League of Empire Loyalists

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The League of Empire Loyalists was a pressure group (also called a 'ginger group' in Gt Britain and the British Commonwealth; see below for context), established in 1954, campaigning against the dissolution of the British Empire in the 1950s and 1960s.

It was a small group of current or former members of the Conservative Party led by Arthur K. Chesterton, a former leading figure in the British Union of Fascists, who had served under Oswald Mosley. The League found support from a number of Conservative Party members, although they were disliked very much by the leadership.

They were well-known for various stunts at Conservative Party meetings and conferences (acting as a constant irritant to the party). These stunts included hiding underneath the speaker platform overnight to emerge during the conference in order to put across their points. At the 1958 party Conference in Blackpool, George Irvine Finlay (who became Director of Organisation for the Scottish Conservatives) was involved in forcibly removing members of the League of Empire Loyalists. The widespread media coverage resulted in his being sued for assault; not only was he acquitted but costs were awarded against the prosecution (George Irvine Finlay Obituary, Herald, 05/01/1999).

As time progressed, the group became primarily concerned with opposing non-white immigration into Britain and were instrumental in the founding (with other right-wing groups) of the National Front in February, 1967.

According to historian Roger Eatwell: "Most of its 2000-3000 active members were Colonel Blimpish rather than fascist: in fact many of its members saw it as a Conservative ginger group . . . an attempt to keep the Conservatives true to the Imperial way." [1]

Members were mostly proud of the traditions and achievements of the United Kingdom, and did not openly support Nazism or Fascism. There was however a widespread anti-Semitism in the group. However, Chesterton - despite his past - refused to ban Jews from membership, resulting in John Bean, Colin Jordan, John Tyndall (politician) & Martin Webster leaving in 1957 to form their own openly Nazi groups, the National Labour Party (Bean) and the White Defence League (Jordan et al). These groups were later to merge to become the original British National Party which itself later became part of the National Front.

According to Rodney Legg, the subscriptions secretary of the period, the membership of the LoEL dropped from c.3000 in 1958 to 300 in 1961, primarily due to deaths from old age.

In the 1964 British General Election, three members of the League stood as "Independent Loyalist" candidates, all three collecting a few hundred votes each, but finding that donations poured in from all over the country to help them fight the campaign. This made a deep impression on Chesterton, whom had largely been obliged to fund the LoEL out of his own pocket, and although he was to be preoccupied over the next three years with his legal case contesting the will of his financial benefactor, the millionaire Robert K. Jeffrey, it proved to be the beginning towards the creation in 1967 of the National Front.

[edit] References

  1. ^ R. Eatwell, Fascism : A History, London: Pimlico, 2003, p.334

[edit] See also


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