The UK General Election 2024 – Lessons to learn for Racial Nationalists – Part 2

In Part 1 of this series we discussed what the figures behind the votes in the General Election meant for Racial Nationalists. Here, we identify voting patterns and discuss the way ahead.The Immigrant Vote

Britain’s minority ethnics (who probably won’t be a minority for much longer) have traditionally been overwhelmingly Labour voters. But in this election a new trend has developed.

Many of these people, especially Muslims, identify with the Palestinians in their struggle with the Israeli bandit state. The war in Gaza that started on October 7th last year has galvanised this feeling intensely. For that reason, many of them do not support Labour any more. They don’t feel attracted to the Tories either. After all, both Labour and the Tories (and the LibDems) have a “Friends of Israel” section that exercises disproportionate power in the party.

With the non-White population here burgeoning like never before, the time has arrived when they can exercise considerable influence on the result of elections. Many Muslims have abandoned Labour and support the Greens, who are the only party to publicly support the Palestinians against Israel.

The Greens, generally, are more extreme left wing than Labour. Most of them are former Communists, Trotskyists and Anarchists. Their policies on the environment are largely the same as those of the main parties, but taken to their logical conclusion. If given the chance, they would ruin the economy and impose a dictatorship over the general population “to protect the environment”. This is a trend to watch in future elections.

The Negative Vote

Another factor to consider is this. Probably since the 1960s, and possible before, increasing numbers of voters in our country have voted negatively at General Elections. They have given up hope of being able to vote for a candidate or party that truly reflects their own opinions, feels their own fears, and shares their own aspirations. So they vote against the party or candidate they hate the most. This keeps many people voting for the same party in every election.

They daren’t vote for a minority party, even though its policies may reflect their own views more than those of any other party, for fear that it may help the “other lot” get in. Both Labour and the Tories take advantage of this by urging voters not to “waste” their vote on a candidate that “cannot win”.

The two main parties are the main beneficiaries of negative voting. People vote Labour to keep the Tories out, and vice versa. But this may be coming to an end, at last. With the success of Reform UK in getting a foothold in Parliament and replacing the LibDems as the third party nationwide, the stranglehold on British politics that Tory and Labour have enjoyed for so long may be loosening.

Just one more thing to note about negative voting. And that is that by-elections are different. There people can vote for one of the minority candidates (there are often several in a by-election) to give their usual favoured party, particularly if it is the party in government, a “kick up the backside”. And without the danger of really upsetting the applecart.

These are often positive votes, albeit misrepresented by the mainstream media as a “protest vote”. For that reason it is to be hoped that the new Parliament will, in time, provide a healthy number of by-elections where the two main parties can receive a bloody nose. That, at least, is my “negative wish”.

The Way Ahead

I’ve mentioned Reform UK a number of times in this post and the previous one. It would be impossible not to, given their meteoric rise in recent years. They are represented as the chief party of the “far right” by the mainstream media, which is not surprising. Compared to the two main parties and the LibDems, they are “far right”, but only because those other parties are so far to the left. Nigel Farage and the rest of the Reform UK leadership have been careful to distance themselves from genuine racial nationalism, which itself is not necessarily “far right”.

This is from fear that the mainstream media will give them an even worse press, and that the criminal elements of the left will be mobilised against them, as they were against the National Front in the 1970s.

They would have to endure personal physical violence and all the other tricks of the left – cancellation of meeting hall agreements, accusations of “nazi” links, and violence at meetings so as to associate them in the public mind with violence and therefore not a party to vote for.

Hence their softly, softly “populist” approach, talking about “net migration” figures as if the qualities of the migrants coming in every day across the Channel and into our airports are much the same as those of native Britons emigrating out of Britain.

British racial nationalists know better than to fall for that one. Farage and his comrades won’t talk about race or ethnicity. They won’t point out the obvious – that the recent riots in Leeds, Manchester, Southport and East London, for example, are race riots. They won’t talk about how immigrants themselves are “racist”. About how they even wage war against each other based on which group of people they support in their home countries. In East London, for example, the rioters comprised two groups of Bangladeshis fighting each other over events happening in Bangladesh.

If Farage and his team had only been honest, and had the courage to come out and say that race is the issue, they would have had millions more voting for them. They would probably have fifteen or more MPs. The Reform UK voters are voting for immigration to stop. But they are also voting for the existing migrants from the third world that already live here to be repatriated, by force if necessary.

They are saying that they don’t want to disappear from history in a sea of black and brown through miscegenation, or racial interbreeding. They don’t want their grandchildren, or any more remote descendants of theirs, to be anything other than White, just as they are.

More anti-White measures on the way

One last word. It’s already evident that Starmer, even though his party only garnered the support of one in five registered voters, isn’t afraid to throw his weight around in bringing in more anti-White measures. It’s quite possible that Labour’s policy of bringing in quotas, so that every Council in the country has to house a minimum number of migrants, probably in council and social housing that White people themselves need, will, somewhere, some time, provoke some kind of violent reaction from the locals.

In fact that is probably what Labour and the anti-White establishment is hoping for. It will be their excuse to ban all “far right” political parties, on the basis that their existence encourages anti-immigrant violence and is a threat to law and order.

If they do such a thing, it may well be the spark that starts the fire. Our main towns and cities are already tinderboxes waiting to explode into flames. And for that the establishment has nobody to blame except themselves.

But they will blame people like us in a bid to save their own skins, and eliminate all effective opposition to their revolting plans for the final destruction of our country and race.

It will be up to us and all who follow us in the years ahead to out-manouvre these traitors and vermin.

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