It seems to have been decided that the best response to the success of Nigel Farage, the leader of the UK Independence Party that won 27.45% of the vote in the May European elections, is to try to copy him.
The Tories will soon reveal that one of their councillors declared that āthe shape of a Romanianās spine proves heās actually a type of stinging nettleā on an election leaflet, but it was a mistake anyone could make, especially as the councillor had an earache at the time.
Labour shadow chancellor Ed Balls has already insisted that from now on, Labour must talk loudly about immigration. So heāll probably announce a commitment to bring in a new law that forbids foreigners from looking at our women. Heāll explain: āImmigrants have been a pillar of British society for hundreds of years, but their birds aināt up to much, are they? So if they start looking at mine, Iāll be the first to say, āOY, Vladimir, OUT, NOWā.ā
Home secretary Theresa May will reply that no Bulgarian will be allowed to work here unless they sing all day in English, starting with a medley of Boney M hits and moving on to āOur Houseā by Madness, and perform a one-man version of The Merchant of Venice during the tea break.
And foreign secretary William Hague will announce: āI have only this morning urinated on an EU commissioner, and unlike the Labour Party I did not spare him the drips at the end.ā
It is hard to beat UKIP at this game, though. For example, Victoria Ayling, likely to be UKIP candidate for Greater Grimsby, said about immigrants: āIād send the lot back.ā So how do you top that? Maybe Chancellor George Osborne will insist heāll send them all back, then make them all come back here again so he can send them all back a second time.
To be fair, Farage accepts he would allow immigration if it was people with the āskills we needā. Because until now, eastern Europeans have been coming here with useless skills like dentistry and plumbing and picking fruit.
So we should send them all home, and allow them in only if theyāve got a useful trade, such as disposing of tons of rotten strawberries that no one picked, chucking out millions of carpets ruined when radiators exploded, and looking after thousands of people who ended up in mental hospitals after screaming, āAaaaaargh my poxy toothā and were told that āthe nearest dentist is in Krakow, mateā.
As Farage said: āAs I say every day on 25 TV and radio shows, these days youāre not allowed to say this sort of thing on TV or radio.ā
But at last someone is making the sort of common-sense arguments we so rarely hear, such as his insistence that hearing people speak a foreign language āmakes me uncomfortableā.
It could be argued that if foreign languages make you uncomfortable, thatās not so much a policy as a mental illness, similar to standing for election with a policy of āIām scared of buttons. And canāt leave the house unless all my furniture is in alphabetical order.ā
But heās made his case well, just as heās pointed out that itās fine to be uneasy if a Romanian moves next door to you, because some Romanians commit crime.
Strangely, he said this logic doesnāt apply to Germans, possibly because his wifeās German, or maybe because you can try as hard as you like, but youāll never find a single German in history whoās behaved in any way that could be considered unpleasant at all, especially not towards Britain.
So you can see how difficult it must be to offer arguments that contradict Farageās sound analysis, and how itās much easier to agree that the reason weāre short of houses is because there are too many people over here whose only skill is building houses.
Itās especially worrying for the old parties when they see similar election results across Europe. The French, for example, seem to think that āitās been 70 years since we let the fascists have a go at running the place, so itās only fair to let them have another turnā.
But a fleeting glance at history suggests that trying to be as firm on immigration as parties set up to oppose immigration isnāt likely to work, just as a chess club wonāt gain many new members if it says: āFootball appears to be more popular than our game. But we can overtake their popularity if we kick the pieces across the table, and if a pawnās taken we surround the referee and insist it dived outside the square.ā
But thatās how it seems Labour and the Conservatives are set to challenge the threat of UKIP.
Maybe a better strategy would be to warn that if we end the movement of people across Europe, that would mean the 808,000 British who live in Spain would all have to come back, which would be the equivalent of a town the size of Brazil being dumped on our overstretched resources, which is why we simply canāt afford the huge growth in population that would happen if UKIP got its way.