Showing posts with label Vale of Glamorgan Show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vale of Glamorgan Show. Show all posts

August 21, 2009

Anger as BNP have stall at Vale show

3 Comment (s)
Angry opponents of the British National Party have protested after the political group was allowed to run a stall at Vale of Glamorgan Show.

The show took place at Fonmon Castle on Wednesday and was attended by an estimated 25,000 people.

A spokeswoman for Plaid Cymru said: “We were very unhappy that the BNP was given official status at the show and permitted to distribute their material. When we protested, we were told by the show organisers that the BNP had as much right to be there as us. The concern is that the BNP is seeking to make itself appear respectable, and in future will try to get admission to the Royal Welsh and the National Eisteddfod.”

Bethan Roberts, who is campaigning to be Labour’s next parliamentary candidate for the Vale of Glamorgan, said: “The BNP’s presence at the Vale Show is deeply disturbing.”

Darron Dupre, from the anti-fascist group Searchlight Cymru, said: “The BNP has taken a small stall at the Vale of Glamorgan show for a few years now. We have asked the event organisers more than once in that time whether it is appropriate to take money from them. Their response has always been the same – the BNP is a legal political party. Searchlight Cymru has absolutely no interest in helping the BNP to gain sympathy or be portrayed as victims by causing a scene at a family fun event, not least when the electorate in Vale of Glamorgan consistently rejects the message of the BNP.”

Nicola Gibson, the show secretary, said: “So far as we are concerned, the BNP is a registered political party. It is not for us to deny them the right to a stall.”

The BNP’s deputy leader and press officer Simon Darby did not return our call.

Wales Online

August 14, 2007

Fury as the BNP is given show slot

2 Comment (s)
A row has erupted following a decision to allow the British National Party to have a stall at tomorrow’s Vale of Glamorgan Show.

Last year the BNP was allowed to have a stall for the first time in the event’s history. The party will again be setting up on the showground this year, alongside other political parties, including Labour, Conservative and Plaid Cymru.

All three mainstream political parties have expressed concern the BNP has again been granted permission to set up a stall on the showground at Fonmon Castle Park, near Rhoose. But show organisers say that the BNP is a legitimate, licensed political party and that if it was banned from the showground all other political parties would have to be banned too.

Councillor Margaret Alexander, who is Labour leader of the Vale of Glamorgan Council, will be hosting a “Business Brunch” at the authority’s marquee on the showground. She said: “I am not particularly happy at having to share the showground with the BNP. The Labour Party made representations last year that the BNP should not have a tent at the showground this year.”

Plaid Cymru AM Chris Franks, who is also a Vale of Glamorgan councillor, will be attending the show. He said: “Whether it is appropriate to have their stand at the show is questionable. The way they play on people's fear is totally abhorrent.”

Councillor Michael Kemp, leader of the Conservative group on the Vale council, said: “I recognise that the BNP is a political party and as such has a right to be at the show. But their views, and the fact that they will be promoting them at the show, concern me.”

Nicola Gibson, general secretary of the Vale of Glamorgan Show, said: “The Vale of Glamorgan Agricultural Society is a non-political organisation. If we allow one political party onto the showground, we have to allow them all. Similarly, if we banned the BNP we would have to ban all the other political parties. We did have a few complaints about the BNP tent at last year’s show from people who just don’t like them.”

A spokesman for the BNP could not be contacted for comment. But at last year’s show a spokesman said the party had policies on rural issues affecting places like the Vale and people were interested in learning more about them.

icWales