Log in

View Full Version : The BNP, a working class party? (Afed)



Holden Caulfield
1st November 2009, 15:33
Taken from the Anarchist Federation blog: http://afed.org.uk/blog/community/139-the-bnp-a-working-class-party.html (http://afed.org.uk/blog/community/139-the-bnp-a-working-class-party.html)



The British National Party has been getting a lot of attention lately, from politicians, the media, and most importantly from sizeable sections of the working-class who feel that the BNP represent their interests. Housing, work, pay and welfare are all issues which the BNP have supposedly taken up whilst claiming to represent the “British working-class”. The BNP however is stooped in a tradition of fighting against our class, from collaborating with rich business owners to calling for the ending of, and actively working against workers' struggles, such as strikes. Despite this, the BNP are still attempting to tap into the working class, especially in former pit towns and dilapidated industrial zones as a way to increase their support by blaming the problems which the bosses (represented by the past and current Tory and Labour governments) have created, on asylum seekers, migrant workers, women and LGBT people, in other words, blaming other working class people for problems they have not created and are also suffering from themselves.

Fascism, as a political ideology only came about as a reaction to the growing workers' movement in Europe in the late 1800s. It was, and still is the ideology of the bosses, who upon seeing a growing working class movement that threatened their own economic and political power sought to find their own 'extreme'. This extreme saw it's fulfilment in fascism, an ideology which has traditionally attacked the working class first, whilst blaming the problems of society on ethnic minorities, and other sections of society rather than themselves (the bosses). When Hitler came to power, his first wave of attacks targeted the trade unionists in Germany, as well as the Anarchists and Communists. Unions were banned except for the 'official' one and they used the state to crush any attempt by workers to improve their working conditions, pay and their life in general. The BNP is no different, it has its roots in former members of the National Front, a more 'in your face' fascist organisation, whilst it also drew members from the former National Socialist Movement (National Socialist being another term for 'Nazi') and the Nationalist Party among many others. The Minister of European Parliament (MEP), Andrew Brons had been a former member of the National Socialist Movement and stated his aim to create a pan-Aryan “Universal Nazism”, whilst Nick Griffin himself had been a former member of the National Front and continue to have links with Fascist organisations around Europe and America. Simply because they have changed their attire from boots to suits doesn't mean they have dropped their former politics, like all politicians, they are also lying.

During the Great Miners' strike, which was eventually defeated by Thatcher's government as well as by Scargill's (the then leader of the National Union of Mineworkers) incompetence, the BNP actively worked against these working class heroes. Not only did the BNP not support the strikes, but they actively called for the miners to return to work and called on the Army to be used to break up pickets. A former BNP parliamentary candidate in Yorkshire and a candidate in Dewsbury in the 1990s, the Dowager Lady Jane Birdwood ran Self-Help, a right wing pressure group dedicated to smashing unions and funded scabs during the strike. She, among many others such as the late John Tyndall who remained in the party up until his death only a few years ago, saw the miners' strike as a “Communist plot” to destroy Britain and even saw Thatcher as being too weak towards the miners. For anyone who remembers the great battles during the 1984-85 strike would remember how Thatcher ruthlessly persecuted mining communities and trade unionists and brought in London police and the Army to batter the miners into submission, at the Battle of Orgreave, soldiers in police uniforms herded miners into a field before charging at them on horseback, and to the BNP, this was seen as being too soft. Jane Birdwood found support from … guess who ... mine owners, who actively worked with her and her pressure group to undermine the strike.

The memory of the Miners' strike is still burning brightly, to those who fought against pit closures in order to secure a decent life for themselves, their family and friends, the BNP's attempt to gain their support should be met with a hard fist to the face. Fascists are opposed to unions and working class struggles as they are organised on class lines. We realise that our enemy is the boss class and their politician lackeys, not fellow working class people who happen to have a different skin colour, unlike what Nick Griffin tells us, but then that is no surprise seeing as he is from a rich, traditionally Tory (his father had been a member of the Conservative party and Griffin himself attended Cambridge university at a time when attending Cambridge was more of a privilege than it is now) and middle class family, he can safely say these things whilst sitting in his comfortable farm mansion in Monmouthshire.


The BNP is a scab party, we have more in common with other workers with different skin colour than we do with bosses with the same skin colour. Smash the BNP before they can come for our class!

http://photos-g.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc3/hs020.snc3/12743_105491712794738_100000017284116_146143_73692 8_a.jpg (http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=146143&op=1&view=all&subj=192513315878&aid=-1&auser=0&oid=192513315878&id=100000017284116)
The Dowager Lady Jane Birdwood, a former parliamentary candidate for the BNP, who set up 'Self-Help' which funded scab miners, took court proceedings against the NUM and actively sought out the destruction of the workers' movement.

Pogue
1st November 2009, 17:19
Good article

Patchd
1st November 2009, 18:39
Good article
Thanks :D

ls
1st November 2009, 19:03
Very good article, well done palachinov.

Pogue
1st November 2009, 19:05
All I would say is that if you were going to say use this as a leaflet, you might need to go into more detail about class being the most important thing and how the BNPs position on it impacts upon us as working class people.

Patchd
1st November 2009, 19:16
All I would say is that if you were going to say use this as a leaflet, you might need to go into more detail about class being the most important thing and how the BNPs position on it impacts upon us as working class people.
Well, I was thinking the opposite, if it was to be a leaflet then it has to be shorter, whereas talking about why class is the most important factor within society should have been in this article *facepalm* ... in addition, I should have used more up to date info, and have talked about the only reason the BNP are supporting the postal workers isn't because it would save jobs, but because it's a great British institution. :rolleyes: FFFFUUUUU

Pogue
1st November 2009, 21:39
Well, I was thinking the opposite, if it was to be a leaflet then it has to be shorter, whereas talking about why class is the most important factor within society should have been in this article *facepalm* ... in addition, I should have used more up to date info, and have talked about the only reason the BNP are supporting the postal workers isn't because it would save jobs, but because it's a great British institution. :rolleyes: FFFFUUUUU

Yeh I spose. But i mean if u were gonna hand this out on estates you need to make it clear that by working class u mean them, u mean class is the most important thing, and so the bnp is a clear class enemy. but ye ur right.

The Ungovernable Farce
2nd November 2009, 13:12
The title of this thread could probably use a question mark. Yes, I'm a pedant.

Holden Caulfield
2nd November 2009, 13:18
done, you pedantic fuck you

Patchd
3rd November 2009, 11:10
Big mistake I made, he lives in Powys, not Monmouthshire. It's all the same to me! :rolleyes:

Solidair
4th November 2009, 07:10
Big mistake I made, he lives in Powys, not Monmouthshire. It's all the same to me! :rolleyes:

Dead right it's a big mistake. It's like calling Warwickshire 'Humberside'. It may be all the same to you but it ain't to Welsh folk.
Ffwl :rolleyes:

Griffin would probably say he lives in Montgomershire but his
neighbours might well say "Sire Trefaldwyn".

Patchd
17th November 2009, 09:01
Dead right it's a big mistake. It's like calling Warwickshire 'Humberside'. It may be all the same to you but it ain't to Welsh folk.
Ffwl :rolleyes:

Griffin would probably say he lives in Montgomershire but his
neighbours might well say "Sire Trefaldwyn".
I should know better as well, living with two Welsh housemates lol.