I really want to celebrate the fact that I was among the voters in the UK’s North West region who re-elected Chris Davies of the Liberal Democrats as a Member of the European Parliament (MEP). At some point, later in the day, I am sure I will. Right now however I am angry that Nick Griffin, leader of the British National Party (BNP) is one of our eight MEPs.
The North West win has not come as a surprise. In the run up to the election nearly every other party tried to convince the electorate that a vote for them would count as an anti-BNP vote. The threat of a BNP win was real. What is unreal is this seeming unwillingness to accept that there are racist people in the UK (at least 132,094 live in the North West) and that on June 4th these racist people exercised their democratic right and duly sent not one but two -Nazis to represent the rest of us in Brussels.
Apparently all this is the fault of the mainstream political parties. It was they who alienated and excluded “regular voters†from the political and democratic process. That the BNP win is a direct result of the frustration that “regular voters†feel and have felt for a long time – they have expressed this frustration by way of a protest vote.
Rubbish. Utter rubbish.
Firstly, if Labour, Conservatives and Liberal Democrats are deemed mainstream political parties, the remaining eight options on the North West ballot paper should have provided sufficient choice for those seeking an alternative view. Failing that, the right to invalidate one’s ballot paper is the ultimate protest vote but it comes as no surprise that BNP voters did not take this course of action. Those who voted in favour of Griffin’s party were not protesting; they were endorsing a hate group that has unfortunately been allowed to masquerade as a political party.
Secondly, to assume that a sense of disillusionment and disenfranchisement is reason enough for a “regular voter†to lend his or her support to a hate group is a leap in a logic that I am unwilling to take. Unless of course regular voters†is code name for “racist, homophobic and xenophobic white voters.â€
If the BNP’s relative success in the European Parliamentary Election shall be discussed along the lines of finding fault and apportioning blame then I have no problem in placing all the blame on the BNP voters around the UK but in particular those in the North West and York and Humber region.
Whatever forms the discussion will take; there is no room for those who argue that the BNP supporters are unaware of the party’s racist, homophobic and xenophobic beliefs, or that BNP voter is well meaning but ill educated person who has been duped. If condemnation for the BNP party is (almost) universal then the same should be true of its supporters.
We certainly should not attempt to portray them as victims; they seem to be doing a good job of it themselves. Listening to Nick Griffin citing the Race Relations Act as the basis of potential law suits against employers who sack BNP supporters is reason enough for us to raise the level of the debate surrounding the BNP and its existence as a political party.
One reason why I detest the BNP so much is because I, like so many others, can see through the name change that transformed the National Front into its present form. Comparisons have been made between the BNP and the Ku Klux Klan and I could not agree more with these comparisons. Yet unlike the KKK, the BNP has been granted political party status, which has resulted in what Mshairi describes as a schizophrenic relationship between the rest of the nation and the party and its supporters.
That is why on the one hand the BNP can appear on a ballot paper yet its members are denied the right to openly associate with their party of choice. It is the same flawed logic that saw the other North West MEPs refuse to share a stage with Nick Griffin as he gave his victory speech despite the fact that they will be sharing a forum in Brussels.
I think our leaders and law makers need to decide where they stand on the issue of the BNP and should that day ever come, I hope they are bold enough to place BNP in the same category as all other hate groups and revoke their political party status. Until that time our discussion of the BNP and its increasing support be limited by this rather bizarre cycle of misplaced blame and unwarranted empathy.
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John says
We live in a democracy and that affords us with the freedom of political expression as well as freedom of speech. As Voltaire said, ‘I may not like what you say but I will defend to the death your right to say it’. Hitler banned the Communist Party and North Korea bans all political opponents. They are a democratically elected party who have the right to represent those who elected them. If you don’t like it, tough sh*t.
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Ron Smith says
You make some good points in your article ‘only a racist votes for a racist party’. I agree that to be voting for the BNPÂ you probably have to be a racist.
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But I think you also somewhat miss the point on the nature of racism. You seem to understand racism as something that springs up from nowhere- an irrational hatred that someone is born with. A burning desire to thwart another group of people instilled in the womb.
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Now I’m not denying that to discriminate against anyone on the basis of race seems irrational to any civilised person, however, I think your argument does hinge on racism being a hatred born from nothing. And as a social scientist I do find that hard to believe.
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My understanding of racism is that it is a symptom of other deeper rooted social issues. I believe that the more you venture into towns with little understanding of other cultures (to be living next door to someone of another race does not automatically mean you understand their culture!) and limited education, combined with important social problems such as unemployment etc the more likely you are to find a higher proportion of racists. This is not a coincidence.
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The BNP’s success has partly been because of a failure of the mainstream political parties. The BNP peddle lies and easy answers which are attractive to people who want someone or a group to blame for the way their life is. A big problem is that mainstream political parties seem to prefer to not engage with the BNP. They prefer to try and silence them. This actually helps the BNP because it means that no one is taking the trouble to explain to their members why their ‘easy answers’ are not in fact answers at all.
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I don’t believe that someone who is a racist or sometimes says or does racist things (such as vote for the BNP) is automatically irredemable. I think we need to focus on bringing these lost souls back into the mainstream.
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We as the mainstream need not be afraid of engaging with the BNP at a political level. We should not fear to take on their arguments, which once confronted will show their shaky foundations. Rather than silencing them, we should be correcting them. But ultimately, we will only really get rid of racists once we address the deeper rooted issues such as ignorance of other cultures, unemployment and other social ills.
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rantersparadise says
I feel the anger Kui but agree with posters. If only life was that black and white! Ahem!
I’ve had the ‘opportunity’ to go to good posh english schools since I was a child and even when I was living in Africa, my parents had a neutral English accent or my mum who had a stronger accent spoke to us in French. And when we weren’t in French schools, we were at international schools, so spoke American lol.
This ‘opportunity’ has been brilliant in seeing how racist people-so called friends I even knew- were and are.
One great example is calling up for a flat in a leafy suburb in London and the agent said it was a decent place because no blacks lived there.
Another was going for a job interview and sailing the interview on the phone but when I got there, it suddenly went cool. Maybe he didn’t like my skirt?
I could go on but you get the picture.
There is no such thing as not seeing colour (race).
Sad but this is humanity as we know and love it.