Oakley opted for a rather unconventional comparison when discussing UKIP’s loss of over 90 council seats during the local elections with host Nick Robinson.
“Think of the Black Death in the Middle Ages – it comes along, it causes disruption then it goes dormant… that’s what we’ll be doing. Our time isn’t finished. Brexit is being betrayed and there is a lot of anger in the country about that,” he said.
— Paul Oakley UKIP (@PaulJamesOakley) 4 мая 2018 г.
When Robinson sought to clarify if Oakley really made an analogy between UKIP and the Black Death, the Secretary General said that it was exactly what he meant, and wondered, “What’s wrong with that?”
“It also led to economic growth and the Renaissance, but this isn't a history lesson. It got rid of the whole issue of servitude and allowed people to go into the towns, escape their landlords and create their own businesses,” Oakley replied, after the host tried to explain that the disease claimed lives of hundreds of thousands of people
Oakley’s remark couldn’t help but spur an avalanche of reactions on social media platforms, with many saying that he made the worst possible comparison…
and the worst simile of the decade goes to Paul Oakley! #UKIP #Elections pic.twitter.com/PvRe5J0NQ4
— Matt Swift (@MSwift94) 4 мая 2018 г.
I don’t reckon Paul Oakley had a lot of sleep last night. Compares Ukip to the Black Death on @BBCr4today, surprised @bbcnickrobinson offers chances to backtrack… Oakley: Yup. Black Death helped a lot of people 🧐
— Kate McCann (@KateEMcCann) 4 мая 2018 г.
#bbcnews UKIP's Paul Oakley. It is not 'all over' for the party. pic.twitter.com/xMS2lzSazd
— Louise McDaid 🌟🌹 (@LouiseMcDaid) 4 мая 2018 г.
…there were also those who simply couldn’t believe that he actually said those words:
Ukip general secretary Paul Oakley just compared his party to the Black Death on R4, before talking up the benefits brought to society by the Black Death.
— Peter Walker (@peterwalker99) 4 мая 2018 г.
I was awake early this morning, but I'm pretty sure I didn't imagine that exchange.
No kidding. That was a strange choice on his part. Black Death. Why say that at all?
— Pat Devlin (@sugeesbabe) 4 мая 2018 г.
Did Paul Oakley really just refer to his party as "like the black death"….?
— Joshua (@JoshuaAlNajar) 4 мая 2018 г.
UKIP's Paul Oakley talking about the economic/social benefits of The Black Death… it did kill up to 200m people but you know… minor detail. pic.twitter.com/mAHnRlrlhN
— Krishan Majithia (@krishm91) 4 мая 2018 г.
Meanwhile, others noted that the analogy was quite apt:
So #UKIP gen sec Paul Oakley has likened then to the #BlackDeath He's right. They're both deeply unpleasant, even mild contact can make you feel tainted and they're both best off left in the Middle Ages.
— Richard Howlett (@Djfridgetwit) 4 мая 2018 г.
Some said it was an “unusual spin strategy”:
Ukip gen sec Paul Oakley compares his party to a plague that killed millions of people. Unusual spin strategy. pic.twitter.com/mwzqhOjvxt
— Pippa Crerar (@PippaCrerar) 4 мая 2018 г.
Fair play to UKIP spokesperson Paul Oakley on BBC Radio 4 there, comparing his party to the Black Death — "it goes away & comes back again" — and then standing by it, citing the Black Death's "economic benefits". 🤦♂️
— Connor Beaton (@cbeatonssp) 4 мая 2018 г.
The jaw-dropping remark even became reason for uncontrollable laughter, due to the shock:
You didn't. My poor dog jumped at my maniacal laughter.
— Janet Pontin (@janetpontin) 4 мая 2018 г.
Just heard Paul Oakley on @BBCRadio4, probably the best piece of radio I've heard in years. Absolutely dying of laughter. The way some people think astounds me. #BlackDeath
— Ally Smith (@allysmithylla) 4 мая 2018 г.
The most devastating pandemic in history, the Black Death, is estimated to have killed half of Europe’s population and anywhere between 75 and 200 million people in Eurasia.