May 24, 2008

Auty leadership campaign in rapid decline

Making a bid for the leadership of the British National Party is no easy matter. An ordinary member is required to have five years uninterrupted membership, has to obtain one hundred signatures from supporters (as opposed to a present officer who only needs ten signatures), is banned (or at least discouraged) from attending meetings to proselytize for him/her self and faces a barrage of criticism, accusation and misinformation, while the current leader Nick Griffin attends all the meetings he can and lays the propaganda on with a trowel himself and via his minions.

Not altogether surprising then, that the Colin Auty leadership challenge is in trouble. The major purge of members that took place after last year's leadership challenge is clearly making the membership wary of signing for Auty - a tacit admission that they are unhappy with the current leader. There have also been strong hints that if this challenge goes ahead, Nick Griffin will make it his business (with the help of an impotent and pointless Advisory Council) to change the system so that a challenge can only be made once every four or five years - a rumour that horrifies the dissidents within the party who have managed to persuade Auty to make the challenge in a doubtless vain attempt to see the former rebels reinstated and a few of the older members returning to the fold.

Although the result of the challenge last year was lauded as a mandate for Nick Griffin to continue his role as party dictator, it was clear that only 39% of the party membership had voted for him. Spin that as you will, 39% does not make a mandate. Nevertheless, Griffin's leadership was made more secure, and despite continually mediocre election results (just ten new councillors at the recent elections as opposed to the BNP predictions of forty) and with conditions as near-perfect as the BNP could hope, his position remains internally unassailable.

And unassailable it will remain, if Griffin and his acolytes have anything to do with it. Since rumours of Auty's challenge have emerged, the dirty tricks department of the BNP has been on overtime. Lee Barnes, the party's insane legal beagle, dashed out a letter to the membership as soon as the news became public, attacking Auty as being a 'puupet' for the machinations of the December rebel's group (or Voice of Change, as they call themselves). Certainly, they have openly given their backing to Auty though, as time passes, rumours of fragmentation reach us. Indeed, it was announced only yesterday that Steve Blake, one of the key rebels, has decided not to support Auty's challenge after all. Others, it seems, are following his example. Chris Beverly, former Griffin blue-eyed boy, has also backed off following pressure from above.

Barnes' letter was swiftly followed by another, this time from the party's National Elections Officer, Eddy Butler. Butler, like Barnes, made no bones about his contempt for the challenger:

'But the backers of this ridiculous bid should reconsider their aimless tactic. People should refuse to sign the nomination papers. It is a distraction and a waste of time and effort and it will end up almost certainly with the constitution changed in a way that destroys the important Right of the possibility of a yearly election. Standing a no-hoper is stupid, mindless and fatally undermines our Constitution. It is a pitiful and moronic – a bankrupt tactic by people who can only be described as having gone giddy to the extent that they are now without the imagination to think how they can raise issues in a legitimate way.

This election, if it goes ahead, should be carried out in the most rapid manner possible with zero publicity allowed for the joke candidate...'

We're told that the party has banned ALL discussion on the Auty challenge on its own forum, thus stifling the possibility of dissent and avoiding giving Auty the opportunity of presenting the reasons for his opposition to Griffin. Stormfront, the playground of the many nazis within the BNP, has been awash with anti-Auty propaganda - much of it instigated by a character calling himself 'Walk towards the light' (Lee Barnes), and other far-right forums are being flooded with anti-Auty propaganda.

Rumour also reaches us that branches have been warned via regional organisers that Auty is not to be allowed a platform under any circumstances. Apart from stopping him speaking on his own behalf (while Nick Griffin zooms up and down the country attending meetings with his entourage at the expense of the membership) this is putting a severe dent in Auty's musical career, such as it is. Auty, the BNP's answer to Keith Richards, was apparently booked to play his rubbishy songs at several branches over the coming few weeks. These have now, we're told, put him on hold. Whether this is because he is challenging Griffin or simply because he's crap, we don't know.

Insults aside, it has been reported that when Auty loses (as he certainly will if the challenge goes ahead) he will be kicked out of the party, as will his supporters. His campaign manager, Roger Robertson, the BNP's former South-East Regional Organiser, has already been told that he faces a disciplinary tribunal on July 6th.

Furthermore, there is another aspect of this leadership challenge that needs to be watched. Griffin has let slip that he is sick of being challenged - using the pretext that it interferes with election planning and electioneering - and that he intends to begin the process to have challenges limited to four or five-yearly as soon as humanly possible. Even less democracy in the BNP - that least democratic of political parties.

Auty's career is in decline and will end with his failure to become party leader. Like Chris Jackson last year, Auty will, if the challenge is allowed to go ahead and he manages to get enough signatures, only have three weeks to campaign. But to whom will he campaign? Griffin, we are told, is refusing to allow Auty access to the membership list on the dubious grounds that such access would breach the Data Protection Act. This effectively kills Auty's ability to reach out to the members who might possibly give him their vote if they know of his existence. A devious and surprisingly clever move by Griffin though the Data Protection Act doesn't seem to have stopped the Barnes and Butler letters being sent out to the entire membership. Interesting how rules can be bent, isn't it.

There is one further complication for Auty that will do him no good at all; the rumour that Chris Jackson intends to stand again. If this is true, the opposition to Griffin will have two people on which to pin their single vote, thus ensuring that neither of them get any respectable numbers in the ballot. This second attempt by Jackson will do nothing for anyone except Nick Griffin, and it has become clear that Jackson is generally regarded as a stalking horse, used last year to flush out the malcontents within the party so that they could be entertainingly purged and used this year to split the vote, thus ensuring Auty's failure, and to prop up Griffin's position in the party.

Open support for Auty is, to say the least, sparse. Just twenty-three members appear on his site under the banner 'We're proudly (and openly) backing the challenge!'. Of these, seven are suspended members, one has had his membership renewal rejected, two are about to be kicked out and Auty's position is itself looking increasingly precarious. If Griffin has his way, this leadership challenge will collapse before it properly gets started. Even if he doesn't, Auty will lose and Griffin will get the security of four or five-yearly terms in office. Either way, Auty's career with the British National Party is over because he had, in Eddy Butler's curious phrase, the 'temerity' to wish to stand for the leadership of the BNP.

28 comments:

  1. Auty, the BNP's answer to Keith Richards

    Your right. He does have Keefs look of having died a couple of years ago.

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  2. Nick Griffin runs a political party like he runs his businesses, into the ground. He's corrupt and that's all there is to it.

    You're correct, Auty has no chance and he'll be lucky to get as far as to challenge the great dictator.

    Good article. Great to see all this original writing on here recently.

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  3. Bye-bye Colin...

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  4. A pretty good honest article. Not like some of the histerical rubbish you lot sometimes put up.

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  5. Most of the BNP members have only ever heard of Colin Auty through various BNP publications which tend to come liberally sprinkled with ads for Great White Records. Most of them will just think of him, if they think of him at all, as a singer who can't get a contract with a real music company. He's got no chance and Nick Griffin will destroy him for having the bloody cheek to show him up by standing for the leadership.

    "Bye-bye Colin..."

    Spot on.

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  6. Hopefully this article will spur the Auty campaign on to actually DO something cos so far they've done fuck all.

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  7. I see that Griffin is demanding BNP members sign an oath of allegiance. A prelude to a mass expulsion of "dissidents". Soon therell be no need for UAF/Searchlight/ANTIFA as Griffin will have done what they havent achieved - completely destroy the BNP and the far-right.

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  8. I'm unsure why you feel that having a fixed term for elections is undemocratic. Isn't that common practice in most organisations?

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  9. "attacking Auty as being a 'puupet' for the machinations of the December rebel's group"

    LOL That really tickled you didn't it, Ketlan.

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  10. "He does have Keefs look of having died a couple of years ago."

    I'd never realised that but yes he does. Another few years and he'll be a 'Keef' double.

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  11. 'I'm unsure why you feel that having a fixed term for elections is undemocratic. Isn't that common practice in most organisations?'

    Every organisation I've ever belonged to, including (many years ago) the Labour Party, allows a leadership challenge at its annual conference or equivalent, assuming all conditions are fulfilled (nominations, supporting signatures and so on). Anything else is not only undemocratic but is dangerous - a rogue leader can do a lot of damage over just a year, let alone four or five (as the BNP will doubtless eventually learn).

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  12. 'That really tickled you didn't it, Ketlan'

    It did. Probably because it's the only funny thing Lee Barnes has ever written.

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  13. Oy, i just posted a comment on the Roberto Fore article and now its gone. What happend to it?

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  14. Can't Auty make a legal challenge?

    Maybe this is what he intends?

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  15. 'Oy, i just posted a comment on the Roberto Fore article and now its gone. What happend to it?'

    We took it down following advice about potentially possibly libellous content.

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  16. 'Can't Auty make a legal challenge?

    Maybe this is what he intends?'

    Possibly but it has always struck me as curious that nobody who is mistreated by the BNP has ever launched a sustained legal challenge. Maybe they're terrified of the combined legal magnificence of Griffin and Barnes.

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  17. "Maybe they're terrified of the combined legal magnificence of Griffin and Barnes."

    LOL Yeah right!

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  18. "Possibly but it has always struck me as curious that nobody who is mistreated by the BNP has ever launched a sustained legal challenge."

    Actually Ketlan you are wrong on that point. John Tyndall took the BNP to the High Court in 2003 when he was suspended from membership. He won costing Gri$$in about £3,000.

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  19. 'John Tyndall took the BNP to the High Court in 2003 when he was suspended from membership. He won costing Gri$$in about £3,000.'

    You're absolutely right. Thanks for the reminder. I'd forgotten all about Tyndall and his triumphant embarrassment of Griffin. Perhaps he should serve as an example to all of those who have been unceremoniously and illegally booted out. If they all took co-ordinated action, Griffin would die of shock. Even if he didn't, it'd give us all a laugh.

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  20. 'John Tyndall took the BNP to the High Court in 2003 when he was suspended from membership. He won costing Gri$$in about £3,000.'

    Tyndall also got a £1,000 from The Sunday Times newspaper for giving them a story about a BNP member who was expelled from the BNP under Nick Gri££in's leadership for having a non-white girlfriend (he either kept the money or split it with the said BNP member).

    It shows a) how much Tyndall hated Nick Gri££in and b) how opportunistic Tyndall was when it came to money - that despite his hatred for non-Whites and Jews, and his hard-line opposition to mixed-race relationships, Tyndall was still prepared to do a dirty on the party he founded and once led for a bit of money and to spite Nick Gri££in in any way possible! But, then again it’s good seeing these BNP fanatics fight each other.

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  21. Very interesting article LU.

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  22. From Norfolk Unity:

    Solidarity May Day flop (what else did you expect?)

    A bit of a lull for us here at Norfolk Unity recently, with DG flitting off for a holiday and yours truly having his arm twisted to redecorate the kitchen (and the hall, and the parlour...), but we're back and fighting fit, so let's kick off with news of everybody's favourite One Big Vast Huge Onion...

    Still labouring under the illusion that anybody cares for him and the other 210 members of the BNP front known as Solidarity, risible "General Secretary" Patrick Harrington called on his fellow British workers (he isn't one, by the way - a worker, that is) to pull out all the stops for May Day.

    The Great Fantasist's call was duly answered - by around four people carting around professionally hand-scrawled placards, by our reckoning.

    The One Big Vast Huge Onion ("establishing itself as a major independent Trade Union") reported that leaflets were handed out to rail communters in Romford and shoppers in Torquay High Street, and... er, that's it.

    According to the Huge Onion's error-strewn website, "social events" were held over the May bank holiday weekend and "Other Chapters of our Brotherhood were out on the streets". But the Huge Onion doesn't seem to know where these "social events" were held or which streets the "Brotherhood" were out on, and Harrington's exhortation for the Brotherhood to send in reports and photographs of their activites has so far drawn a blank.

    Mostly because nothing of the kind happened, and as indifference usually reaches fever pitch very quickly whenever the Great Fantasist makes a call for anything, ergo there was nothing to send in.

    "Together we are strong!"

    Not with the Great Fantasist running the show you're not!

    Back in March the One Big Vast Huge Onion's website carried a statement from its token Sikh Pramjit Sadra, the "statement" grandly issued by the Onion's one-man PR-"company" with the webmail address, Accentuate. In it Sadra attacks migrant labour, but we're not interested in that as much as we are Mr Sadra himself. We've tracked him far and wide and been in touch with him frequently (though he doesn't know it - yet), and far from being a "British worker" Sadra seems to be involved in a number of get-rich-quick schemes - those flaming eAcademy emails (among others) are really clogging up my inbox.

    We'll have more on Mr Sadra the British worker very soon.

    We'll also have news of the trade union Certification Office's decision on the legitimacy of the One Big Vast Huge Onion.

    Visitors will remember that the "union" was hi-jacked from its founders by the BNP last summer when allegations of financial irregularities concerning Patrick Harrington surfaced, so we have Official Solidarity (the original organisation founded by Clive Potter and Tim Hawke) and Provisional Solidarity (Harrington's One Big Vast Huge Onion group).

    The Certification Office is investigating allegations of financial irregularities, and breaches of both the law and Solidarity's constitution.

    The Certification Office will issue a ruling on whether the Harrington/BNP takeover was legitimate. If it isn't, a legal morass will swamp both sides, as a ruling in favour of Official Solidarity will almost certainly mean that the One Big Vast Huge Onion will have to hand over its assets and membership lists - and we can't see the BNP allowing that to happen without pulling a few strokes.

    Something we do know for certain is that the Executive of Official Solidarity recently held a meeting to discuss the way forward in the event of the Certification Office ruling in their favour. The meeting concluded that the name of Solidarity had been so badly damaged by its close association with the British National Party and had attracted so little interest (even from BNP members) that there was no point in continuing with the operation, and they would disband it.

    As the BNP and the Great Fantasist would find it very difficult to start up another fake trade union (because this time the real trade unions will be ready for them), Harrington would find himself with even more time on his hands than normal in which to "order" the start-up of more blogs devoted to "deconstructing" (his most favouritest word in all the world) the Unity websites that have done so much to remind the antifascist brethren that you don't need to visit a circus to see a clown in action.

    http://norfolkunity.blogspot.com/2008/05/solidarity-may-day-flop-what-else-did.html

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  23. "I see that Griffin is demanding BNP members sign an oath of allegiance."

    Do you have a link for this?

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  24. Do you have a link for this?

    Yeah, it's on the Challenge for Leadership page. The Auty page.

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  25. Anonymous said...
    'John Tyndall took the BNP to the High Court in 2003 when he was suspended from membership. He won costing Gri$$in about £3,000.'

    Tyndall also got a £1,000 from The Sunday Times newspaper for giving them a story about a BNP member who was expelled from the BNP under Nick Gri££in's leadership for having a non-white girlfriend (he either kept the money or split it with the said BNP member).

    It shows a) how much Tyndall hated Nick Gri££in and b) how opportunistic Tyndall was when it came to money - that despite his hatred for non-Whites and Jews, and his hard-line opposition to mixed-race relationships, Tyndall was still prepared to do a dirty on the party he founded and once led for a bit of money and to spite Nick Gri££in in any way possible! But, then again it’s good seeing these BNP fanatics fight each other.
    6:58 PM, May 24, 2008


    I know the man you are talking about and his girlfriend was Spanish ,as to the £1000.00 I will ask the man in question if it is true or not, so I hope you can back up what you have said if not SHUT your big BNP mouth up.
    KEYSER SOZE.

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  26. Tyndall and money...

    Nope, we can't corroborate that.

    Maybe some C.U.N.T.s would be better off taking that to Stormfront..?

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  27. his girlfriend was Spanish

    I thought that the girlfriend was an Amazon Indian from either central or south American, not Spanish.

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  28. Met the organiser in question, and his young lady, a few times.

    She certainly spoke Spanish, came from South America, and looked Hispanic, so the rumours were that she was part-Indian (South American Indian) and a paid-for wife.

    Strongly denied by him, of course, and he had the support of Tyndal before it became an issue in the on-going rows with Griffin, and JT was not a man to accept mixed marriage lightly.

    Therefore, I would guess that she was at least nine parts European, and had been able to prove that to JT's satisfaction.

    remember, at the time Griffin was posing as the 'hard-right' alternative to the old, neo-conservative JT, and was a friend of C18 and the skinheads. This may well have been him trying to show JT as the weak moderniser, as Griffin played to the skinhead gallery to get the votes to oust JT.

    First I've ever heard about JT getting payment for selling the story though, and that does not sound like him. He had a good private income from investments and family inheritance (which, unlike Griffin, he spent on the party) and, whatever else can be said about him, he was 100% honest and an old-fashioned type gentleman in many ways. I cannot imagine him accepting money, nor doing anything which he felt would harm the partyt, even with Griffin as circus-master.

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