The far right is falling apart, but leftists keep on scaremongering about these ‘bloody nasty people’
by Patrick Hayes
In the conclusion to his book Bloody Nasty People: The Rise of
Britain’s Far Right, Daniel Trilling lists ‘10 myths about Britain’s far
right’, and begins first and foremost with the ‘myth’ that ‘the threat has
passed’. His attempt to puncture this myth is lame – the British National Party
(BNP), he acknowledges, is now a ‘failed project’. It has been all but wiped
out in elections and is riddled with internal divisions. All he can do is point
to the English Defence League’s (EDL’s) declaration of support for the recently
formed British Freedom Party (BFP) in April this year as evidence of a ‘new
vehicle’ for the far right.
Unfortunately for Trilling,
EDL leader Tommy Robinson has already quit the BFP and currently languishes in
jail, accused of entering the US under a false identity. The EDL itself is now
having problems mobilising more than a couple of hundred people for a demo and
its central Facebook page, with its 79,000 ‘supporters’ that Trilling cites as
evidence of its ascendancy, has shut down.
A reader of Trilling’s book
may then be puzzled. Why is a left-wing journalist dedicating his time to
writing a book subtitled ‘the rise of the far right’ at a time when the far
right in Britain is in no way on the rise? The only way Trilling’s subtitle is
accurate is if you see it as giving a historical account of the rise of the BNP
following the collapse of the National Front. But Trilling is no historian. A
far more interesting phenomenon to discuss at the moment would be the decline of far-right groups in the UK at
present and their failure to gain significant purchase with the public.
But this is not the story Trilling wants to tell. It seems only too
important to him that the spectre of the far right remains. Indeed, his use of
the word ‘vehicle’ to describe the need for the emergence of the EDL after the
collapse of the BNP is telling. Often in the book, he makes it sound like an
evil fascist entity plagues Britain through the ages, continually changing
form, looking for new host bodies through which to infect cultural and
political life. ‘The EDL’, he says, in one revealing sentence, ‘is further
evidence of how the far right has had to accommodate to the reality of modern
Britain’. He writes repeatedly about how the EDL has strategic and tactical
advantages over the BNP, as if its emergence was a manoeuvre by a great Lord of
the Rings Sauron-like figure who has commanded the dark forces of Britain’s
right-wing extremes since time immemorial.
From the outset of the book,
however, Trilling fails to define his terms. He is nervous about using the term
‘fascism’ and opts instead for what he calls the more neutral catch-all term
the ‘far right’. Where he does attempt to define fascism, he chooses a quote
from US historian Robert Paxton, who said ‘fascism is a system of political
authority and social order intended to reinforce the unity, energy and purity
of communities in which liberal democracy stands accused of producing division
and decline’.
According to this definition,
then, the possibility of fascism lurks among any communities that are critical
of liberal democracy. Wary of the idea of multiculturalism? Concerned about the
intolerance of Tony Blair’s rallying call to ‘liberate Britain from the old
class divisions, old structures, old prejudices, old ways of working and doing
things that will not do in this world of change’? According to Trilling - who
comes across as a great cheerleader for a New Labour-esque vision of
multicultural Britain - to have such concerns is seemingly to be on the path
towards fascism.
Despite noting that the EDL’s
Tommy Robinson became disillusioned with the BNP because his black friends
weren’t able to join, and that the EDL is a big supporter of Israel and had
Asian spokespeople, Trilling is keen to highlight common threads between the
two groups. He cites the findings of a survey of EDL sympathisers that reveals
what he believes to be the tell-tale ‘familiar factors’ of far-right thinking.
These sympathisers share ‘pessimism about the UK’s future, worries about
immigration and joblessness… mixed by a proactive pride in Britain, British
history and British values’.
The extent to which, during a
double-dip recession, concerns about the future of the UK or joblessness might
be perfectly legitimate isn’t explored. And any questioning of immigration
policy is portrayed as sign of wrongheadedness. It seems that Trilling would
have been right alongside Gordon Brown when, in the run-up to the 2010 UK
General Election, he generated a furore by branding Rochdale pensioner Gillian
Duffy a ‘bigoted woman’ for raising issues of immigration and joblessness. If
we accept Trilling’s understanding of far-right thinking, Duffy must have been
infected by fascism. Certainly he is keen to bash historian David Starkey for
‘willingly repeating’ on the BBC’s Newsnight the BNP’s ‘mainline of propaganda –
that Britain was being undermined from within by racial mixing and an
undeserving poor’.
For someone adept at making
the most tenuous links to fascism, however, Trilling seems blind to the more
authoritarian tendencies of left-wing activists and the state. He has no words
of criticism for the erosion of free speech that comes with ‘no platform’
policies, or the censorious nature of campaigners who tried to prevent the BBC
from airing an edition of its topical debate programme Question Time featuring BNP leader Nick Griffin in
2009 - despite the fact that Griffin was an elected member of the European
Parliament (MEP).
In a bizarre, Orwellian
moment, Trilling attempts to rewrite history to suggest that the EDL was
prevented from protesting outside a mosque in Tower Hamlets last year due to
the actions of Unite Against Fascism activists ‘blocking the road, joined by
several thousand local residents’. More importantly, the UK Home Office had
slapped a ban on the EDL marching in the borough, enforced by an
almost-unprecedented mobilisation of police officers from across the country
who significantly outnumbered the EDL’s marchers (see The Battle of Cable Street it
wasn’t). No matter how you spin it, these ‘jubilant’
anti-fascist protesters were in reality cheering the actions of the state
clamping down on the freedom to assemble – the only way they were responsible
for preventing the EDL march was to the extent that they lobbied the state to
ban the demonstration beforehand.
Trilling’s blinkered account
of the triumph of the anti-fascist left over the far right, coupled with his
continual refrain - against all the evidence - that the far right is still in
the ascendancy, reveals far more about his own outlook than about reality. Trilling’s
tilting at ‘fascist’ windmills reeks of a certain desperation that is shared by
many on the traditional left. Devoid of any sense of what they are for, left-wing campaigners seek
to gain a sense of purpose by saying what they are against: cuts, naturally, but
more than anything, fascists.
After the resounding electoral
defeats of the BNP, the emergence of the EDL was a wet dream for directionless
lefties. Now the EDL is on the wane, all left-wing activists
can cling to is the idea of the persistence of an amorphous blob of ‘bloody
nasty people’, who will flock to the dark forces of fascism should the correct
‘vehicle’ appear. You would have to be a Bloody Naive Person to believe such
baseless scaremongering.
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