Difference between revisions of "Swinton Circle"
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::the [[Monday Club]] is but one example of a dense network of Tory links with the far right. | ::the [[Monday Club]] is but one example of a dense network of Tory links with the far right. | ||
− | ::Look, for example, to the 500-strong pro-Tory pressure group the Swinton Circle, formed in the 1970s by backers of [[Enoch Powell]]. Their regular journal informs us that in this country we are suffering from "an asylum invasion". We should "dismantle the BBC" and put its "far-left" commentators out of a job. And the [[British National Party]] is merely a "breakaway party" from the Tories.<ref>[http://www.newstatesman.com/200112100020 Il Duce's heirs], by Johann | + | ::Look, for example, to the 500-strong pro-Tory pressure group the Swinton Circle, formed in the 1970s by backers of [[Enoch Powell]]. Their regular journal informs us that in this country we are suffering from "an asylum invasion". We should "dismantle the BBC" and put its "far-left" commentators out of a job. And the [[British National Party]] is merely a "breakaway party" from the Tories.<ref>[http://www.newstatesman.com/200112100020 Il Duce's heirs], by Johann Hari, News Statesman, 10 December 2001.</ref> |
==Website== | ==Website== |
Revision as of 18:37, 22 May 2008
- the Monday Club is but one example of a dense network of Tory links with the far right.
- Look, for example, to the 500-strong pro-Tory pressure group the Swinton Circle, formed in the 1970s by backers of Enoch Powell. Their regular journal informs us that in this country we are suffering from "an asylum invasion". We should "dismantle the BBC" and put its "far-left" commentators out of a job. And the British National Party is merely a "breakaway party" from the Tories.[1]
Website
References
- ↑ Il Duce's heirs, by Johann Hari, News Statesman, 10 December 2001.