John Kingsley Read

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Kingsley Read (19371985) was chairman of the British National Front from 1974 to 1976. A former member of the Conservative Party and chairman of the Blackburn Young Conservatives he left to join NF in the early 70s.

After securing the support of potential rival Roy Painter, Read was elected Chairman of the National Front on October 21, 1974 in a victory for the 'populist' or neo-Imperialist wing of the party over the supporters of John Tyndall who had an overtly National Socialist (i.e. Nazi) background. Tyndall refused to accept his defeat and attempted to overturn it through the courts, eventually succeeding in 1976.

Read then quit the party along with many of his followers to establish the more respectable National Party (NP). The party was initially successful, winning two seats on Blackburn Council (one of them Read), but they failed to build on this early success after their other councillor was disqualified for election irregularities, and Read eventually left active politics to retrain for local community work instead.

After the murder of a young Sikh man in a suspected racist attack, Read remarked during a speech at a NP meeting of 'One down, a million to go', which effectively ended his presentation of a more moderate stance. Great play was made of this by both the National Front and the Anti Nazi League, but Read denied having made the comment - nevertheless he was found guilty and fined by local magistrates for it.

He subsequently became a great admirer of Margaret Thatcher and her policy of privatisation, and is rumoured to have re-joined the Conservative Party before his death in 1985.

Read died in 1985 and upon his death was claimed by Searchlight magazine to have been working as a mole for them. This was disputed by Nick Griffin and many others who assert that Kingsley Read had been working with the knowledge of other leading members of the NF to feed false information to the magazine deliberately, although John Tyndall was convinced that Kingsley Read had been a double agent. [1] Kingsley Read's legacy continues to be debated as a result of this still unsettled confusion, and in the confusing world of Britain's far right -where claim & counter-claim are sporadic - the truth may never well be known.

[edit] Elections contested

Date of election Constituency Party Votes %
February 1974 Blackburn NF 1778 4.2
October 1974 Blackburn NF 1758 4.4
March 4, 1976 Coventry NW NP 888 5.7

[edit] References

  1. ^ J. Tyndall, 'An Enemy Agent is "Exonerated"', Spearhead, August 2002, p. 11


The far right in the United Kingdom
Pre-1945 political parties and groups:

Anglo-German Fellowship | British Brothers League | British Fascists | British Peoples Party | The Britons | Imperial Fascist League | The Link | National Fascisti | National Socialist League

Post-1945 defunct political parties and groups:

British Democratic Party | British Empire Party | British Movement | British National Party | Column 88 | Constitutional Movement | Flag Group | Greater Britain Movement | League of Empire Loyalists | National Democratic Party | National Fellowship | National Independence Party | National Labour Party | National Party | National Socialist Action Party | National Socialist Movement | Official National Front | One Nation | Patriotic Party | Racial Preservation Society | Union Movement | White Defence League | White Nationalist Party

Active political parties and groups:

British National Party | British Peoples Party | Combat 18 | England First Party | Freedom Party | International Third Position | League of Saint George | National Democrats | National Front | National Socialist Movement | Nationalist Alliance | New Britain Party | New Nationalist Party | Northern League | November 9th Society | Racial Volunteer Force

Pre-1945 people:

John Amery | A. F. X. Baron | Henry Hamilton Beamish | John Beckett | Hastings Russell, 12th Duke of Bedford | Barry Domvile | William Evans-Gordon | Robert Forgan | Neil Francis Hawkins | J. F. C. Fuller | William Joyce | Arnold Leese | Rotha Lintorn-Orman | Diana Mitford | Unity Mitford | Lady Cynthia Mosley | Oswald Mosley | Alexander Raven Thomson | Henry Williamson

Post-1945 people

Ian Anderson | John Bean | Jane Birdwood | Andrew Brons | A. K. Chesterton | David Copeland | Mark Cotterill | Sharon Ebanks | Richard Edmonds | Andrew Fountaine | Nick Griffin | Jeffrey Hamm | Anthony Hancock | Patrick Harrington | Derek Holland | Colin Jordan | John Kingsley Read | Michael McLaughlin | Eddy Morrison | David Myatt | John O'Brien | Denis Pirie | Kevin Quinn | Anthony Reed Herbert | Robert Relf | Charlie Sargent | Simon Sheppard | Troy Southgate | Keith Thompson | John Tyndall | Richard Verrall | Martin Webster | Martin Wingfield | John Graeme Wood

Related articles:

Battle of Cable Street | British National Front election results | British National Party election results | British nationalism | Europe a Nation | List of British fascist parties | National Party of Europe | Political Soldier | World Union of National Socialists