration camps"). UKIP was criticised as an "explicitly far-right party" after they invited
Paul Joseph Watson as a spokesman. The party saw its membership rise by 15% in July 2018, following the publication of the
Chequers Agreement and allowing three prominent far-right activists to join the party. Previous leader
Nigel Farage stated he was "really upset" that Robinson could be allowed into the party and that he believed Gerard Batten was marginalising the party. Batten's appointment of Robinson as an adviser was followed by a wave of high-profile resignations from the party. Farage announced his decision to resign in December 2018, calling Batten "obsessed" with Islam and saying that "UKIP wasn't founded to be a party based on fighting a religious crusade". Former deputy chair
Suzanne Evans had left earlier that week after Batten survived a vote of confidence from the party NEC. The former leader of the party in the Welsh Assembly,
Caroline Jones, and the MEP
William Dartmouth had also cited the party's trajectory to the right as reasons for leaving the party. Another former leader,
Paul Nuttall, also left for the same reason. By December 2018, a majority of the party's MEPs had left. Others leaving included
Peter Whittle, the party's top vote-winner on the London Assembly. On 9 December 2018, before an important vote on
Brexit legislation, UKIP led a "Brexit Betrayal" rally in central London fronted by Robinson, alongside prominent far-right groups. By April 2019, of 24 UKIP MEPs elected in the 2014 European Election, only four remained members of UKIP. Ten of these MEPs would later move to Nigel's Farage's new
Brexit Party (with the party eventually succeeding UKIP politically), whilst O'Flynn defected to the
SDP. Most others continued to sit as
Independent MEPs. By April 2019, the British government had agreed an extension to EU membership with the EU until 31 October 2019, which would mean the UK would take part in the
2019 European Parliament elections. Candidates selected by UKIP to run in the election included right-wing
YouTube personalities
Carl Benjamin and
Mark Meechan. Benjamin had caused controversy by making "inappropriate" comments in 2016 about the
rape threats to a female Labour MP
Jess Phillips, with the UKIP Swindon branch chair calling for him to be deselected. Videos made by Benjamin in which he used racist terms also caused controversy. In May, the
2019 United Kingdom local elections saw UKIP lose around 80% of the seats it was defending. The party was criticised for failing "to capitalise on the collapse of the Conservatives" by commentators. In the European elections later that month, UKIP received 3.3% of the vote and lost all its remaining seats. On 2 June 2019, Batten resigned his post as party leader as he had promised if he lost his MEP position. In the
2019 UKIP leadership election,
Richard Braine was elected UKIP leader and attempted to appoint Batten as deputy leader. Braine's attempt to appoint Batten as the party's deputy leader was blocked by its NEC. Braine was criticised in the press for comments he has made which were considered racist and offensive, including one incident in which he claimed he "often confused" London mayor
Sadiq Khan with
Mohammad Sidique Khan, one of the
7/7 terror attackers. Braine later further came under fire when he announced he planned to boycott the September 2019 UKIP Party conference in
Newport, after fewer than 450 tickets were sold for the conference. The chairman of UKIP, Kirstan Herriot, told members that Braine had attempted to cancel the conference due to the low turnout and was highly critical of this attempted action.
Internal instability and wipeout (2019–2024) In October 2019, UKIP underwent a leadership crisis in the run-up to its NEC elections after it suspended Braine's membership, and by extension, his eligibility to be party leader, over allegations of data theft from party databases. Three other members associated with Braine – Jeff Armstrong, the party's general secretary appointed by Braine; NEC candidate Mark Dent; and Tony Sharp – were also suspended. In response, Braine accused the NEC of carrying out a purge of members. All four members were reported to the
National Fraud Intelligence Bureau. On 7 November 2019, Welsh Assembly Member and UKIP group leader
Gareth Bennett resigned from UKIP and chose to sit as an independent in the
Welsh Assembly. He stated that he wanted to support
Boris Johnson's
Brexit deal. As a result, the sole remaining UKIP member of the Welsh Assembly was
Neil Hamilton. In November 2019, Meechan posted a video to his YouTube channel, announcing that he had left UKIP, citing internal disputes and backstabbing within the party over their leadership as his reason for leaving. On 16 November 2019, NEC member
Patricia Mountain was appointed interim leader in preparation for the December general election and the upcoming UKIP leadership election. Only 44 UKIP candidates stood in the
December 2019 general election, targeting constituencies that voted to leave the European Union in which the Brexit Party withdrew their candidates for the Conservatives or where the Conservative candidate was in favour of remaining in the EU. On 2 December 2019, Mountain appeared on
Sky News for an interview with journalist
Adam Boulton as a part of the launch of the election manifesto for UKIP; it lasted for eight minutes and the interview was described by the
Evening Standard as a "car crash", and there were reports that she was mistaken for the titular character of ''
Catherine Tate's Nan''. Mountain was unable to name a single seat her party was contending and "accidentally called her party racist". UKIP failed to win any seats it contested in the election, and nationwide the party received only 22,817 votes (0.1% of the vote share). This result was the lowest the party had achieved in a general election in its history. The party also failed to retain any deposits, only received more than 1,000 votes in two seats, and, in another two seats, finished behind the
satirical Official Monster Raving Loony Party. In January 2020,
David Kurten, UKIP's last remaining
London Assembly Member, left UKIP to stand as an
independent candidate in the
2020 London Assembly election and the
2020 London mayoral election. Kurten described the politics of both UKIP and the Brexit Party as needing "rebranding" once Britain left the EU on 31 January. Kurten's departure ended UKIP's presence on the London Assembly. In March 2020, according to a tweet by former leader Gerard Batten, the party was reported to be "close to
insolvency". He stated that the party "went astray quite a few years ago" and that under his leadership it would "return to our libertarian freedom-loving principles". On 12 September 2020, it was reported that Vachha had been suspended from the party following a formal complaint of bullying and harassment. Later that day, UKIP Wales leader
Neil Hamilton was made interim leader. Vachha argued a short time later that he was still leader, and that his suspension was unconstitutional, as he claimed to have appointed Marietta King as chairman in place of Ben Walker a few days earlier. Vachha decided to take legal action, however in December a judge refused his request to fast-track the case. Vachha then dropped his legal case and was ordered to pay the party's legal costs. In the
2021 Senedd election, UKIP performed poorly and suffered a "complete collapse" of voter support, with the Conservative Party gaining a number of voters who had in previous elections voted UKIP. The party finished seventh with 1.56% of regional list votes.
Neil Hamilton, Interim UKIP leader and UKIP's sole
MS in the
Welsh Senedd lost his seat, ending any representation UKIP had outside of
local government in England. In the
Scottish Parliament election, the party received just 3,848 (0.14%) list votes across the whole country despite standing in every region in Scotland. In the
2021 local elections, UKIP lost all the seats it was defending from the previous elections in those council areas. Furthermore, in the
London mayoral election, the UKIP candidate, Peter Gammons, achieved 0.6% of the total vote, finishing 13th. The party finished ninth in the
London Assembly election, down from fourth in 2016. After a period as acting leader, Hamilton was elected as leader in October 2021, receiving 498 votes of 631 cast (78.9%) against challenger John Poynton. In April 2023, the party removed a longstanding ban of current or former members of far-right groups and parties – including the
British National Party (BNP) – from joining the party, and replaced it with a ban of members of several
anti-fascist, left-wing, and environmentalist groups. In the
May 2023 local elections, it lost all of its remaining council seats leaving the party without representation at any level. At the start of 2024, Hamilton announced that he would retire as party leader that May, leading to a new leadership contest.
Bill Etheridge, Lois Perry, and
Anne Marie Waters, who had rejoined the party the previous year after having left to form the
For Britain Movement, were announced as candidates for the contest, though Waters subsequently withdrew her candidacy for unspecified personal reasons. Lois Perry was elected on 13 May 2024, and announced upon the calling of the
2024 United Kingdom general election later that month that the party would be entering into an electoral alliance with the
English Democrats. On 15 June, after just 34 days as leader, Perry resigned due to health issues. Deputy leader Nick Tenconi took over as leader for the duration of the campaign, which saw the party's vote further decline from its 2019 levels, earning just 6,350 votes nationwide. Of the 26 candidates nominated, all but three of them finished with fewer than 300 votes, with 17 of them finishing in last place in their constituency. Unlike the 2019 election, however, the party did succeed in retaining one deposit by winning 6.3% of the vote in
Stone, Great Wyrley and Penkridge, largely due to
Reform UK (as the Brexit Party had renamed itself after the previous election) not nominating a candidate there; the 2,638 votes won by the UKIP candidate Janice Mackay single-handedly accounted for 41.5% of the party's national vote share.
Tenconi's leadership (2024–present) After Nick Tenconi took leadership of UKIP, he attempted to move closer to controversial activist
Tommy Robinson, and appointed anti-Islam activist and preacher
Calvin Robinson as its lead spokesperson, and also entered into talks with anti-Muslim influencer
Katie Hopkins. Since becoming leader, Tenconi has made Christian identity politics an important part of UKIP's campaign. Based on this, some people have described Tenconi and UKIP as
Christian nationalist. A demonstration in Portsmouth in August 2025 was notable for an incident where Tenconi made an arm gesture which was likened by numerous observers to a
Nazi salute. Tenconi denied the resemblance, stating that there was "nothing Nazi-esque about the power fist symbol" UKIP and Tenconi were involved in the
2025 British anti-immigration protests, organising some of the protests under their "Mass Deportations Tour", which has seen them march or rally in cities such as Glasgow, Nottingham, Liverpool, Newcastle, and London and be met with counter-protesters such as
Stand Up To Racism. On 21 October, a rally planned by
UKIP for 25 October in
Whitechapel was banned from occurring within the
London Borough of Tower Hamlets, an area with a large Muslim population, by the
Metropolitan Police. The police said that this action was taken due to a "realistic prospect of serious disorder". UKIP's
X account had asked attendees to "reclaim Whitechapel from the Islamists". UKIP accused the police of two-tier policing and of caving in to "sectarian violence" as they believed "far-left and Islamist protest groups" were planning disorder, and changed their plans to instead gather at the
Brompton Oratory and march to
Speakers' Corner. UKIP's march were also prohibited from protesting before 1pm or after 4.30pm. A counter-protest organised by Stand Up To Racism and other local groups remained planned for Whitechapel, and the police further banned Stand Up To Racism from gathering in an area of central London, including near the UKIP protest. Four anti-racist counter-protesters were arrested for breaching this. The logo has been criticised for appearing to resemble
Nazi symbolism, something the party denies, stating that the symbolism is Christian in origin, with the circle in the centre representing the
Eucharist and the spear the
Holy Lance. The Electoral Commission rejected the logo, with the rationale that it was "Offensive / Likely to mislead voters as the words spelt out in the emblem are unable to be read". ==Ideology and policies==