Liberty GB

From FasciPedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
British Freedom Party
British Freedom.png

{{{caption}}}

Country United Kingdom
Headquarters Bristol
Website http://britishfreedom.org/

The British Freedom Party (BFP) was a short-lived civic fascist political party which was formed in late 2010 by a small number of members that broke away from the British National Party. It was deregistered with the electoral commission in March 2013. Several of its leading members have regrouped under the party Liberty GB to promote homosexuality, Zionism and multiracialism.

History

The British Freedom Party was formed by a group of liberal "modernisers" from the British National Party that thought that the ethno-based nationalism of the BNP was too extreme, instead they wanted to shift to a civic fascist ideology. These liberals included Peter Stafford, a homosexual, and Paul Weston, a former United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) candidate for the 2010 general election.

The British Freedom Party website promoted race mixing and asserted that to be British you can be any race or ethnicity, "culture not colour" was among their key website slogans, while it also supported homosexual perversions through the influence of Stafford. The party later came to be associated with the English Defence League, as its political wing. During its short existence as a party, the BFP came into conflict with the BNP who exposed Weston in a video as a Zionist with terrorist connections.

Demise

The party was deregistered from the electoral commission, and was revealed in a twitter post in March 2013 to be defunct.[1]

Elections

The BFP fielded six candidates in the 2012 local elections (five in Liverpool). All polled terribly low; Peter Stafford obtained only 50 votes (1.51%). they put up a candidate (Kevin Carroll) in the England Police and Crime Commissioner elections in November, who came fourth place (second last) with 8,675 votes (10.6%). Strangely the British Freedom website claimed this was a "victory".

Splits

The Freedom Democrats split from the British Freedom Party in 2011 after a leadership dispute.

External links

References