Martin Webster

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Martin Guy Alan Webster (born May 1943) was a leading figure on the far-right in British politics.

Contents

[edit] Early political activism

An early member of the National Labour Party and the League of Empire Loyalists, Webster was John Tyndall's closest ally and followed him in joining the British National Party, the National Socialist Movement and the Greater Britain Movement. Webster also spent time in prison for knocking former Mau Mau leader Jomo Kenyatta to the ground outside the London Hilton hotel, for helping to organise Spearhead, and was convicted under the 1936 Public Order Act. He attracted further notoriety in 1972 when he was recorded as saying: "We are busy setting up a well-oiled Nazi machine in this country." .[1]

[edit] With Tyndall in the NF

Webster continued to be an able lieutenant to Tyndall and followed him into the National Front. Webster proved an early success in the NF, being appointed National Activities Organiser in 1969. [2] and, in this postion, jointly held the leadership of the party with Tyndall until 1974. Webster clashed with Tyndall's replacement John Kingsley Read and the clash set in motion Read's downfall, allowing Tyndall to return to the leadership. However Webster would go on to break with Tyndall and became the leading figure in the NF during Andrew Brons' leadership.

[edit] Later NF activity and expulsion

Rumours of Webster's homosexuality led to him becoming vilified in far-right circles and he also fell foul of the Political Soldier wing of the NF. In 1983 they ensured that he lost his position as National Activities Organiser, then deprived him of his place on the National Directorate, before expelling him from the party altogether. Many activists also reproached Webster for being too friendly with the police. He briefly attempted to lead his own group, One Nation, although this proved unsuccessful despite the financial support he received from Françoise Dior.

[edit] BNP and current activity

No longer involved in active politics (although he was associated with Lady Jane Birdwood for a while leading up to her death) Webster re-emerged in 1999 to claim that he had been involved in a gay relationship with Nick Griffin during the 1970s, apparently an intervention in Griffin's attempts to wrest leadership of the British National Party from Tyndall. Webster's efforts proved unsuccessful and he has yet to return on the political scene, although he writes as a freelance. He is an active cyclist and is a member of recreational cycling groups.

[edit] Elections constested

Date of election Constituency Party Votes %
May 24, 1973 West Bromwich NF 4789 16.0
February 1974 West Bromwcih East NF 2907 7.0
1979 Bethnal Green and Bow NF 1740 6.1
October 28, 1982 Peckham NF 874 3.9

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ "The Listener", BBC, Dec 1972.
  2. ^ N. Copsey, Contemporary British Fascism: The British National Party and the Quest for Legitimacy, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004, p. 16

[edit] See also