I totally agree with Whenim64. I'm sure the UKIP thing was just one of many points taken into consideration when making the decision. We have several friends who have adopted children from very different cultures, and all of them say that the issue of 'identity' is very complex and can cause real crisis when kids become teenagers. Some friends of our in the Paris region adopted a Brazilian child when a baby, for instance. At first, they believed that all the child needed was love and security, but as the child became more and more rebellious and unhappy in his early teenage years, they realised how he suffered from an identity crisis. They are middle-class and live in a lovely Paris suburb- where the youngster found himself to be the only black kid, and it did unsettle him. He began to love Brazilian music and sub-culture - wanted to distance himself from his adoptive parents values. Fortunately, they were aware of this, very tolerant- and always hugely positive about his roots - encouraging his interests in that direction, taking him twice to Brazil, etc.
They have all got over that difficult phase, and he is now doing well as a youg adult, with a wonderful girlfriend, and finally in proper training for a job. They do say how naive they were about children 'just needing love and security' - identity is vastly important too. How could UKIP members, whose official values are clearly anti immigration and anti multiculturalism- not make such identity issues worse as kids get older???