Archive for the 'BNP' Category

 

Reflections on the London elections

Sunday, May 4th, 2008

Mayor Johnson
The headline news is, of course, the victory of Boris Johnson. It is no secret (at least if you’ve been reading this blog!) that I was and remain a strong supporter of Ken Livingstone and that I have very grave doubts about the Johnson mayoralty. I have tried to draw a comparison between […]

 

Registering to vote

Friday, April 11th, 2008

On May 1, Londoners will choose the Mayor and London Assembly for the next four years.
In 2004, low turnout in the London elections allowed the BNP to receive 4.9% of the London Assembly vote — dangerously close to the 5% threshold required to win a seat.
You can register to vote using the information on the […]

 

The Oxford Union, a Racist and a Holocaust Denier

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

The Oxford Union is a private debating society; only members can attend its proceedings. Its appeal for speakers is in being able to influence some of the top minds in the UK and the world and, of course, being recognised as worthy of such an opportunity. It does not matter a hoot whether people outside […]

 

BNP councillor elected unopposed in South West

Tuesday, May 1st, 2007

This is a very good argument for always having “Re-Open Nominations” (rather than “None of the Above”) as a candidate. Essentially, Corsham Town Council in Wiltshire is made up of people who don’t stand on party political platforms, in the main. There is a ward with one councillor and one Michael Simpkins has been elected […]

 

The BNP

Sunday, April 23rd, 2006

Matt Sinclair echoes Norman Tebbit in saying that the BNP don’t fit on the right and by extension must be of the left.
Giving definitions such as ‘left-wing’ and ‘right-wing’ are not in and of themselves good, but only by the extent of the usefullness.
Is it useful to describe the BNP as right-wing?
I would say that […]