Monday, April 29, 2019

The Worrying Rise of Spain’s Far Right

In today's general election, Spain’s far right Vox party is set to enter Congress for the first time. And it’s already building alliances with the mainstream center-right.
Leader of far-right party Vox, Santiago Abascal, takes part in the Vox closing rally on April 26, 2019 in Madrid, Spain. Pablo Blazquez Dominguez / Getty

Discussions of Europe’s rising national-populism in recent years often took Spain as something of an exception. It was asked how come this was the only major country in continental Europe where no far-right force had managed to enter parliament. In other liberal democracies, notwithstanding the deep antifascism inherited from 1945, so-called “post-fascist” forces had managed to elect MPs and conceal or prettify the ideology that once bled the old continent dry. Yet Spain seemed different.
Up until 2018, this country had no equivalent to hard- or far-right forces like France’s Front National, Germany’s Alternative für Deutschland, the Dutch Partij voor de Vrijheid, Italy’s Lega, or UKIP in the United Kingdom. Yet this apparent anomaly also masked something going on under the surface, which finally became apparent with the Andalusian election last December. In the vote in Spain’s biggest region, the far-right Vox party achieved institutional representation for the first time, helping lift to power a coalition of the mainstream center-right.
With a snap general election to be held today, Vox looks bound to go one step further and elect MPs to the national parliament. More than that, after April 28 it hopes to influence the government itself. Its backing could be decisive in the formation of a right-wing coalition at the national level, uniting the conservative Partido Popular (PP) with the liberal right as embodied by Ciudadanos. Four decades since the end of the Franco regime, Vox’s breakthrough spells dark days for Spanish democracy.

Exception Within the Exception

We might then ask: was there ever a Spanish exception at all? Well, yes, but not in the way that Europe liked to think. There was, indeed, no explicitly organized far-right presence in the Spanish parliament, outside the PP. This owed both to distinct elements of Spain’s history, and to recent conditions which postponed the arrival of a national-populist alternative to the traditional conservative party.
The historical difference owed to the tolerance of what Spaniards call the “ultraright” during the turn to democracy that followed Francisco Franco’s death in 1975. Spain underwent an ordered transition from Franco’s dictatorship to democracy, in which that regime’s fascist and national-Catholic elements were reintegrated as an accepted part of the new conservative right. They remained part of the regular functioning of the state administration, the judiciary, the police and the army.
Where democratic constitutions like Italy’s — born of the wartime resistance against Nazism and the Mussolini regime — glowed with antifascist spirit, this was absent in the Spanish case. Rather, philo-fascist forces remained a normal part of Spanish politics, most of all represented by the Alianza Popular. This party, the forefather of today’s conservative Partido Popular, was indeed founded by seven Francoite ministers. For forty years the far right could feel comfortable within conservative ranks, without having to differentiate itself.
The second key factor in delaying the emergence of a national-populist force in Spain were the developments on the other end of the political spectrum. The 15M anti-austerity mobilizations from 2011 onward paved the way for the creation of a populist force on the Left — Podemos — which directed Spaniards’ grievances toward more progressive outlets.
The breaking of the old two-party system (as represented by the conservative Partido Popular, PP, and the center-left PSOE) also held off the emergence of a more reactionary force to direct the malaise of the losers of globalization. This “buffer” has however now been broken, thanks to the normalization of Podemos as an institutional party and, most importantly, the nationalist polarization that has developed since the disputed October 2017 independence referendum in Catalonia. The rise of Vox’s national-populism is impossible to understand except in light of the Catalan declaration of independence and the ultranationalist reaction elsewhere in Spain.

What Is Vox?

Vox was created in 2013 after its present leader Santiago Abascal grew disillusioned with the Partido Popular. He had been left without any post in that party after the dissolution of a foundation that had had created by Esperanza Aguirre — PP president of the Madrid region — precisely in order to give him a job. In the same month that this foundation was closed, Vox was registered as a party name. Vox thus emerged in response to a former conservative’s need to find a new home, and up until the December 2018 regional elections in Andalusia it was unable to achieve parliamentary representation.
Vox shares the same fundamental precepts as the other comparable formations in surrounding European countries. It is a nativist and ultranationalist force, deeply opposed to immigration and promoting a strongly Islamophobic message. In economic terms, it is much closer to the ultra-neoliberal doctrines of Jair Bolsonaro and US libertarians than to the protectionist measures promised by Marine Le Pen’s Rassemblement National (ex-Front National).
Indeed, if that party’s base cuts across left-right ideological divides, this is not the case of Vox, which instead supports fiscal measures that favor the wealthiest and punish public services. Vox does not seek the vote of people disenchanted with the Left in depressed areas, along the lines of what Le Pen has managed to do. Rather, its only nod to cutting across the ideological divide lies in its identitarian appeal. Spanish nationalism is especially rooted in the old working class, especially in the interior regions and the south, and among those who feel under attack by the nationalisms in the regions on the periphery — the Basque Country and Catalonia.
This identitarianism is Vox’s most fundamental value. Its success owes above all to a Spanish ultranationalist message, deployed in reaction to the Catalan nationalists that proclaimed independence in October 2017. Its antagonism against the Catalans is based on a romantic patriotism of Francoite hues; it calls for the systematic repression of the pro-independence parties and all politicians who participated in the independence declaration. This punitive populism goes hand-in-hand with its involvement as a party to the sedition case against pro-independence leaders, which is currently being heard by Spain’s Supreme Court.
Vox cannot, then, be understood simply by transplanting the traits of other European national-populisms onto the Spanish context. Rather, its emergence results from Spain’s own specific social and national realities. Doubtless, its rise has been encouraged by an international situation in which sovereigntist and anti-immigrant movements are on the advance — helping to legitimize Vox itself. Yet it could not have taken root without the disputed independence process in Catalunya, and the reaction against it that it represents.

The National-Populist International

Vox’s breakthrough promised something that European post-fascism had previously lacked — the missing Spanish link in the effort to implode the European Union from within. Indeed, the party’s success in the Andalusian regional elections in December put it on the radar of Steve Bannon and his illiberal think tank “The Movement,” which seeks to create a far-right international inspired by Alexander Dugin’s Fourth Political Theory.
Vox’s most important international contacts operated by way of Rafael Bardají, a member of its national council and in the 2000s a prominent foreign-affairs advisor for conservative (PP) prime minister José María Aznar. A neoliberal hawk, Bardají enjoys close relations with Donald Trump’s administration, inherited from his Aznar-era contacts with GOP figures close to George W. Bush. He is also part of various Zionist organizations directly linked to past Israeli leaders like Ehud Barak.
Paradoxically, however, the Spanish far-right party’s success would soon cool its contacts with — and interest in — Bannon’s own “Movement.” As soon as it became able to look forward to a breakthrough at May’s European elections (which were planned already before this week’s Spanish general election was called), it no longer needed Bannon’s strategy or contacts to make institutional breakthroughs.
Vox’s distance from Bannon also owes to its conservative origins, and only weak anti-European stance. Indeed, in various interviews and statements Vox leader Santiago Abascal has insisted that his contacts with Bannon were limited to the argument that Spanish opposition to Catalan separatism should also be translated into European terms. Vox did not participate in the recent summit organized by Italy’s far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, which welcomed other national-populist formations like Alternative für Deutschland, the Danish People’s Party, and the Finns party.
The fundamental obstacles to Vox being drawn into a national-populist international are the same ones that hamper any coordinated action among such formations. Indeed, ultranationalists have a hard time developing a common policy at the international level, as the call for sovereignty for one country clashes with its neighbors’ own claims. This is especially true as concerns the sharing out of migrants among EU countries on the basis of quotas. Southern European countries like Spain and Italy (the main receivers of migrants arriving from Africa) consider such a move fundamental, but it is sharply rejected by possible far-right allies in countries like France, Poland, or Hungary, who are unwilling to take in migrants.

A Danger to Democracy

No one doubts that in today’s general election Vox will indeed succeed in electing MPs to the Congress of Deputies. The various pollsters forecast that it will secure between twenty and fifty seats. This would be a breakthrough similar to those enjoyed by Podemos and Ciudadanos in the elections three years ago, in which they jumped from no representation to seventy-one and thirty seats, respectively.
Vox’s seat numbers would not, however, be such a problem if it were not for the fact that its arguments and its role have been totally accepted by the more established parties of the Right. Both the PP and Ciudadanos have based their campaign on the need to join forces with the far-right party in order to create a coalition that can unseat Pedro Sánchez’s social-democratic PSOE from government.
Vox’s numbers could indeed help the Right achieve a majority sufficient to taking over the government. It may not only exert direct influence over the new administration, but even join the executive itself, if it achieves sufficient sway in the incoming Spanish parliament.
This would place center-stage the reactionary measures that Vox has highlighted during this election campaign. Inspired by Trump, the far-right party has proposed the building of a wall around Spain’s North African enclaves Ceuta and Melilla — to be paid for by Morocco, or the EU’s Frontex border agency — and the expulsion of 52,000 “illegal” immigrants from Spain. Vox has repeated this latter figure with some frequency, albeit without ever clarifying where it comes from.
Vox’s leader Santiago Abascal has gone so far as to demand citizens’ right to keep weapons in their own homes. Moreover, one of his flagship proposals is the outright banning of all parties who call for the independence of Spain’s regions. One Vox leader, Iván Espinosa de los Monteros, has called for a similar ban on all formations that do not reject Marxism.
This goes together with Vox’s male supremacism. Culturally, it is a copy of the misogynist anti-feminist movement led by Trump. Indeed, the sexist reaction explained by Susan Faludi in her book Backlash is vital to the Spanish far-right imaginary. The party’s discourse is built around a constant attack on all measures designed to protect women, which they consider “gender ideology,” and an assault on the entirety of Spain’s powerful feminist movement, which has been an imposing force in public life since the millions-strong mobilization on International Women’s Day 2018.
Vox’s rise is bound to put democrats on edge, not least given the inclusion on its electoral lists of former members of fascist and neo-Nazi organizations. Indeed, some of them have direct links with the terrorist organizations active in the reaction against Spain’s post-Franco democratic transition. Such is the case of leading Vox member Jorge Arturo Cutillas, once part of a philo-Nazi party called Fatherland and Freedom. He had direct ties to Leon Degrelle, founder of Belgium’s Rexist party in the 1930s and then an SS man. Vox also includes former leaders of the Nazi organization CEDADE, dissolved in 1993 after British Labour MP James Glynn Ford exposed the extent of its ties across Europe.
Today preparing to enter parliament, Vox has already realized a long-unfulfilled desire of the post-Franco far right. It has brought together in a single force — acceptable to the established right-wing parties — all the neo-Nazi, Falangist, Francoite, and traditionalist formations that had so clamorously failed to make any breakthrough over the last forty years of Spanish democracy. A party of national-Catholic colors with an aggressive online strategy, its Trumpian discourse communicating hatred through fake news has succeeded in shifting the wider public debate, drawing the established right-wing parties closer to national-populism. Its presence in Spanish politics is already a reality. After today’s vote, we will just be measuring how much its success costs for the rest of us.
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2019/04/vox-party-far-right-spanish-election

NWN : In 1999 and 2000 we of NWN went to Madrid for the Jose Antonio/France rallies that are held late in the year. When we were going to the Plaza De Oriente , which is where the Franco rallies have traditionally taken place, we saw black women selling Falangist  memorabilia ! We have video of the rallies plus the black women selling to 'fascists'. (Note: 'Fascists' were never racist. Though reading any marxist tripe you would think otherwise.)

It looks like Spain and the Spanish nationalists have realised they are now in the 21st Century and not still in the 1930's. They knew not, or cared less, of the issues involving mass coloured immigration. It looks like recent waves of illegal immigration and rising crime and drugs has awoken a movement in Spain. It's about time ! More power to them.

Thursday, April 25, 2019

Prime Minister Theresa May to speak at Ramsbottom cricket club later today. April 25th 2019


Ramsbottom is just outside Bury in Lancashire.

We hope she gets grief from the Tory 'faithful' ? She is a traitor.

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Drivers hit by fuel rip-off as oil industry fat cats fail to pass on £8 BILLION of savings - costing motorists an extra £200 a year

  • Since 2015 drivers have paid an average of £2.20 more per tank than they should
  • Campaign group FairFuelUK said motorists are being 'exploited' by companies
  • Tactic has generated almost £8 billion extra for firms over four years 
  • It comes as an investigation found a postcode lottery in pump prices, with a variation of up to 42 pence per litre in forcecourts just a few miles apart 

Fuel retailers have raked in £5million in excess profits from motorists every day by failing to pass on falls in their wholesale costs, according to a report.
An audit which has tracked fuel prices for more than four years estimated that this tactic has generated almost £8billion extra for firms since January 2015.
It has calculated that over this period drivers have paid an average of 4p a litre – or £2.20 a tank – more than they should have, given the variable price of crude oil.
An audit which has tracked fuel prices for more than four years estimated that this tactic has generated almost £8billion extra for firms since January 2015
An audit which has tracked fuel prices for more than four years estimated that this tactic has generated almost £8billion extra for firms since January 2015
Campaign group FairFuelUK, which published the report, said millions of motorists are being ‘exploited’ and accused the industry of ‘profiteering’.
The report comes as drivers count the cost of the highest Easter pump prices for five years. Among the most glaring findings is a difference of up to £22 in the cost of filling up at two forecourts a few miles from each other in London.
An Asda filling station in Tottenham was charging 118.7p a litre for unleaded petrol yesterday – or £65.29 to fill up a typical family car with a 55-litre tank. Meanwhile, a Gulf station in South Kensington was charging 158.9p a litre – or £87.40p to fill up.
For years firms have been criticised for being slow to cut prices when wholesale costs fall, and quick to increase them whenever they rise.
The report calls for an independent pump price regulator, which will allow drivers to track whether retailers are playing fair. Howard Cox, founder of FairFuelUK, said: ‘Faceless profiteering opportunists in the fuel supply chain are exploiting millions of motorists because this essential commodity and its pricing goes unchecked. These firms can do what they want and they do.’
Tory MP Kirstene Hair, vice chairman of the cross-party parliamentary fuel group, said: ‘We can’t keep treating motorists as cash cows – we need fair pricing, and that includes making sure drivers are not paying over the odds.’
For years firms have been criticised for being slow to cut prices when wholesale costs fall, and quick to increase them whenever they rise
For years firms have been criticised for being slow to cut prices when wholesale costs fall, and quick to increase them whenever they rise
She will meet the Treasury’s Exchequer Secretary Robert Jenrick today to discuss the problem. The analysis monitored the daily wholesale cost of fuel as well as the average price paid by motorists for petrol and diesel from January 1, 2015 to April 17, 2019.
The price of crude oil, fuel duty – which has been frozen at 57.95p per litre since 2011 – VAT, and delivery and distribution costs were included in working out the wholesale costs.
The report calculated that retailers have pocketed an extra 4p a litre on average from failing to pass on the fall in their wholesale costs.
With an estimated 125million litres of fuel sold every day, it said this equates to around £1.8billion a year in surplus profits for retailers – and £7.7billion since January 2015.
Brian Madderson, chairman of the Petrol Retailers Association, defended the industry, saying: ‘Since 2000 the number of independent fuel retailers has dropped by 70 per cent, and nearly 100 went out of business last year.
‘If the industry was profiteering, how on earth has that happened? Meanwhile all their costs are increasing.’
The price of crude oil, fuel duty – which has been frozen at 57.95p per litre since 2011 – VAT, and delivery and distribution costs were included in working out the wholesale costs
The price of crude oil, fuel duty – which has been frozen at 57.95p per litre since 2011 – VAT, and delivery and distribution costs were included in working out the wholesale costs.

NWN: This where 'laissez-faire' capitalism falls down very badly. Unbridled capitalism is no less cruel than unbridled socialism/communism. A proper independent British government looking after it's population from corrupt fat cats should be a priority. The Theresa May regime don't care about the downtrodden ripped off public. Mrs. May herself is married to a 'capitalist fat cat'.
An image from the Good Friday Armed Forces Veterans march in Manchester 19th April 2019 in support of SOLDIER F & SOLDIER B.

 

Monday, April 22, 2019

Tens of thousands of Armed Forces veterans march in cities and towns across the UK on Good Friday in support of SOLDIER F & SOLDIER B

Marches were held in London where over 30,000 veterans massed and in Manchester where over 5,000 veterans marched . Both marches were held on Good Friday 19th April 2019.

Marches and demonstrations were also held in Plymouth, Dundee and Scarborough.

A march  was also held on Saturday 20th April in Leeds city centre, were several thousand veterans marched.   It was noteworthy that not one word emanated from the BBC over any of these marches or demonstrations. Neither did the BBC mention the ROLLING THUNDER bikers in support of SOLDIER F on Friday 12th April when over 22,000 bikers and veterans drove their motorcycles into Central London and past Parliament. Central London was gridlocked, but the BBC didn't say a thing.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019




Manchester Assembly; Piccadilly gardens 12.00 mid day. Good Friday 19th April 2019.

Armed Forces veterans are marching in support of SOLDIER F  and SOLDIER B. The Northern Ireland veterans are being shafted by the Government/Regime . So they have started to mount huge campaigns nationwide.

The largest demos are the above ones this Friday.

All this is 'backing up' the massive demonstration held last Friday in Central London when over 22,000 + bikers drove through central London causing traffic chaos. But in particular, the BBC and other 'controlled mass media' failed to mention this fact.


Some of the  bikers completely filling Park lane in London last Friday. All in support of SOLDIER F.

 Other demos on the 19th April unless stated otherwise;  


Plymouth,
Dundee
Scarborough
Brisbane
20th April :-
Leeds
27th April :-
Belfast
11th May :-
Glasgow
June :-
Hull date tbc



Monday, April 15, 2019

Farage launches the Brexit Party and unveils his secret weapon... Rees-Mogg's little SISTER: Ex-'Cameron cutie' Annunziata, 40, stuns the Tories by defecting just HOURS before vowing to take on 'far-right' UKIP in EU elections

  • Nigel Farage launched Brexit Party and started war of words with UKIP as he unveiled Annunziata Rees-Mogg 
  • Jacob's younger sister stood as Tory in 2005 and 2010 general elections - but refused to 'de-toff' her name  
  • She said: 'The Prime Minister will not listen to the people - I can't sit by and let her do it. We need to fight back' 
  • Her brother told MailOnline: 'The Brexit Party is fortunate to have such a high calibre candidate. I am sorry that Annunziata has left the Conservative party'. 
  • Farage says new home will beat UKIP and has bet £1,000 on Brexit Party winning the most seats on May 23
  • Tory MEP David Campbell Bannerman said party 'will get a kicking' at polls and lose half of their 18 MEPs

Nigel Farage launched his new Brexit Party and announced Jacob Rees-Mogg's sister Annunziata as his first star MEP candidate -  after she quit the Tories after 35 years today.
The former UKIP leader has vowed to take votes from the 'tarnished' party he left in December and started a new war of words with successor Gerard Batten by claiming he lacks 'good people' and has allowed a 'take over' by the far right.
Launching the party in Coventry today Mr Farage said it is 'no more Mr Nice Guy' before unveiling his secret weapon Ms Rees-Mogg, whose brother told MailOnline today: 'The Brexit Party is fortunate to have such a high calibre candidate but I am sorry that Annunziata has left the Conservative party'.
His younger sister previously stood as a Tory candidate in the 2005 and 2010 general elections and joined the party aged five - but has now jumped ship after Theresa May failed to deliver Brexit. She defected from the Tories to join Mr Farage's revolt today.
The 40-year-old mother-of-one, once one of David Cameron's 'cuties' who refused party requests to 'de-toff' her name to Nancy, blasted MPs, including her older sibling, saying: 'The politicians are not our masters - they are to do our bidding. We need to fight back to take back our democracy. It's as drastic as that. It is our fight and we must fight to win'. 
She said she had stuck with the Tories 'through thick and thin' but Brexit had been the last straw.
She said: 'But the point at which our Prime Minister will not listen, not only to her membership, but will not listen to the people of her country. I can't sit by and let her do it. We've got to rescue our democracy, we have got to show that the people of this country have a say in how we are run'. 
Theresa May's Tories are in crisis over her failure to steer Britain out of the EU with the party ten points down in the polls. Conservative MEP David Campbell Bannerman said today the party 'will get a kicking' on May 23 and lose half of their 18 MEPs. 
Labour has also lost ground, according to the BMG poll, down three points, with the Liberal Democrats, UKIP, Independent Group and Brexit Party are all closely matched at approaching 10 per cent. 
As his party faces a massacre at the polls, Chancellor Philip Hammond today insisted he believes MPs can still agree a Brexit deal after Easter to avoid the elections and said: 'Clearly nobody wants to fight the European elections - it feels like a pointless exercise. We want to ensure that any British MEPs never have to take their seats'.
He also admitted the idea of second referendum ‘very likely’ to be put to Parliament. 
Annunziata Rees-Mogg was unveiled as the Brexit Party's star candidate at the European elections
Annunziata blasted MPs including her brother, pictured yesterday
Annunziata Rees-Mogg was unveiled as the Brexit Party's star candidate at the European Elections by Nigel Farage today and she blasted MPs including her brother, pictured yesterday
Nigel Farage and Annunziata Rees-Mogg at the launch of the Brexit Party's European Parliament elections campaign in Coventry
Nigel Farage and Annunziata Rees-Mogg at the launch of the Brexit Party's European Parliament elections campaign in Coventry
Nigel Farage launched his new Brexit Party in Coventry today as he vowed to take votes from 'tarnished' UKIP
Nigel Farage launched his new Brexit Party in Coventry today as he vowed to take votes from 'tarnished' UKIP
Tory support appears to be in free fall amid the Brexit chaos as a new poll showed the party down 10 per cent in a month with Farage's new party neck-and-neck with UKIP
Ms Rees-Mogg, 40, and her brother Jacob, 49, are the youngest of five children born to Lord Rees-Mogg, who edited The Times from 1967 to 1981, and his wife Lady Gillian. They grew up together at the grand Ston Easton Park estate near Wells in Somerset, which has since been turned into a luxury hotel. 
If she stands in the south-west as an MEP her ERG Brexiteer brother, who is believed to be worth £150million, will have to campaign against her.   
However, as Annunziata's views on Brexit have hardened, her brother's have softened as today he shared an article urging Brexiteers 'diehards' to 'wake from No Deal dreams' and said: 'I think this is analysis is correct which is why I backed Mrs May’s deal last time'.
Ms Rees-Mogg explained she has been a full-time mother for the last eight years, adding she wanted to 'avoid the negative comments... and the violence that can come from putting your name above the parapet and standing for what you believe in', and she didn't want her children to suffer.
She said: 'I joined the Conservative Party in 1984 and this is not a decision I have made lightly - to leave a party for which I have fought at every election since 1987, from Maggie Thatcher through to Theresa May.
'I know which one I'd rather have representing us now.'
Mr Farage has admitted there is 'no difference' in policies between UKIP and the Brexit Party - but said he would not tolerate racism and would will field 'many Muslim candidates' in the May European elections. 
He said: 'UKIP did struggle to get enough good people into it but unfortunately what it's chosen to do is allow the far right to join it and take it over and I'm afraid the brand is now tarnished.'
Today he put a £1,000 bet on that the Brexit Party would win the most seats next month and revealed the public have donated £750,000 to the campaign fund in ten days.
Mr Farage said that the Leave vote had 'hardened' since the 2016 referendum, and made clear he was also appealing to Remainers who felt the result should be respected.
'There are many people who voted Remain who believe that democracy is so fundamental to this country, to who we are as a people, that unless the will of the people is carried out something will have changed in our nation forever,' he said.
'With a bit of luck and a following wind, trying our hardest, I think we can turn this around.
'I know this is a battle that we shouldn't be having to fight, but we are having to fight it and we are going to win it.'
Mr Farage introduced Ms Rees-Mogg on stage as one of 70 Brexit Party candidates who would be fighting the May 23 elections in England, Scotland and Wales.
Current UKIP leader Gerard Batten has defended the party's links to Tommy Robinson and insists he has saved the party 'from oblivion' and Mr Farage quit.

NWN; Deja Vu ? Farage to 'take on far right ? We have seen this before. Farage was one of the group of people who toppled John Tyndall from the leadership of the BNP in the late 1990's. Others included ; Tony 'bomber' Lecomber, Dr Mark Deavin and of course Nigel Farage. Nick Griffin, though not in the below pic, was 'in the circle' to rid the BNP of John Tyndall. ERGO to smash the BNP.



 And a quick search on the web brings up this text;

Then came the most disturbing titbit of all: a blurred photo, taken in the summer of 1997, showing Nigel Farage of UKIP chatting to two men. One was Tony “the bomber” Lecomber, the other was Mark Deavin, head of research for the BNP, who had briefly infiltrated UKIP but was expelled in May 1997 after his true affiliations were discovered.
Deavin, who edited Mindbenders, an “expose” of Jews in the media, is also the author of The Grand Plan: The Origins of Non-White Immigration, in which he argues that “the mass immigration of non-Europeans into every White country on earth” had been engineered by “a homogeneous transatlantic political and financial elite to destroy the national identities and create a raceless new world order.” Homogeneous, eh? Allow Deavin to explain: “These concerns were Jewish in origin… the promotion of World Government can also be seen to be in line with traditional Jewish messianic thinking.”
When the photo was sent anonymously to the UKIP a few months ago, Farage expressed bafflement. While admitting that “I briefly met Mr Deavin at his request on June 17 1997, and had lunch with him in a restaurant,” he insisted that “I have no recollection of ever meeting or speaking to Mr Lecomber in my life… I can only surmise that Mr Lecomber was planted outside the restaurant or that the photograph has been doctored.”
Whatever the explanation, the fact that Farage met Deavin after the BNP man’s expulsion was enough to alarm some UKIP members – especially as Farage, who earns his living as a City commodity-broker, is a man who often used words such as “nigger” and “nig-nog” in the pub after committee meetings. A month after the lunch, by an odd coincidence, Deavin wrote an article in the far-right journal Spearhead which discussed the possibility of closer relations between the BNP and UKIP.
But here’s an even stranger coincidence. Shortly before the 1997 general election, Mark Deavin spoke freely of his plans to undercover researchers from Searchlight magazine and The Cook Report, who had posed as emissaries from Jean-Marie Le Pen’s Front National. One necessary step, he said, was to get rid of the BNP leader John Tyndall (“who is actually an obstacle”) and replace him with Deavin’s chum Nick Griffin. This would leave one other obstacle. “If Blair becomes prime minister,” Deavin predicted, “the BNP will be the official opposition in the inner cities, in working-class areas. The UKIP will be the opposition in the shires, the county areas, the middle-class opposition. That party is a serious opposition to us in middle England, but, if we had the resources, we could tear it to pieces.”
Two weeks ago, at the same time as UKIP was tearing itself apart in Solihull, Nick Griffin duly toppled John Tyndall and promised a “realignment” of the far-right. He may not yet have the popular appeal of Jörg Haider; but he certainly needs watching.

Shamima Begum: IS bride set to be granted legal aid


  • Shamima Begum case



  • Former ISIS wife Shamima Begum photographed in a Syrian refugee camp during an interview with BBC Middle East Correspondent Quentin Sommerville.
    Image caption Ms Begum left Bethnal Green, east London, in 2015 to join the Islamic State group in Syria

    Shamima Begum - who joined the Islamic State group aged 15 - is set to be granted legal aid to fight the decision to revoke her UK citizenship.
    The 19-year-old, who left east London in 2015, was stripped of her citizenship in February, after she was found in a Syrian refugee camp.
    Her family has previously said it planned to challenge the decision.
    Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said the idea of the provision of legal aid to Ms Begum made him "very uncomfortable".
    Mr Hunt added, however, that the UK was "a country that believes that people with limited means should have access to the resources of the state if they want to challenge the decisions the state has made about them".
    Legal aid is financial assistance provided by the taxpayer to those unable to afford legal representation themselves, whether they are accused of a crime or a victim who seeks the help of a lawyer through the court process.
    It is means-tested and availability has been cut back significantly in recent years in England and Wales.
    Civil servants at the Legal Aid Agency, which is part of the Ministry of Justice, are responsible for making decisions about who receives legal aid.
    Earlier, the BBC reported Ms Begum's case had been approved - but sources now say it will be formally signed off in the coming days.
    The legal aid that is expected to be granted covers a case before the semi-secret Special Immigration Appeals Commission, which adjudicates on cases where the home secretary has stripped someone of their nationality on grounds of national security.


    Presentational grey line
    Analysis box by Dominic Casciani, home affairs correspondent
    Cases before the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (Siac) are among the most complicated legal challenges that the government can face.
    This is because they typically involve a complex combination of MI5 intelligence reports, which cannot be disclosed to the complainant, and long-standing law on achieving a fair hearing.
    It is not yet clear when the expected case will be heard but the Siac process can take years to complete - and granting of legal aid in these circumstances is not unusual.
    Over the last decade or so there have been many other people stripped of nationality on the basis they are linked to terrorism who have been legally-aided during the SIAC process.


    Presentational grey line
    Ms Begum left the UK in February 2015 alongside fellow Bethnal Green Academy pupils 15-year-old Amira Abase and 16-year-old Kadiza Sultana.
    Ms Begum was found in a Syrian refugee camp in February 2019 and said she wanted to return home.
    Soon afterwards, she gave birth to a boy called Jarrah. He died of pneumonia in March at less than three weeks of age. She had two other children who also died.
    In the wake of the boy's death, Home Secretary Sajid Javid was criticised over the decision to strip Ms Begum of her British citizenship.
    Three weeks prior to the death, Ms Begum's sister, Renu Begum, had written to Mr Javid asking him to help her bring the baby to the UK.






    Jeremy Corbyn: "We should not judge outside of a court"

    Media captionJeremy Corbyn: "We should not judge outside of a court"
    On Monday, the Daily Mail first reported that legal aid had been granted in response to an application made on 19 March.
    Mr Javid said the granting of legal aid was a decision for legal aid organisations and it was "not for ministers to comment".
    Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn argued Ms Begum had the right to apply for legal aid.
    "She is a British citizen," he said. "She's therefore entitled to apply for legal aid if she has a legal problem just like anybody else is."
    He added: "The whole point of legal aid is that if you're facing a prosecution then you're entitled to be represented and that's a fundamental rule of law, a fundamental point in any democratic society."

    'Not a political decision'

    Dal Babu, a former chief superintendent in the Metropolitan Police and a friend of the family, said Ms Begum should have legal aid to make sure the correct process is followed.
    He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "I think legal aid is a principle of the British legal justice system."
    Under the 1981 British Nationality Act, a person can be deprived of their citizenship if the home secretary is satisfied it would be "conducive to the public good" and they would not become stateless as a result.
    It was thought Ms Begum had Bangladeshi citizenship through her mother - although Bangladesh's ministry of foreign affairs said she had been "erroneously identified" as a Bangladeshi national.
    Human rights group Liberty said granting legal aid in this case was "not just appropriate but absolutely necessary to ensure that the government's decisions are properly scrutinised".
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-47934721?SThisFB&fbclid=IwAR2sxzMQzG2bPMjsTH8URwqxcGbqhfFy7G8XjRl-jyUzeV4r3Rk-LXRLXLU 

    Saturday, April 13, 2019




    Metropolitan Police say 22,000 bikers descended on Central London in support of SOLDIER F

    Thursday, April 11, 2019

    April 12th - delays expected around M25 as up to 7,000 bikers descend on motorway in mass rally to Westminster

    The protest has been organised by armed forces veterans from across the country - In support of Soldier F .


    The huge rideout has been organised for Friday, April 12
    Thousands of motorcyclists are due to descend on the M25.
    As well as the usual Friday traffic, commuters will be joined by as many as 7,000 bikers taking part in a protest on the busy motorway.
    The demonstration will see riders drive all the way to Westminster on Friday (April 12) from areas such as Kent and Essex.
    The rally has been organised by armed forces veterans in support of a 77-year-old former soldier who has been charged with murder over his part in Bloody Sunday, Kent Live reports.
    He faces two murder charges relating to deaths in Londonderry in 1972.
    Here is everything you need to know about the rally.
     

    Where will the M25 be affected?


    Bikers will meet at various M25 service stations before the rideout

     

    Participants in the demonstration plan on making their way to Westminster after meeting at various points between 11am and noon.
    Those meeting points are thought to include Thurrock, Clacket Lane and South Mimms Services on the M25, London Gateway Services on the M1 and Heston Services on the M4.
    Rider Fred Staszewski wrote on Facebook saying: "Just a heads up, please be aware that this Friday 12th April there will be many motorcycles on ALL roads leading to London.
    "There are groups of riders coming from the 4 corners of the country and it is estimated that 7,000 bikes will be in attendance.
    "There are 5 designated assembly points around the M25 before the push into central London.
    "Please take extra care out there on Friday and watch out for the bikers."

     

    As many as 7,000 bikers

    The Facebook group has gained a lot of support, with over 12,000 people joining the page.
    One of the organisers, Christopher Davies, commented: "Rolling Thunder in support of Soldier F motorcycle ride taking place on Friday 12th April should be quite spectacular.
    "The Facebook page has exceeded 12,000 since its inception in a couple of weeks.
    "A possible 7,000 motorbikes will be converging on London mostly ridden by veterans although anyone is welcome on the ride."
    Met Police is thought to be working with organisers to ensure the rally runs smoothly.

    https://www.mylondon.news/news/zone-1-news/m25-traffic-westminster-16113279?fbclid=IwAR3wfKU2KRUolMwJjtpBbzK0b3akJL3OySYic9pjDNKpw6OvkKhClN_jaWA

    One of the riders wrote;

     It is not a PROTEST, it is a ride in solidarity to bring attention to the INJUSTICE of the prosecution of veterans of Operation Banner (Northern Ireland) and the release under the Good Friday agreement which saw CONVICTED terrorists freed from jail while there is a 'witch hunt' being performed against veterans for doing their DUTY. 

    This ride is NON POLITICAL. We just want the general public and those in Parliament to be aware of this situation. Those in power send our troops to trouble spots all over the world, but then do not support their actions at a later date.

    SHAME ON THEM

    Wednesday, April 10, 2019

    Centrica boss gets 44% pay rise after 'challenging year'



    The chief executive of the company which owns British Gas received a 44% rise in his pay last year to £2.4m.
    It means Iain Conn, who runs Centrica, is paid 72 times that of an employee in the lower quartile of its salary range - a smart energy expert paid £33,718.
    The pay deal comes in what the company described as "challenging year" and after it warned profits this year would be hit by the energy price cap.
    The energy price cap rose to £1,254 at the start of April.
    Mr Conn's pay rose from £1.7m in 2017 because he did not receive a bonus that year, while in 2016 he received £4m.
    In the annual report, Centrica said Mr Conn had been "reshaping" the company against "the challenge of a constantly shifting operating environment".
    "Iain has shown significant resilience in the face of this challenge and has led the business through the shifting context, keeping the strategic objectives in sight and ensuring that the organisation remains adaptable and innovative".
    The company's shares fell to near 20-year lows after the warning in February that profits would be knocked by Ofgem's price cap, amid fears it would cut its dividend.
    A year ago, Mr Conn announced 4,000 job cuts, while British Gas has lost 742,000 energy supply accounts, as it rarely appears among the cheapest deals on price comparison websites when customers look to switch suppliers.
    The company said it was reducing the pension contributions of senior managers - which are subject to scrutiny by fund managers - to 15% from 1 June,
    It said this represented a reduction of between a half and a quarter in the pension benefit for affected executives and "represents appropriate alignment with the wider workforce".
    The company also measured Mr Conn's pay alongside that of an employee in the median salary range - £41,239 - which gave a ratio of 59:1, and in the upper band, a technical engineer receiving £55,107 - which was 44:1.
    Last month, energy company Shell said its chief executive Ben van Beurden's pay was 143 times larger than that of the average Shell employee in the UK.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47850775

    NWN: So we have these characters putting their prices up and awarding themselves obscene pay rises. With young families whose 'bread winner' is on low pay, and particularly older people who cannot afford to put their heating on during the winter, this is indeed shocking news . Many old people die during the winter months, and a lack of heating helps to kill them off.

    These 'utility' companies need to be 're-nationalised' and quickly. 'Privatisation' promoted by people such as Margaret Thatcher has been a massive error for the British people. Privatisation is a big scam !

    Thursday, April 04, 2019


    BREAKING NEWS.....................................

    Greater Manchester police and Manchester City Council attempt to stop Armed Forces veterans from marching in Manchester city centre on the 19th April 2019 in support of SOLDIER F.


    Wednesday, April 03, 2019

    'Totally unacceptable': MoD criticises troops after Corbyn picture used in target practice



    British soldiers in Kabul
    Image: British soldiers in Kabul

    An investigation has been launched after soldiers were filmed using a picture of Jeremy Corbyn in target practice.
    The Ministry of Defence said the incident was "totally unacceptable" and "falls well below the high standards the army expects".
    It is understood the soldiers were using simulated paint rounds and not real bullets.


    A video has surfaced showing British soldiers filmed apparently shooting at a Jeremy Corbyn target at an army base in Kabul.
    This video has surfaced showing British soldiers filmed apparently shooting at a Jeremy Corbyn target at an army base in Kabul.
    The video is believed to have been taken in Kabul.
    More follows...
    https://news.sky.com/story/totally-unacceptable-mod-criticises-troops-after-corbyn-picture-used-in-target-practice-11682894?fbclid=IwAR32bV_3gOO8pGxQeFhXAe7dxJXjUf0wQAFibu_IhF-TOf75o5dhcTuBFsc 

    ======================================================================






    Breaking news
    The Army has launched a "full investigation" after video appearing to show soldiers shooting at a target with Jeremy Corbyn's face on was uploaded to social media.
    British personnel based in Kabul appear in the video which showing troops firing and then pans to the target with the Labour leader's face with on it.
    It is thought the rounds used in the video are simulated paint rounds.
    An Army spokesperson said: "We are aware of a video circulating on social media.
    "This behaviour is totally unacceptable and falls well below the high standards the Army expects.
    "A full investigation has been launched."
    https://www.forces.net/news/services/army/army-launches-full-investigation-after-jeremy-corbyns-image-used-target-practice 

    NWN: NWN has been telling everyone that the Armed Forces and veterans are extremely angry about what is going on in the UK. You won't find a more patriotic bunch of people anywhere than these men & women, and there are 1,000's of them.
    Oi veh ! This is New York .


    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6878831/Tens-thousands-Hasidic-Jews-crowd-Brooklyn-streets-funeral-popular-rabbi.html 

    Tuesday, April 02, 2019

    Thousands of bikers to protest in London against soldier's Bloody Sunday prosecution



    A member of the Parachute Regiment chases a civilian on Bloody Sunday











    Thousands of bikers will gather in London next week to protest against the prosecution of a British soldier over Bloody Sunday.
    'Soldier F' is to be charged with murdering two people after troops opened fire on civil rights demonstrators in Derry in 1972.
    The organiser of the 'Rolling Thunder' event, Harry Wragg, said the British government should not have allowed the prosecution.
    "Our ride is not directed at the victims, it is directed at the British Government," he said.
    "Our argument is with the Government, not the victims of Bloody Sunday or any other event."
    He added: "Where are they pulling the evidence from, why are the British Government allowing this to happen?"



    James Wray (left) and William McKinney who died on Bloody Sunday. Soldier F will be prosecuted for their killings. Picture from Bloody Sunday Trust, Press Association
    Participants in the demonstration on Friday April 12 are due to travel from across the UK, including the Lake District and Wales.
    Mr Wragg said: "The plan is, we ride through with 4,000 motorcyclists.
    "That is rolling thunder."
    They had planned to travel to Westminster but that date coincides with the new no-deal Brexit date.
    It is uncertain whether they will be allowed to proceed to Parliament, the organiser said.
    Plans for a separate motorcycle ride in east Belfast on April 12 in support of Soldier F had been lodged with the Parades Commission but have since been withdrawn.
    Supporters of the British army’s Parachute Regiment have also organised a “mass rally” in Belfast next month.
    The ‘Paras Fight Back’ rally is expected to take place outside Belfast City Hall on April 27.
    Thirteen civil rights demonstrators were shot dead on Bloody Sunday on January 30 1972, on one of the most notorious days of the Troubles.
    Soldier F will face charges for the murders of James Wray and William McKinney and the attempted murders of Joseph Friel, Michael Quinn, Joe Mahon and Patrick O'Donnell, the Public Prosecution Service has said.
    http://www.irishnews.com/news/northernirelandnews/2019/04/02/news/thousands-of-bikers-to-protest-against-soldier-s-bloody-sunday-prosecution-1588904/?fbclid=IwAR1CAMLqrIW8eSMJuBdpRKfu08iVXmtSDfT62OFO_ADV-OtrQX_uDlQBm-Y

    NWN: Irish press reporting this story but such as the BBC are not ?