- Anti-Federalist League
The Anti-Federalist League was a small cross-party organisation in Britain, formed in 1991 to campaign against the
Maastricht Treaty . It is mainly remembered now as the forerunner of theUK Independence Party .The main founder of the Anti-Federalist League was Dr Alan Sked, lecturer at the
London School of Economics , leading figure in theBruges Group and former official of the Liberal Party. The Maastricht Treaty, which greatly increased the powers of theEuropean Commission , was widely unpopular according to opinion polls, but all three of the main parties had pledged themselves to support its ratification in the House of Commons. Sked and others felt that this denied voters a say on a crucial constitutional issue. Running AFL candidates was supposed to make good this shortfall in the democratic process.The League stood about twenty candidates in the 1992 General Election, but failed to make any impact or attract any press attention. It lost all its deposits. The following year, Alan Sked represented it in by-elections in Newbury (gaining 1% of the vote) and Christchurch (1.6%).
Amidst extraordinary scenes in the House of Commons, and in the teeth of intense opposition from a minority of Conservative MPs known as the
Maastricht Rebels , the Maastricht Treaty finally passed into law. Many members of the Anti-Federalist League concluded that with the Treaty in place, the only option for anti-federalists was to campaign for complete British withdrawal from theEuropean Union . To this end, Sked and others met in late 1993 to set up a full-blown political party: theUK Independence Party . Not all members of the League followed Sked into the new organisation, but the party did effectively supersede the League, which ceased to exist.
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