United Kingdom
Related: About this forumHave the Tories become the party of the far-right?
Some have accused the Tories of aping old BNP policies. Is it fair?
https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/politics/have-the-tories-become-the-party-of-the-far-right/28/01/
Last March, in the heat of Britains first salvoes with coronavirus, the former head of MI5 made a remarkable intervention that, given the unfolding national crisis, slid somewhat under the radar. Lord Evans of Weardale, who led Britains domestic security service between 2006 and 2013, suggested that the threat of far-right terrorism in Britain could be diminishing following Boris Johnsons election victory a few months earlier. The supposed blunting of that threat was not, he said, because the ideological extremism which sustains the far-right was fading away. Instead it was because many of the alienated voters who are usually sucked into the British National Party (BNP) or English Defence League (EDL) felt as if their voices had been heard at the ballot box after the Conservative victory the previous December. Whatever you think of the outcome of the recent election in the UK, the fact that some of the legitimate concerns that were being used as a pretext by English nationalists have now been formally acknowledged at the ballot box might be a good outcome, even though it is sort of disconcerting for southern liberals, the former MI5 director general now a crossbench peer said.
There was a significant alienated and disenfranchised group out there who didnt think the system was taking any notice of them. And thats where you need to be concerned about extremists exploiting legitimate concerns. Disaffected English nationalists were manifesting themselves at the extremes in things like the British National Party and National Action, which fed the undertone that articulated itself as extreme rightwing terrorism. In the weeks after the election, it emerged that more than 5,000 supporters of far-right group Britain First whose leaders were jailed for hate crimes against Muslims in 2018 had joined the Conservatives. We will support a party that is willing to take a firm stance against radical Islam and it looks like the Tories are willing to do that, the organisations spokeswoman said. The Conservative Partys drift towards the far-right has reared its head again this week, as the Guardian revealed that EU citizens are being offered financial incentives to leave the UK now that Brexit is done and dusted. Eagle-eyed viewers noted that the BNP had outlined a similar-sounding plan over a decade ago.
There are some caveats here. The BNP announced that it would offer non-white Britons up to £50,000 to leave the country an overtly racist proposal that is a far cry from the governments voluntary return scheme, which offers financial support up to £2,000 to encourage people to return to their country of origin. Nonetheless it sparked accusations in some quarters that the Conservative Party were veering further and further towards the fringes. It is not the first time those claims have been bandied about. Last year, an old National Front poster from the 1970s did the rounds online, which several pointing out that the fascist groups manifesto STOP immigration, SCRAP overseas aid, REBUILD our armed forces, REJECT Common Market shared many similarities with the modern Tory partys platform. This government is, undoubtedly, among the most right-wing in living memory. The home secretary has reportedly explored the idea of sending asylum seekers to a volcanic island in the South Atlantic. Many ministers seem more comfortable waging petty culture wars against the woke left and BLM than doing their actual jobs.
But far-right? Recent events in America where the far-right was effectively patronised and co-opted by Donald Trump, with catastrophic consequences surely puts that suggestion in perspective. Allegations of authoritarianism ring a little hollow, too. For all the Dominic Cummings-era sabre-rattling with the media, Boris Johnsons government holds regular press briefings wherein members of the press are able to ask questions of his Covid-19 response and hold the government to account. The UK recently offered up to three million Hong Kong citizens a path to citizenship. Dominic Raab, the foreign secretary, imposed sanctions against Belarus after the countrys dictatorial ruler held a rigged election and crushed peaceful protests on the streets moving before even the European Union. The far-right poses a real and terrifying threat in this country, and the government has been too reluctant to meet head-on. One need only look to the statue defenders who descended on London to see as much. Nor is there any doubt that the Tory party has swung hard to the right and there are undoubtedly MPs in the party who veer dangerously close to extremism. It will be interesting to see how the party treats on Desmond Swayne who, it emerged on Thursday, appeared on the antisemitic, conspiratorial Richie Allen Show last year. But Jacob Rees-Mogg is not Tommy Robinson, and Johnson is not Viktor Orbán. Not yet, anyway.
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Denzil_DC
(7,949 posts)I mean, the Trump regime held regular press conferences where the media were allowed to ask questions. If the responses are somewhat less abrasive and uncouth than those from Trump's press spokes, they're often no more illuminating, and the "left-wing" media, "traitorous" judges and various other sectors of society have been regularly demonized when convenient.
Proposing a repatriation scheme that's less generous than the one championed by the BNP and targeted at a different outgroup isn't much to boast about either.
We shouldn't forget the repeated, not particularly subtle threats from various politicians that if Brexit was not enacted, violence on the streets might result, with the implication it would be justified. That's a very slippery slope. The fact this seems to have been headed off for now by pandering to them is probably just storing up problems for the future.
T_i_B
(14,800 posts)The result of this weakness is that they have allowed the far right to drag them by the nose into an ever worse agenda.