Difference between revisions of "Graham Webster-Gardiner"
(→Further Reading) |
|||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== | ||
− | *Joan U. Isaac 'THE NEW RIGHT AND THE MORAL SOCIETY' Parliamentary Affairs (1990) 43(2): 209-226 | + | *Joan U. Isaac 'THE NEW RIGHT AND THE MORAL SOCIETY' ''Parliamentary Affairs'' (1990) 43(2): 209-226 |
+ | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
<references> | <references> |
Latest revision as of 17:00, 30 January 2011
Graham Webster-Gardiner is a conservative activist who stood in the 2001 UK General Election for the United Kingdom Independence Party (Epson & Ewell), having previously been a member of the Conservative Party and playing a leading role in the Conservative Family Campaign.
According to Searchlight magazine (in 2001) Webster-Gardiner was a 'former leading figure in the right-wing and anti-immigrant Monday Club during the 1970s' and 'a hardline anti-communist, regularly attending functions at the South Vietnamese and Cambodian embassies. Today Webster-Gardiner is the South East organiser of UKIP and a member of its executive committee.'[1]
Affiliations
Further Reading
- Joan U. Isaac 'THE NEW RIGHT AND THE MORAL SOCIETY' Parliamentary Affairs (1990) 43(2): 209-226
Notes
<references>
- ↑ Nick Lowles and Kate Taylor 'UKIP lurches right', Searchlight Date: June 2001, accessed 22 August 2010