EHRC Move against BNP Is “State’s Biggest Own Goal” BNP Wandsworth Told

The state-funded court case against the British National Party by the Equality and Human Rights Commission is a huge own goal which will help the party destroy one of the biggest arguments against it, the BNP’s latest branch meeting at Merton and Wandsworth was told.
Speaking before an audience of about 150, BNP Foreign Affairs spokesman Arthur Kemp told the enthusiastic crowd that the EHRC court case was an attempt by the state to waste the party’s money and nothing else, as the new Equality Act being piloted through parliament was going to outlaw any party from being able to choose its membership criteria.
“Even though the BNP is protected under section 26 of the Race Relations Act, which allows an organisation to be ethnically exclusive, the new act is going to do away with that protection,” he said. “To bring a lawsuit now is pointless except to use up party resources needed to fight the general election.”
“The irony is that by taking this action against the BNP, the enemy is also taking away its biggest stick with which it tries to attack the party. It is a win-win situation for us.
Mr Kemp said the party would adhere to the law, whatever it said. The state can never legislate away the core values of the BNP, which are to ensure that the majority population of these islands remains of indigenous British extraction.
“There are those who will say that the party will now be ‘flooded with ethnics’ and taken over. This will not happen for two reasons. Firstly, if the enemy was going to do something like that, they would have done it ages ago with white members. That never happened and there is no reason to think it will happen with ethnics. Secondly, even if this unlikely scenario ever happens, we will just all leave and start a new party. People vote for the principles of the party, and not the name. We will do that again and again and even if we end up with something called the Ying Tong Tiddle I Po party, we will still be here,” Mr Kemp said to loud applause. (The full speech is now available on the BNPtv panel on the right-hand side of this page.)
First speaker of the evening was Councillor Paul Golding. He told the crowd that the party would soon be launching a campaign “similar to the Racism Cuts Both Ways” initiative last year, only it would focus on the war in Afghanistan.
Cllr Golding said the brochure which would accompany the campaign would detail the lies told by the Labour and Tory parties to get Britain into Middle Eastern Wars, list the equipment supply failures since then, and end with a call to get all British troops out of Afghanistan as quickly as possible.








