Sunday newspapers find common sense “vile”
DESPITE a week of newspaper headlines and television reports on the British National Party, there has been one glaring omission from all the coverage. At no time has BNP policy come under the spotlight.
Journalists in the Sunday newspapers were queuing up to condemn the British National Party stance on immigration as “vile”, but never explained why, in their eyes, it was “vile”.
It is unclear which BNP immigration policy the likes of the News of the World, The People and Sunday Mirror were referring to, but it must have been one that was in place in the early 1990s before Nick Griffin became chairman and completely modernised the Party. That is because the British National Party’s policy today is what the majority of British people, according to the polls, say they want – a complete stop to any further immigration.
In the British National Party’s mini-manifesto published in 2007 our policy is very clear.
* Stop all new immigration except for in exceptional cases.
* Deport all illegal immigrants.
* Reject all asylum seekers who have passed through a safe country to come Britain.
Britain’s population is now racing towards 70 million and spiraling out of control. This is down to immigration. It has put unbearable pressure on our social services and the very fabric of our country.
Britain is full and continued mass immigration is unfair, not only on indigenous Britons but also on all the law-abiding ethnic minorities who are here legally, who pay taxes like the rest of us, and with whom we are happy to share this island as long as they support the values that made this country such a great place.
This is a policy the majority of British people would agree with should they ever get the chance to be told about it – and that is why the media deliberately hides it from them.
There’s nothing ‘vile’ about the British National Party’s immigration policy – it’s just common sense.








