Monday, June 08, 2009

BNP Wins Two Seats


Yes, yes, yes, it seems whitey may be waking up from a Methusalan sleep. The BNP has picked up two seats during the European elections. More importantly, many "hard right", "conservative" and "nationalistic" parties made progress. This indicates a groundswell movement is afoot, probably brought about by third world immigration. I wait and watch with anticipation.

The far right party's leader Nick Griffin picked up a seat in the North West region in the early hours of this morning, after candidate Andrew Brons won in Yorkshire and the Humber.

Mr Griffin said that the presence of his party in Brussels would "transform British politics", adding that the country had become a "bankrupt slum" under Labour.

In his victory speech at Manchester Town Hall, he said that the British public were angry about the "many ways the liberal elite have transformed this country."

"For the last 50 years, more and more of the people of Britain have watched with concern, growing dismay and sometimes anger as an out-of-touch political elite has transformed our country before our very eyes," he said.

The election of two BNP euro MPs is a significant blow to Gordon Brown, with both of their seats won from his own party.

Labour supporters and MPs will be disgusted that it is under a Labour government that the BNP have made their biggest breakthrough.

Andy Burnham, the Health Secretary, said: "It is a sad moment. There are concerns about immigration. The Government have to get a response to those concerns."

"We have got to understand why people have voted for the BNP. We should redouble our determination to take them on and take them out of British politics." (The BNP isn't the enemy arsehole, it is your policies and the voters are responding.)

Mark Francois, the Tory Europe spokesman, said: "It's a disappointing night for British politics."

Mr Griffin ran for a European seat in the North West region, where he had earlier said that the vote was "on a knife-edge".

Earlier in the evening, before the results were announced, protesters had prevented Mr Griffin from reaching the European elections count for the constituency where he was standing.

Mr Griffin finally reached Manchester town hall in a police van after his vehicle and bodyguards were pelted with eggs by a noisy group who yelled: "Fascist scum." (Yep, the vocal minority are starting to run scared.)

Meanwhile, far-Right parties and extremists made gains across Europe on Sunday night as protest votes and low turnouts marked elections for the European parliament.

Exit polls suggested that voter participation would fall below 45 per cent, the lowest level since the first direct elections to the parliament 30 years ago.

Angry voters punished governments in Spain, Bulgaria, Hungary, Latvia, Greece and Ireland – all countries hit hard by the economic crisis.

8 Opinion(s):

Dachshund said...

About blerrie time too!

Viking said...

no...... this is not good. UKIP best represents "Britishness", not the BNP. but the health minister rightly said that voting bnp is "two fingered salute to the establishment" and he's right.

Doberman said...

It's not bad either. Something has to give and if anything it sends a strong message to those in the establishment that think they have been ordained to rule Britannia forever. Same for the rest of Europe and the US, where independents outnumber Democrats and Republicans. People are not as stupid as politicians wish them to be.

Anonymous said...

It was funny actually. Didn't the poms oust the conservatives 15 years ago stating that they wanted "a change" ???

Fucken hilarious to see what they did to themselves

Bantu Education said...

"Health" Secretary Andy Burnham said....
"We have got to understand why people have voted for the BNP. We should redouble our determination to take them on and take them out of British politics."

The BNP doesn't even bother putting up candidates in quiet country towns or rural areas. They go where the "racists" are - and, by an amazing co-incidence, those areas just happen to be the same ones "enriched by divershitty" and with "vibrant multicultural communities".
I wonder why that is?

I imagine there are a few Brits who live in France who hate the French, but surely most of them like the French? So why do most British "racists" live so close to darkies? I suppose it must be because they feel good when discriminating against darkies.

If these divershitty-promoting liberals wish to cure BNP-voting whites of their racist attitudes maybe they should subsidise the racists to move to another area.

Alternatively they could subsidise the "divershitty" to move away - preferably very far away - from the racists. Whichever option is the cheaper of the two would work.

That way they would achieve their goal of "taking them (the BNP) out of British politics".

Viking said...

@Bantu Education

It's true what you say. Funny how people who live near the 'Bringers of Diversity' tend to dislike them.

Anonymous said...

Bantu Education said this:
"I imagine there are a few Brits who live in France who hate the French, but surely most of them like the French? So why do most British "racists" live so close to darkies? I suppose it must be because they feel good when discriminating against darkies."

The truth is much more simpler. It is not that these so called racists want to live close to the darkies, it is because the darkies have settled close to where the previous liberal, now racist person lives.

It is a case of, to know a darkie, is to hate him.

Exposure to darkies is the biggest case of racism.

Dachshund said...

@Anon 9:08 PM. The Americans also wanted "a change". Funny how those people who vote for change usually feel they have a lot more change coming to them after they realise they have been conned. Like Nando's Julius Malema ad.

It's good to see that indigenous Britons are beginning to see the light.