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Archive for October, 2009

Are the BNP about to chuck Griffin?

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

This morning’s article in the Times which says that BNP supporters are calling for Nick Griffin MEP to go after his much-maligned performance on QT last week should be treated with caution.

NG’s performance last week was certainly under-whelming for someone who had shown promise in recent appearances such as Andrew Marr and Adam Boulton. Many members will feel disappointed. However, NB doesn’t think a leadership contest is on the cards:

1. The panel for The Times’s poll was recruited from Stormfront, a well-known and notoriously wacky white supremacist forum where many members regard Griffin as a “sell-out”. It is not reprsentative of BNP members, informal supporters or voters. In fact, in our experience the membership/supporters are very committed to Griffin.

2. The BNP rules largely support Griffin’s hold on the party.

3. There is no obvious successor or agititator for change. Lee Barnes, the BNP’s legal officer is a senior, officeholder in the BNP, but his political judgement is regarded as suspect, even by the BNP leadership. His blog, 21st Century British Nationalism, regularly embarrasses the party with its anti-Semetic, homophonic, Nazi-sympathising articles.

Richard Barnbrook is apparently a leadership contender. Barnbrook is popular, particularly in the South, but he is not regarded as able to grasp a brief (his performances in the London Assembly are regarded as unimpressive). He is accused by his enemies of having a drink problem (this is a funny video of Barnbrook dancing at a wedding).

Andrew Brons MEP, a man with a history of neo-Nazism and racial hygiene theory, is also being muted as a possible contender. But his age and lack of mainstream appeal count against him.

Simon Darby, BNP deputy chairman  and head of press, is probably the strongest performer in the BNP hierarchy. In 2006, Darby was lined up by Griffin to take control of the day-to-day running of the BNP if he was found guilty of incitement to racial hatred. But he is currently a Griffin loyalist and lacks any visibility outside the party.

BNP news update – Tuesday

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Peter Hitchens in the Daily Mail: Griffin, the BBC and the birth of a ’stab in the back’ myth http://bit.ly/2pM5J9.

PoliticsHome: Consensus view on Question Time: Warsi shone, but BNP benefited* http://bit.ly/wTvLd

MELANIE PHILLIPS: The outrageous truth slips out: Labour plotted to transform make-up of Britain without telling us http://bit.ly/q8DGW

Sir Andrew Green: Mass immigration deliberate Labour policy http://bit.ly/2T3EJw

Spectator – Still no room for complacency about the BNP http://bit.ly/OJRfg 

Melanie Phillips – Trying to stuff the cat back into the bag – Is Andrew Neather backtracking?  http://bit.ly/178p3J 

“The left have a lot to learn from Nothing British”, says Gaby Hinsliff

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Gaby Hinsliff, the political editor of the Observer, has written that Nothing British’s Stolen Valour campaign can teach the left a lot about how to take on the BNP.

Nothing British ”co-ordinated this week’s letter from former army chiefs of staff attacking the BNP for hijacking the good name of the military in an attempt to boost its patriotic credentials, with a powerful “not in our name” message using veterans including the Falklands hero Simon Weston.

Griffin’s uncharacteristically hysterical reaction – suggesting they were traitors – successfully wrecked his credibility among the kind of voters he might be trying to attract.”

On the stale approaches of the left she wrote:

“The left tends to dwell on immigration policy and whether it should appease BNP supporters by talking up British jobs for British workers, or restricting access to council houses. The right is more confident that its stance on immigration is populist and is therefore less hung up on it, but has in the past seen the BNP as not really its problem (particularly when it was taking votes largely from Labour supporters).”

Gaby encapsulates the Nothing British campaign as follows:

“The launch of Nothing British was another important moment, reflecting a recognition that Griffin had widened the BNP’s appeal and was trying to steal ground – on patriotism, or law and order – held by the mainstream right that was not overtly to do with race (such as its misleading campaign on rights for squaddies).”