British National Party Doubles Its Vote!
British National Party Doubles Its Vote!
The following article from the Guardian in the UK headlined that the BNP doubled its vote.
Nick Griffin, leader of the British National Party scored a significant 10% of the vote in his race for Parliament in a multi-party field. The British National Party ran a record 110 candidates and doubled its vote from the 2001 election and is nearing the point where it is feasible for some of its candidates to win seats in Parliament. The BNP’s vote came in spite of the fact the Conservative Party, led by the hyper-Zionist Howard, falsely portrayed itself as the only party opposing immigration with a chance to win. In fact, the Conservative Party has consistently sold out the British People and immigration has continued with the same ferocity under the Conservatives as it did under the Labor Party.
Because many voters don’t want to “waste” their vote they are often influenced by the media orchestrated opinion polls which portray nationalist candidates as as a “wasted vote.” When people believe they have to vote for a lesser evil to prevent a bigger evil, it distorts the true support a party or candidate has. It is safe to say that th Nick Griffin and the British National Party support is easily more than double than the vote percentage received. That fact makes the BNP one of the major Parties in Britain today.
Nick Griffin is slated to give a major speech at the 2005 International European American Conference in New Orleans on May 20, 2005. Europeans and Americans from around the world anxiously look forward to his presentation. –David Duke
BNP doubles its vote as it builds on support in inner cities
Leader Griffin polls 10% as party benefits from focus on immigration
David Hencke
Friday May 6, 2005
The GuardianThe British National party last night built on its surprisingly good performance in the last general election by doubling its vote in some of the first results from the 112 seats they contested this year.
From the first declared result in Sunderland South, where the party increased its share of the vote from 1.9% to 3.8%, the BNP appeared to entrenching its support in run-down city areas.
Across the North-east the party polled between 3% and 4%, even when it was contesting a seat for the first time.
read the original article in the Guardian.
















RSS 2.0
Atom 0.3
RDF