Lineage of New Zealand Fascist organizations and individuals

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Lineage of New Zealand Nationalist organizations and individuals

New Zealand Nativist Association (1880s)

White Race League (1880s)

Anti-Asiatic League (1880s).

Lionel Terry, poet, trade union organiser, painter. Author of "The Shadow", opposing Chinese immigration as a means of capitalist exploitation, he is now only remembered with infamy as the killer of a Chinaman in New Zealand's China quarter, Haining Street, Wellington, in 1905, to draw attention to immigration.

White New Zealand League, organised among farmers, 1920s.

New Zealand Legion (1932) Founded by Maj. Gen. J.V.R. Sherston, led by well known Wellington physician Campbell Begg, the Green shirted Legion grew to 20,000 members, including future Prime Minister Keith Holyoake. The Legion was founded not only to resist socialism and communism during the Depression, but to offer an alternative, and towards this end adopted social credit economics, and a semi-corporatist policy advocating an Economic Council to advise Government, that would be drawn from all productive sectors.

Arthur Nelson Field Journalist with the Dominion and other major newspapers, Field became a recognised expert on the banking system, and the author of best sellers during the Depression, including The Truth About New Zealand, The Truth About the Slump, and All These Things. He was also sympathetic towards fascism, although himself being a fairly typical colonialist European for that time, and developed an antipathy for Jewish influence in politics and banking, reflected in books such as All These Things. Field was also a columnist for Henry Kelliher's popular home journal, The Mirror, which pushed banking reform, for which Labour's First Prime Minister Joe Savage acknowledged Kelliher's assistance in the election victory, banking reform being a major Labour policy at that time. Field published his own newspaper, The Examiner, which concentrated on the Jewish issue.

White Army Foundation (1950).

Anti-Communist League (1961).


New Zealand-Rhodesia Society (1962).

League of Empire Loyalists (New Zealand branch of the Chesterton movement), (1952) becoming the NZ National Front in 1967, in emulation of the British party. Kay Hopper J F L Hartley Sir Ernest H Andrews Canon E Blackwood Moore

Essential Books, Hamilton (1965-1980?) Proprietor A R Wells, this provided the educational resource to New Zealand patriots, importing many books from the John Birch Society, but also carried books on ethnology, and zionism. Wells' changed the name to Western Destiny Publications to align it with the Western Destiny Union of Bing and Hartley (see below).

New Zealand National Socialist Party (1967) Colin Ansell


League of Rights (1970) Founded by Sid Wood, a British Israel devotee as a branch of the Crown Commonwealth League of Rights, established soon after World War II in Australia by social credit activist Eric Butler. The League philosophy centers around loyalty to God, the British Crown and social credit economics, and is anti-communist, anti-zionist and opposed to monopoly. First newsletter issued by Sid Wood was Torch of Truth, and in later years a magazine, On Target, by Wood's successor Bill Daly. Operated a book service, Conservative Books and for many years organised lecture tours by overseas League speakers, including Butler, Jeremy Lee, and Pat Walsh (Candada).

New Zealand Commonwealth Alliance (1974) Ron Keen Maj. B G Wilcox Established in Auckland mainly by returned servicemen who considered their generation had been betrayed after the War, the Alliance was committed to a revitalised Commonwealth of the White Dominions, along the lines then being proposed by the British National Front. Keen published the Alliance's newsletter, The New Zealand Phalanx.


Southern Africa Friendship Association (1970) Lt. Col. A.C.R. Elderton Brian Thompson Maj. B G Wilcox

Association Defending South African Tours (1972). Brian Thompson, Christchurch


"Pointing Right" , Christchurch, (newsletter and group) (1973) Colin Elderton David Crawford Brian Thompson

Heed (1975) Magazine: Bruce Larsen, David Crawford

Association for the Prservation of European Traditions and Cultures, Auckland (1975).


New Zealand Democratic Nationalist Party (1975)

Kerry Bolton
New Force Party (1981)
B. Zandberge, Kerry Bolton.
Nationalist Workers Party (1983)

B. Zandbergen, Kerry Bolton

United Movement Against Communism (1975)

Tory Press newsletter, ca1970s. T O Maddison, Otaki. Spenglerian, Social Crediter.

Society of Patriots, Christchurch (1982).

Friends of Chile (1976). Brian Thompson.

Western Destiny Union, Auckland (1970s) Ian Bing, Bill Hartley Based on the philosophy of Oswald Spengler, they also imported a stock of Yockey's Imperium from Noontide Press. Ian Bing, produced the WDU's newsletter, Perspective 21st Century.

New Zealand Church of Odin (1980-1983) David Crawford

Conservative Front National Front Freedom Party National Democrats Anton Foljambe


New Zealand Fascist Union (1990s) Colin Ansell

New Zealand Workers Front Kerry Bolton


New Zealand National Front Brian Thompson, Kay Hopper (1967) David Crawford (1977) Anton Foljambe (1990s) Kyle Chapman (until 2005) Sid Wilson (2005) Colin Ansell (2005 - )

New Right New Zealand, Wellington (2005 - ) Steven Larsen (not associated with New Right Australia/New Zealand)

Nationalist Alliance (2008 - ) Kyle Chapman. Intended to unify the Right, it comprises primarily those involved with New Right NZ and Right Wing Resistance, and co-operates with the National Front, primarily with a joint "Flag Day Rally" at the Wellington Cenotaph and Parliament grounds, annually over the Labour Weekend, since started by the NZNF in 2004

Right Wing Resistance (2009 - ) Kyle Chapman

Blood & Honour New Zealand

Nation Destiny

NZ Fascist Union

New Zealand League of Rights

See also