Cameron’s Tories Want Pact with Labour to Keep out BNP in Barking



Tory Party leader David Cameron offered Gordon Brown an election pact whereby the Conservatives would not stand in Dagenham in order to help arch-leftist Margaret Hodge keep her seat against the British National Party’s Nick Griffin, the London Evening Standard newspaper has revealed.

In what is the clearest indication yet that there is no difference between the Conservative and Labour parties, the supposedly “conservative” Tory party betrayed its core supporters to back Ms Hodge, a leading Labour Party leftwing extremist, only because the BNP leader is standing against her.

According to the London Evening Standard, a “Labour-Tory pact to keep BNP leader Nick Griffin out of Parliament was floated by David Cameron.

“The Standard has learned that the Conservatives considered a radical plan to help arts minister Margaret Hodge fend off the challenge from Mr Griffin in Barking.

“Under the proposal, the Tories would have agreed not to put up a candidate against Mrs Hodge in the hope of giving her a better chance of defeating the far-Right party leader at the general election.”

It seems that the plan had been agreed upon and was only scuppered after the Communist Party front organisation Searchlight said the “pact could backfire by fuelling Mr Griffin’s “victim status”.

The BNP does not believe that this Tory-Labour election pact would have any effect on the voters, as all but the willingly blind can now see that they are one and the same party.

The policies of the both Labour and Tory parties on all the key issues are identical and there is so little to differentiate them that they may as well only put up one candidate per seat.

Issues upon which the Tory and Labour parties have identical policies:
Continued... HERE

Return to index