Campaign Against Political Correctness
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The Campaign Against Political Correctness is a British based campaign created to oppose political correctness. The name is sometimes shortened to the acronym 'CAPC'.
[edit] Aims
The campaign was set up by John and Laura Midgley in 2004. [1] It increased its appeal by appearing in high-profile media programmes such as ITV's This Morning. Since its creation, it has had the political support of MPs such as Philip Davies.[2] In 2005 John Midgley claimed that the Campaign had 5,000 supporters, including both those who had joined and those who had donated money or signed its petition. [3]
[edit] References
- ^ The first mention in the national press was in a letter titled "Tory proposal to review effects of Human Rights Act" in The Times, 26 August 2004, p. 25.
- ^ Speaker Panel, CAPC
- ^ "Answers to Correspondents", Daily Mail, 26 September 2005, p. 54.
[edit] External links
- The Campaign Against Political Correctness Official Website
- The Politically Correct Scrapbook The Politically Correct Scrapbook ISBN 0-9552078-0-0
- Database of Archives of Non-Governmental Organisations - Campaign Against Political Correctness