The Socialist 30 September 2009
Fight all council cuts
Socialism 2009: ideas to change the world
New right wing government, but success for the Left Party in Germany
Kazakhstan: Socialist activist attacked by thugs
London postal workers: Big majority to stop funding Labour
Unison witch-hunt - Defend the Four!
Honduras: Coup leaders step up repression
Nepal - mass rallies back Prachandra
Leeds council workers' strike solid
Mass rally in support of South Yorkshire firefighters
Civil service compensation scheme: Thousands say no to cuts
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Link to this page: https://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/595/8201
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No to BNP TV platform
THE BBC has announced that Nick Griffin, leader of the far-right racist BNP, will be invited to take part in Question Time, taking place in London on 22 October. The BBC's justification is the need for "due impartiality". This is laughable. As National Union of Journalists representatives at the BBC pointed out, the laws being invoked actually only apply in the period immediately before elections.
Hannah Sell
And in reality, the BBC has repeatedly shown that it is not impartial. In the run-up to the European elections, for example, Question Time refused point blank to let Bob Crow, general secretary of the trasnport workers' union, the RMT, appear on behalf of No2EU - the trade union based European election challenge. But while militant trade unionists are not given a voice on Question Time, the BNP are to be allowed to spread their poison.
The BNP has gained votes by falsely posing as a party that defends the interests of the white working class. The reality is very different. This viciously racist party attempts to divide working-class people, therefore weakening workers' struggles to defend pay and conditions.
And when actually faced with a battle to defend workers' interests, the BNP have repeatedly been on the wrong side. Most recently a BNP councillor in Huddersfield welcomed the Labour council's proposals to slash public spending, leaving it to the trade unions and socialists to fight in defence of services [see page 1].
The BNP's new constitution reveals that, despite its new veneer of respectability, it remains as racist as ever. Its "statement of principles" reads, "The British National Party stands for the preservation of the national and ethnic character of the British people and is wholly opposed to any form of racial integration between British and non-European peoples.
"It is therefore committed to stemming and reversing the tide of non-white immigration and to restoring, by legal changes, negotiation and consent, the overwhelmingly white make-up of the British population that existed prior to 1948." To achieve this would mean forcibly deporting more than five million people from Britain.
Increased electoral support for the BNP - however skin-deep - inevitably gives racists more confidence and leads to an increase in racist attacks and harassment. Nick Griffin has a long history of support for neo-fascist ideas, and the core of the BNP undoubtedly still holds these views. If they were able to implement their neo-fascist agenda it would mean a destruction of all democratic rights - including the right to vote, to join a trade union and to demonstrate.
That is why the trade union movement should mobilise to stop the BNP gaining a platform for its anti-democratic ideas. Where the BNP has already managed to establish a platform, it is necessary to be prepared to take them on directly in political debate in order to undermine them.
However, this is not yet the case on Question Time. We need to step up the campaign to demand that the BNP is not allowed on the programme. If, despite this, the BBC goes ahead, we will need the biggest possible demonstration outside - organised around clear class slogans like 'jobs, homes and services not racism'.
In this issue
Socialism 2009
Socialism 2009: ideas to change the world
International socialist news and analysis
New right wing government, but success for the Left Party in Germany
Kazakhstan: Socialist activist attacked by thugs
Socialist Party news and analysis
Socialist Party workplace feature
London postal workers: Big majority to stop funding Labour
Unison witch-hunt - Defend the Four!
Socialist Students
Marxist analysis: history
International socialist news and analysis
Honduras: Coup leaders step up repression
Nepal - mass rallies back Prachandra
Socialist Party workplace news
Leeds council workers' strike solid
Mass rally in support of South Yorkshire firefighters
Civil service compensation scheme: Thousands say no to cuts
Home | The Socialist 30 September 2009 | Join the Socialist Party
Related links:
25 years since 50,000 marched against the far-right threat
CripTales: A painful reflection of a system that pits us against each other
USA: cop killings and the anti-racist movement
Swansea BLM protest against racist police brutality
School boy assaulted by police in Tottenham
Socialist Party national meeting: Perspectives for socialism after the elections
Preparing to build a working-class force for May's local elections
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