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  17 January 2013 Last updated at 22:21 UKIP's Farage should not take part
in TV election debates, says PM
[image: David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Gordon Brown] The 2010 general
election TV debates were uncharted territory for the three contenders

David Cameron has dismissed calls for UKIP leader Nigel Farage to be
allowed to take part in the leaders' debates at the next general election,
due in 2015.

The PM told The House magazine only parties "that are going to form the
government" should be included.

Mr Farage once accused Mr Cameron of being "weak" and suggested he was not
"grown up and sensible" enough.

But the PM has previously described the eurosceptic party as containing
"loonies and closet racists".

Mr Cameron said in an interview: "Obviously, we have to decide on this
nearer the time, but the TV debates should be about, you know, the parties
that are going to form the government, in my view."

Some recent polls have placed UKIP, which wants the UK to leave the EU, in
third place ahead of the Liberal Democrats.
'Scared'

Mr Farage said: "If UKIP's share of the opinion polls were to continue as
they are now, to exclude us from the debates when the Lib Dems were
included last time would make British politics look as outdated as the
closed shop and embarrassingly out of touch.

"If he wants to restrict it to those parties who are likely to form the
next government, he'd better not be booking studio time himself with
confidence."

The first ever televised general election debates took place in 2010, with
the format agreed between the Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats.

The Liberal Democrats enjoyed a surge in popularity following the first
debate.

In December last year Mr Cameron said that, while he enjoyed the debates,
he felt they "took all the life" out of the 2010 campaign.

He suggested the three main parties "could learn from last time" and stage
the 2015 debates "in a slightly different way".

Labour accused the PM of trying to "ditch the TV debates simply because he
is too scared to defend his record".

A Lib Dem spokesman said the TV debates had helped to connect people to the
democratic process and "realistically" they were likely to feature ahead of
the next general election.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-21066558

-- 
Mario Huet
List Administrator
Libertarian Alliance Forum

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*   Words cannot picture her; but all men know   *
* That solemn sketch the pure sad artist wrought *
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