Part of the openDemocracy Network

Power2010

Breaking the monopoly of the professional politician: Guy Aitchison's idea for popular forums in Parliament
 

When you're in a hole, stop digging: Pam Giddy's advice to MPs who still don't get it
 

Ending the divine right of political parties: Steve Hawkins makes a radical suggestion
 

Les Miserables and Power 2010: John Jackson diagnoses the political class's selective crisis-mongering
 

A call to oD readers: Helena Kennedy calls on oD readers to support Power2010
 

More in this series

Submit your idea for the Power 2010 pledge.

The British Crisis

Do the public really want to change ‘the system’?: Stuart Wilks-Heeg presents polling evidence
 

Don't trust MPs' constitutional poker: Guy Aitchison supports the call for a citizens' convention
 

Brown's 'National Council for Democratic Renewal': Anthony Barnett on the Prime Minister's desperate proposal
 

More in this series

Navigation

delicious | digg | reddit | newsvine | furl | google | yahoo | technorati | diigolet

Syndicate content

BNP cannot be ignored

OurKingdom, 10 - 05 - 2008
delicious | digg | reddit | newsvine | furl | google | yahoo | technorati | diigolet

GJ Harris (London): On 1 May 2008, the British National Party won its most high profile office to date with the appointment of the party's mayoral candidate, Richard Barnbrook, to the London Assembly. He came fifth in the contest for mayor but then won his assembly seat through the top-up list, allocated by proportional representation with 5.3% of the vote. Whilst the BNP only narrowly met the 5% threshold needed to secure a place on the London Assebly, the result is perhaps all the more significant, considering the high turnout that was hoped would put the seat beyond their reach. The seat was solace for the party’s failure to capitalise on anti-Labour sentiment in competition with a revitalised Conservatives in the local elections outside London where the party increased its number of councillors by 10 to take its total to 55.

The far right in Britain usually provoke one of two responses: a complacency bordering on neglect, given the barrier to small party success by the British electoral system, or the hysterical ringing of alarm bells at the rise of a resurgent neo-fascism. Both are equally misguided. The BNP's recent political gains pose a problem to the democratic pretensions of a progressive opposition, as Barnbrook was quick to point out in his post election speech. The seat is potentially a stepping stone to gains in the forthcoming 2009 European elections, again allocated through PR. Success here would bring significant publicity and access to public funding, which could offer a real electoral breakthrough on the model of some of its continental cousins. It is a dangerous strategy to rely on the flaws of the democratic system as a bulwark against the illiberal democracy of the Far Right. As the BNP gains an increased pres-ence within the political arena this is a fundamental paradox for their opponents.

We have been here before; similar worries were aired in the heyday of the far-right National Front after a strong showing in the 1977 elections to the then Greater London Council with, again, 5.3%. The vote of the NF evaporated in the 1979 elections, partly as a result of Margaret Thatcher's rhetoric about the "swamping" of Britain which helped her to win. The present drift to the Conservatives could produce a similar effect, though it smacks of voting by default and an appetite for change rather than any positive content. It remains to be seen whether Boris Johnson's subsequent performance will continue to convince disenchanted Labour voters.

This is not the time for complacency therefore. The BNP, despite the “Nazi” name calling by its enemies, is a very different creature from John Tyndall's National Front. The party has made significant headway through distancing itself from its "boots-and-braces” images; strong local candidates and old-fashioned campaigning have engaged with the demands of voters on local issues. This approach has struck a chord with sections of the electorate who feel abandoned and betrayed by the major parties. The description of housewives in Sussex as knuckle-dragging Nazis just does not wash.

If lazy name calling is no answer to the democratic dilemma that the BNP poses, attempting to ‘exclude’ it simply does not work eitherwitness the ineffectiveness of the "cordon sanitaire" on the popularity of Vlaams Blok in Flanders. A refusal to engage with party officials in public office can be interpreted as an attack on the cherished British value of free speech which the party is adept in using to its advantage. The depiction of the BNP vote as a negative protest ignores the material concerns of people who have been left behind in our increasingly polarised society. It has campaigned on the solid issues of social housing, employment, linked by a diatribe against immigration.

This is hardly their preserve as the mainstream has equally jumped on the immigration bandwagon; Gordon Brown's exhortation of "British jobs for British workers", the media's current Enoch Powell fest and Islamophobia have helped to legitimise the BNP's message. The distrust towards politicians and cynicism that pervades British politics is something that the BNP is well served to exploit; claiming "to say what the people think", whilst exercising an appeal to the values of the common man against the corrupt and disengaged political elite (the “LibLabCon Trick”).

The London Labour group leader, Len Duvall, has promised to make a pariah out of Barnbrook. But this profoundly misunderstands the nature of the BNP vote: the BNP garners support precisely because they stand apart from mainstream politics. I could not help but feel unease at the departure of Boris Johnson, Ken Livingstone, Brian Paddick and Sian Berry from the podium at City Hall, as Barnbrook made his post-election speech.

Even though he has denied he is a racist there's an element of double-standards at play when meanderings about ‘picanninies’ of the bumbling "Boris” are forgivably charming, whilst the racism of the "chavvy" working class is considered unforgivable. 130,714 people voted for Barnbrook to take his seat, to dismiss their concerns so churlishly is to exacerbate the vein of disen-chantment that the BNP is keen to exploit and further their status as the people's champions against the metropolitan elite. The entry of the BNP into public office poses an enduring problem for progressives: how do we accommodate the opinions of those we find loathsome within the democratic process? By ostracising them from political debate are we not deepening the democratic contradiction of which their populist appeal is symptomatic?

This article adheres to the openDemocracy.net principles.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

edward reid (not verified) said:

Sat, 2008-11-29 00:46

are you saying the 130,000 or so, voters who voted for richard barnbrook are racist?........

Ray Bell said:

Mon, 2008-05-12 15:38

Maybe instead of ignoring the BNP, and repeating "Nazi"* all the time, we should be looking at exactly why they get the votes.

My suggestion is that the following are involved:

1) A feeling of disenfranchisement amongst working class white males.

2) Social deprivation and high crime, which affect all, regardless of ethnicity, but the effects of which are transferred onto ethnic minorities.

3) A high degree of non-integration between various social and ethnic groups, which leads to distrust and mutual animosity. This has been documented well by Darkus Howe and others - and not only applies to white-non-white relations, but between the various other groups e.g. Pakistani-West Indian.

4) A white English underclass, which is largely on benefits and has been unemployed for a long period, and sees jobs going to other groups. (In the same way, the emergence of an unemployed underclass of non-White/non-English origin is equally unhealthy.)

I think all of these things apart from #2 are taboo topics. Unless they are addressed properly, further trouble will develop, which shall be harmful to all working class Londoners, regardless of origin. Just because these things are exploited by the BNP, does not mean that they should be ignored.

* I tend to think this accusation holds a lot of water, but making it continually is tantamount to crying "wolf". Just like violence, repeated exposure tends to "harden" the witness.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><b> <i> <br> <p> <div> <img> <map>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may quote other posts using [quote] tags.
More information about formatting options

Books from Amazon

Email Alerts

Fill in the form below to sign up to our automatic daily alerts, or weekly editorial summary (you will be taken to another page to confirm which options you want).

Enter your Email


Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz

They say about OK

"the ever-stimulating OpenDemocracy"
Ekklesia

"See OurKingdom to keep up"
South Belfast Diary

"...an essential guide to understanding the dynamic constitutional situation..."
Peter Oborne

"...becoming a daily read for me."
Iain Dale

"To make sense of it all, check out OurKingdom..."
Matthew d'Ancona

"Worth a look...it is, however, recommended by Matthew d'Ancona."
The Wardman Wire

"Fast becoming the best political website around"
Tom Waterhouse, CEP

"...attracting energy from a range of contributors."
thenextwave

"...looks very promising..."
The England Project

"The excellent new OurKingdom blog from OpenDemocracy..."
The Green Ribbon

"On the internet, I keep in touch with openDemocracy, a website on global current affairs, and its useful offshoot, OurKingdom"
Andreas Whittam-Smith

"thanks to the fine folk at OurKingdom, (who manage to communicate a variety of perspectives in the way that only a decent group blog can)"
Nostalgia For the Future