May 21, 2009

Holding back the BNP

The British National Party (BNP) sees the European Parliament elections as a key opportunity to advance its influence. Andy Bowman of Red Pepper reports on the campaign to keep them out of their target seats in the north-west of England

For better or worse, the UK’s first past the post electoral system largely prevents smaller parties gaining a serious role in government, at both local and parliamentary levels. For the EU elections, however, the UK uses a version of proportional representation that ensures representation of minority opinions. While the legislative influence of a single MEP is relatively minor, the position can – as amply demonstrated by the Green Party’s Caroline Lucas – dramatically enhance the public profile of individual and party. The job also brings £250,000 of funding.

With this in mind, the BNP has picked the North West out of the 12 UK constituencies, as its primary target for concerted electioneering. The party won 6.4 percent of the vote here in the previous European Parliament elections of 2004 – compared to 0.7 per cent nationally in the last general election – and hopes to make serious gains this time round. It has certainly started work early. The European elections are already central in BNP campaigning and publicity, with activists out on the streets canvassing around the region. Buoyed by the recent acquisition of a council seat in Swanley, Kent – ending a 40-year Labour incumbency with 41% of the vote – the BNP claims it is about to mount ‘the largest and most sophisticated campaign in the history of patriotic politics.’

The party’s lead candidate is its leader, the holocaust denier and former National Front member Nick Griffin. If successful, he would become one of eight North West MEPs, drawn from the UK’s allocation of 72. The voting system means Griffin is practically guaranteed a seat if he wins 9 per cent of the vote. Depending on the spread among other parties, he could get one with only 7.5 per cent.

Keeping the BNP out will be a challenge. Anti-fascist campaign organisation Searchlight sees low voter turnout – 41.1 per cent in the North West last time around – as a boon to the extreme right. Searchlight’s ‘Hope not Hate’ campaign aims simply to get people out to vote – for anyone but the BNP. Based on the 2004 results, it calculates that an additional 35 non-BNP voters in every council ward (on average comprising 6,000 people) would be enough to stop the BNP.

The key battlegrounds will be the densely populated conurbations of Greater Manchester and Merseyside. Renowned BNP strongholds such as Burnley have seen declining activity and lost council seats (down to four in Burnley from eight at the party’s local peak). However, in some of the more deprived areas in north and east Manchester, such as Blackley, Charlestown and Miles Platting, there has recently been an upsurge in BNP campaigning. The BNP’s Derek Adams received 27 per cent of the vote in last May’s council elections.

‘You’ve got to be creative’

A Blackley resident speaking to Red Pepper (she asks not to be named), who has lived in the area for the past 20 years, described her shock on seeing a BNP leaflet drop through her letterbox prior to the elections. In response, she ordered £30 worth of Searchlight’s ‘Hope not Hate’ leaflets and distributed them around the neighbourhood, speaking with people about the issue. She likes the non-divisiveness of the campaign. ‘Most people here have switched off, so you’ve got to be creative,’ she says. ‘Even if I managed to change one person’s mind it would be worth it.’

She feels efforts such as hers are hampered by the distanced attitude of her local Labour representatives. ‘What really incensed me was that not one of our local councilors even bothered to come round,’ she says. She emailed to complain, but received no reply. ‘Whatever I think of the BNP, they were out there speaking to people. People here feel hard done by and not listened to, and the Labour government doesn’t seem to care.’

Other anti-racist campaigners in the area attribute the BNP’s rise to loss of faith in the main parties, and in electoral politics more generally. The BNP does best when turnout is low, and attracts protest votes more than committed supporters. If it’s anywhere near as difficult for residents here to speak with their political representatives about these issues as it was for Red Pepper, it’s easy to see the problem. Repeated attempts to talk with a range of Labour Party councillors in Manchester were ignored, forgotten, prevented by holidays abroad, or outright refused.

One Labour politician who was willing to speak was Theresa Griffin. Already a North West MEP, she is running for re-election, and considers the BNP ‘a very real and present threat’. Griffin feels the recent experiences in the London assembly provide ample warning: ‘They’ll use it as a platform not for serving constituents, but for promoting the BNP.’ She states that the Labour Party’s anti-BNP campaign strategy is underway, as constituency parties around the region attempt to spread the word about the benefits of the EU parliament, and the ‘fair, inclusive and prosperous society’ New Labour is building.

Responding to claims that New Labour’s distancing itself from the working class has aided the BNP, she says: ‘We’ve got to embrace those criticisms, and make sure we campaign and speak to our constituents all year round. Actually, we are doing a shedload of fantastic work for deprived communities, we just need to be able to communicate that clearly.’

An urgent information war

One non party-political organisation attempting to stop the BNP filling the political vacuum is North Manchester Against Racism. NMAR activist Bernie Murphy feels they are engaged in an urgent information war. ‘The welfare state has been shrinking, and so has all the security we had,’ she says. In such situations, scapegoating outsiders has extra purchase. The group holds community meetings tackling the BNP’s pet issues, such as housing, Islam and immigration.

The extreme racist and nationalist views of the BNP are, they stress, divergent from mainstream opinion in the BNP’s strongest areas. The far-right capitalises upon apathy, they explain, and attempts to harness the anger of communities still reeling from de-industrialisation. ‘We need to find ways of making people feel positive and having a bit of pride in their area,’ Bernie asserts.

The NMAR’s efforts have attracted BNP attention, with activists arriving to disrupt meetings in large groups. Denise McDowell experienced this at an immigration workshop she ran. She feels migration into the area isn’t the principle cause of the BNP’s rise, and disagrees with the strategy pushed by immigration minister Phil Woolas, of ‘getting tough’ on migrants to draw attention from the BNP. ‘Most people think the arrival of migrants here is fantastic,’ she says. ‘It’s a more vibrant and interesting area,’ with more people occupying houses and setting up businesses. The BNP myths, she explains, are fuelled by the opaque procedures of government: ‘Nobody came to explain why such rapid changes in the area were happening in such a short time. People react to changes in negative ways when they’re powerless. There was no support for the community to adapt, and people are treated as if they can’t have these conversations.’

Similar concerns proliferated at the Convention of the Left recall in January. In a packed public services seminar, the BNP was a hot topic. Many agreed the decline and commercialisation of social housing provision was a key factors behind the successes of the BNP, which has pinned the blame for housing problems onto immigrants. Speakers stressed the need both to refocus on community engagement and issues of everyday concern, and to provide a voting alternative to Labour. Could the Green Party represent this? In the spirit of cooperation fostered by the convention, Respect North West has backed a Green vote for the European elections. The combined Green and Respect vote in 2004 was 6.8 per cent, higher than the BNP’s, so this is no empty gesture.

Crucial percentage points

Peter Cranie, Green Party candidate for the North West, explained to Red Pepper that these percentage points are crucial. Contrary to Hope not Hate, he claims defeating the BNP requires similar levels of tactical analysis used against the BNP on a local level in first past the post. A draft Green Party election strategy document given to Red Pepper, based on projections from previous European elections, claims the deciding factor will be the tussle between the smallest parties.

By winning between eight and nine per cent of the vote, the Greens argue, the party finishing fourth gets the seat. To shave a crucial single percentage point from the BNP total, they say, Labour’s vote would have to increase by four per cent, compared to the Green Party’s one.

Recent polls and past projections show that if the elections were held tomorrow, the BNP would finish fourth by a narrow margin, and win a seat. However, the failed attempt to form an electoral coalition with UKIP and results in the London mayoral elections suggest the BNP won’t experience a surge in support like the five per cent it achieved between 1999-2004.

Divisions remain over how to deal with the BNP, both at the ballot box and on the streets. Each party, of course, makes the case for its own vote being the best. Recent demonstrations in Liverpool, and at the ‘Red, White and Blue’ festival in Derbyshire over the summer, show that disagreements over the levels of militancy appropriate in confronting the BNP remain entrenched. However, the spectre of the BNP in a position of high office should be enough to make a divided left focus on what it has in common to prevent it happening.

Article first published in the April/May issue of Red Pepper

11 comments:

  1. "By winning between eight and nine per cent of the vote, the Greens argue, the party finishing fourth gets the seat. To shave a crucial single percentage point from the BNP total, they say, Labour’s vote would have to increase by four per cent, compared to the Green Party’s one."

    That makes sense. As Peter Cranie says, tactical voting needs to be taken into consideration on this occasion.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Bloody good article. Well done for picking that up.

    ReplyDelete
  3. "Recent polls and past projections show that if the elections were held tomorrow, the BNP would finish fourth by a narrow margin, and win a seat. However, the failed attempt to form an electoral coalition with UKIP and results in the London mayoral elections suggest the BNP won’t experience a surge in support like the five per cent it achieved between 1999-2004."

    I really wouldn't bank on that latter point. If the government keeps on fucking up so extravagantly, the BNP will do a lot better than it itself hopes for. We need some decisive action from Gordon Brown. I won't be holding my breath though.

    ReplyDelete
  4. UKIP are to spend £2m on targetting disenchanted Labour voters. This should syphon off a good chunk of the BNP vote! http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article6329902.ece

    ReplyDelete
  5. ‘Being creative’ should involve making clear that the present difficulties of the mainstream parties are not so much problems as opportunities. The mainstream politicians are being called on to account for themselves both personally and politically. Voters should not refrain from voting for the mainstream parties, as a sort of passive protest, but should see the present expenses controversy as part of a continuing process of improving public life in Britain.

    And of course electing the BNP would be an extremely retrograde step. The BNP whether through maliciousness or incompetence are involved in an apparently never ending flow of political, social, financial and legal problems. These problems include murder, libel, incitement to racial hatred, sacking pregnant employees, public relations mistakes and much else.

    The present expenses controversy involving the mainstream parties should be seen as part of a continuing process of improving public life in Britain. We should not be shocked into electoral apathy by the surprises and realities, involved in calling our politicians to account for themselves. This new accountability is one of the fairly unexpected advantages of the new information age, which of course has only existed for about the last ten years. We should be pleased by the realities and changes following on from the expenses controversy. These changes should not involve electing the BNP.

    We should not throw babies out with the bath water.

    DON’T VOTE FOR THE MALICIOUS AND MORONIC BNP.

    ReplyDelete
  6. You said:
    "For better or worse, the UK’s first past the post electoral system largely prevents smaller parties gaining a serious role in government, at both local and parliamentary levels."

    You could not be more wrong. So far, the BNP has won ONE seat in a PR election. But they have won more than 70 seats in FPTP elections. In some council wards they hold all three ward seats, thanks to the FPTP voting system.

    ReplyDelete
  7. "You could not be more wrong. So far, the BNP has won ONE seat in a PR election. But they have won more than 70 seats in FPTP elections. In some council wards they hold all three ward seats, thanks to the FPTP voting system."

    Edinburgh, spot on it's not whether it's FPTP or PR that matters so much. It's the turnout that is crucial. Low turnout= higher chance of the nazis of success.
    I was looking at some parts where they had won, can you believe the turnout is sometimes as low as 18%, and they still only just scrape in.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Anonymous, your "spot-on" comment is confusing. You seem to be saying I'm right about FPTP and PR and then you say it doesn't matter - it's turnout that is crucial.

    Low turnout has certainly been a factor, in that supporters of other parties did not vote, allowing the BNP voters to become the largest minority and so take the FPTP seat.

    But the voting system is crucial. No matter what the turnout, with PR the BNP (or any other party) would win no more than their proportionate share of the seats.

    It is the FPTP voting system that allows the BNP (or any other party) to win more than their fair share of the seats and to take all of the seats in the 3-member wards even when they have less than one-third of the vote.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Sorry, Edinburgh. I reread my post and it doe's seem confusing.

    I agree, FPTP system means a political party only needs a very small band of supporters to vote them in if it is a low turnout.
    They would only need to win with a very small number of votes 3 times and would control an entire ward.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I was never confused.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Dicky Barnbrook9:09 pm, May 21, 2009

    I used to be confused.
    Not now, us two Queens are going to meet the real Queen!

    ReplyDelete