Author Archives: Searchlight Team

Italian antifascists march against fascist thuggery

By Mark Scholl

Anti-fascists demonstrated in Rome last Thursday to protest about right-wing street thuggery – in particular the actions of a group of CasaPound fascists who had opportunistically pounced on and beaten up some passer-by students. The event drew opposition politicians, trade unionists and ANPI, the organisation dedicated to keeping alive the spirit of the Partisans who resisted Mussolini and Hitler before and during the Second World War.

It’s no great surprise that the street soldiers of Italian fascism, numbered in the thousands, are stepping up attacks on leftists, liberals and immigrants. Italian politics has long been, at best, febrile, volatile and emotional. It also has a history of violence, whether from the far left (including the Red Brigades) or the far right – Ordine Nero, the Bologna bombings and the mid- to late-70s ‘Years of Lead’.

Into this historical maelstrom enters a changing Italy. An Italy that both needs foreign workers and despises their presence. An Italy where the Roman Catholic church is less influential than in the past. An Italy where the once powerful Italian Communist Party (PCI) of Enrique Berlinguer is but a distant memory. Years ago, communist and socialist politics existed not only at the highest levels of political power but across the grass roots.

These days, grass roots left groups are nowhere near as active within working class communities as they used to be. In some cases, fascist groups such as CasaPound have moved in to occupy the vacuum, providing food banks and free medical services in the most vulnerable areas, often neglected or even forgotten by politicians in Rome. (This is a strategy that British groups on the far right are slowly beginning to take to heart, and an outcome that our own mainstream politicians should learn a lesson from).

CasaPound is now more than 20 years old, having been founded in 2003 by veteran fascist Gianluca Iannone (above). He was joined in his activities by four others who broke into, and effectively took over, a building in Via Napoleone III in Rome’s Esquilino neighbourhood (below). Having fascist friends and sympathisers in high places works nicely for CasaPound, which has occupied the technically state-owned building, now its de facto HQ, ever since.

Although the group had its origins in a previous squat called CasaMontag (named after the antihero of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451), Iannone came from the more conservative Tricolour Flame party (Fiamma Tricolore). But CasaPound is radical. Its name means Pound House, in honour of the antisemitic poet Ezra Pound, who lived in Italy for many years after the Second World War.

CasaPound’s ideology – its style, if you like – is calculated to appeal to youth. Leftist leaders such as Che Guevara and other 60s radicals are much beloved, at least on the surface. Marxist economics is discussed alongside Tolkien and HG Wells. Casual street clothing and modern music are preferred. No clownish 1930s fascist uniforms or military bands here.

Some have described CasaPound as ‘fascist hipsters’ and they have a point. There is a focus on music festivals, right-wing rap, an active social scene and a community spirit. The CasaPound HQ alone houses around 60 people. Squatting, historically more of a left-wing movement, has spread to several dozen similar buildings / communities.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni comes from strictly fascist roots. She was active in the National Alliance student movement, the successor party to Giorgio Almirante’s post-war fascist MSI party. The unapologetic fascism of Almirante met with considerable success in the late 60s and early 70s, though he never won over the workers.

But Meloni affects a different image. Seeking ‘good optics’ she wears chic clothes, presents well and is a popular figure within some segments of Italian society. Her anti-immigrant, nationalist rhetoric has also been tempered by a huge dose of reality. Migration has not declined under her premiership but risen. Cheap talk about ‘sending them back’, Fortress Italy, and using the navy to stop the boats are more popular rhetoric than political policy.

The sticky problem of dealing with mass migration, caused largely by war and famine in Africa and the Middle East, cannot be solved by Meloni-style politics. No matter how much money she raises from Italian big business, and no matter how many right-wing free market think tanks she impresses, the results are the same.

This is the atmosphere in which the street-level movement has begun to flourish. In parallel with the stylised, partly sanitised and slightly stifled fascism of Meloni, out of the shadows step CasaPound and their fellow travellers from fascist hooligan firms and youth groups such as Blocco Studentesco. These are not the kennel club dogs of Melonismo. These are the rabid street dogs. And they bite.

Heritage Party conspiracy-nuts fight 41 seats

After Reform UK, the far-right party fielding the most candidates in the general election is the Heritage Party, a UKIP breakaway heavily involved in promoting conspiracy theories about vaccinations and other strange obsessions. It is putting up 41 candidates. They are standing against Farage in Clacton, and against the English Democrats candidate Steve Laws in Dover & Deal.

The party’s founder and leader, David Kurten (pictured, in earlier times with Nigel Farage), was prominent in the leadership of UKIP and represented it on the London Assembly from 2016 till 2020 but split in 2020 to set up Heritage. He contested the Old Bexley and Sidcup parliamentary election for Heritage in 2021, gaining 1.7% of the vote.

The party is controlled by a limited company which is in turn entirely under the control of Kurten himself: he has 75% control and the right to appoint of sack a majority of the board of directors. Members needn’t expect any significant democratic say in the running of this party.

Kurten has been in trouble a few times when he was caught posting disinformation online. Last November he posted film of a luxury yacht which he claimed had been purchased by Ukrainian President Zelensky with funds from the UK, USA and EU (pictured). It turned out the yacht had not been bought by anyone – it was still listed for sale. In fact, it is still listed for sale today.

Then he posted a picture of a ‘woke’ LGBT sandwich, suggesting he’d bought it that day. In fact, the picture was five years old and had been digitally manipulated to look recent.

Since its launch, Heritage has lurched increasingly rightwards, embracing the full panoply of conspiracy theories which excite the wilder fringes of the far right: it’s against low traffic networks, 15-minute cities, net zero, digital currencies, 5G networks, fluoride in the water supply, comprehensive sex education. It is also strongly pro-Putin.

Its conspiracy obsessions are given free rein in their take on the Covid pandemic, describing the lockdowns of four years ago as “the tyrannical lockdown in the UK imposed by the Tories, Labour and MSM working in lockstep with the WEF, WHO and other globalists”.

At the time Kurten claimed that the infection, at the time killing a thousand people a day, was no worse than flu, and he discouraged people from getting vaccinated.

But Heritage are silent on some things as well – not least of all the fact that Kurten is a fanatical fundamentalist Christian who wants to completely ‘abolish’ abortion rights.

What we also know is that, despite the ostensibly responsible presentation of these issues online and in its election publicity, life at grass roots level in the party is very different. Local branches have become home to some of the most off the wall, conspiracy-obsessed, antisemitic crazies you will come across.

Britain’s fascists cross fingers and hope for Conservative collapse

By Paul Gale

Leaders of Britain’s fascist parties are already planning their next moves, anticipating the Conservative Party’s collapse at the general election.

Mark Collett has struck a short-term deal with English Democrat leader Robin Tilbrook and is running four members of Patriotic Alternative (now Britain’s largest nazi movement) as election candidates. Steve Laws, a Dover-based active racist who has ties to both PA and the rival Homeland Party, is also standing as an English Democrat.

But Collett’s conversion to parliamentary democracy is only skin-deep. The only reason he decided to stand PA candidates in this election (under ED colours because PA has not yet succeeded in registering as a political party) was because he feared that PA members would continue to defect to Homeland. This rival party, founded by Collett’s former ally Kenny Smith, is registered and presents itself as a real political party, in contrast to PA which it sees as more interested in online streaming and stunts.

Smith (pictured, above) had already decided that this General Election had come too soon for Homeland to fight credible campaigns, and he is now secretly hoping that the PA candidates suffer crushing defeats, or that the PA-ED alliance breaks up quickly.

Collett’s problem is not only to keep that alliance of convenience alive until polling day, but also to persuade some of his own leading activists that elections are worth their time and trouble.

Even Collett himself has been known to argue that the UK has now embraced a socially liberal and multiracial society to such an extent that there’s no point in community politics or the ballot box. Instead, Collett and others in PA sometimes argue, their fellow nazis should be developing networks of businesses so they can withdraw from mainstream society and create their own racist communities.

In the USA such ideas have often inspired terrorist violence, so it’s no surprise that several leading PA members have been imprisoned for a variety of offences, including incitement to racial violence and terrorist crimes.

Unfortunately, in 2024 many mainstream journalists are so obsessed by balance and seeking to be ‘fair’ to extremists that they have failed to scrutinise PA/ED candidates properly. For example, the Manchester Evening News, in an article that appeared on several local news websites, interviewed PA’s Craig Buckley (candidate for Leigh and Atherton) under the soft headline ‘”I’m no racist neo-Nazi,” says Greater Manchester election candidate.’

Rather than taking a serious look at PA or informing their article by discussion with anti-fascists, the MEN lazily allowed Buckley to present his racism virtually unchallenged.

Some of PA’s ideas are so crazy that they have achieved the amazing feat of making their rival Alek Yerbury look sane. Yerbury (pictured, below) is leader of his own small and imperfectly formed, military-style movement, which recently registered as the National Rebirth Party. He has recently mocked Collett and others for what he regards as cowardice and stupidity, since according to Yerbury, the strategy of withdrawing into racist communities is defeatist and will inevitably fail.

Where Collett, Smith, and Yerbury agree is in looking forward to the collapse of the Conservative Party, and hoping that parliamentary democracy itself will lose credibility.

The British far right is unsure whether or not to welcome the growth of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK. On the one hand it shifts the ‘Overton window’ in favour of extremist ideas. But on the other hand, the likes of Collett fear another lengthy period in which Reform UK becomes the face of the far right, just as UKIP did, followed by the Brexit Party, for most of the 2010s.

During the past week one of Farage’s candidates was exposed as having argued that Britain shouldn’t have fought Hitler during the Second World War, while Farage himself is now dropping the mask and stating that the West was wrong to stand up to Putin.

Farage says so many contradictory things that it’s difficult to pin him down, but the one consistent thread seems to be that Reform UK’s leader and many of his candidates are more attracted to dictatorship than to democracy. They are more drawn to conspiracy theory and the shrill assertion of extremist slogans, than to serious political debate.

A major problem in this campaign is that it has been left to journalists such as the BBC’s Nick Robinson to confront Farage. Labour’s leading figures are happier making the election about economic competence, while avoiding the battleground of ideas.

We can hope that Farage’s repetition of Moscow propaganda lines in his latest interview will cause Labour to take the gloves off.

There are one or two people in Reform UK who are prepared to say a bad word about Nazism. But rather than criticising violent anti-immigrant rhetoric, these allies of Farage see echoes of the Third Reich in …the NHS!

One of Farage’s close advisers, the barrister and former UKIP secretary Matthew Richardson, now based in the USA where he is an important liaison with Trump circles, has described the NHS as “the Reichstag bunker of socialism”, and as being at the heart of a system of “wasteful socialist programmes”.

UKIP in disarray as members “leave in droves”

Photo: Short lived leadership team Lois Perry and Nick Tenconi

For a party in the middle of a general election campaign, UKIP is in a state of some disarray, with reports of an exodus of members outraged at recent revelations.

Although its website continues to insist that Lois Perry is party leader 2024-2028, this is of course complete nonsense. Perry quit several days ago.

The Kippers may be hoping to get away with pretending that they have been too busy to update the web site recently, but that really won’t wash. Before the resignation, Lois was prominently addressing members about what was coming during her reign.

 Now all of that gush has vanished. Instead, readers can discover the views of the Perry-appointed deputy leader, Nick Tenconi, on any number of subjects.

The NEC is supposed to declare an interim leader on occasions when the leadership is vacant, but there’s no sign that they have done so. So Tenconi continues as deputy to a leader who doesn’t exist.

There’s a glaring logical flaw there somewhere but, hey, this is UKIP.

The party’s inactivity in naming an interim leader, or opening nominations for fresh elections for a new permanent leader, is probably partly explained by it being a bit short-handed right now. Even ignoring Perry’s debacle, UKIP Ltd has lost three directors in the last seven weeks and named no new ones.

And there’s no sign that this tail-turning trio – Anne Marie Waters, Julie Carter and Sqn Ldr Peter Richardson – have even been replaced on the NEC (the appointment of directors always lags behind that).

The party currently has no named Secretary, no Northern Ireland spokesman, no Justice, Abuse & Exploitation, Equality & Disability spokesman, and no Defence & Veterans spokesman. Not forgetting that the position of Patrons Co-ordinator is not so much empty as being squatted – under-fire chairman Ben Walker ‘temporarily’ has his thumb in that plum.

There would normally be 16 active people on the UKIP NEC – 12 elected members, party leader and chairman, and two appointees. The party are currently only identifying nine elected executives and four ex-officio members, who are Walker, Tenconi, Perry (!) and honorary president Neil Hamilton (jokingly described as one party wag as ‘always contactable by Ouija board’).

It’s probably as much as that committee can cope with to supervise the party’s general election defeats in 23 constituencies.

With Lois Perry widely predicted to be heading for Reform, former deputy leader Rebecca Jane tearing lumps out of Ben Walker in Searchlight, and defeated leadership candidate Bill Etheridge handing out some stick on streaming media, it’s no surprise that we are hearing reports that UKIP members are leaving in droves and that even whole branches are teetering on the brink. Oops!

UKIP veteran hints at Farage linked anti-UKIP plot

Was Lois Perry’s resignation as UKIP leader part of a Nigel Farage-inspired plot?

“I couldn’t possibly comment” says her UKIP leadership election rival, Bill Etheridge.

Interviewed on the right-wing online ‘Freeman Report’, Etheridge, a long-standing, senior UKIP veteran and one of its Euro MPs from 2014 -2019, pours scorn on the idea that she was elected fairly as leader in last April’s election:

“I’m prepared to believe that a large number of activists and people involved in the party appeared to have voted or me, yet the vote turned out to be about 80% to 20% to Lois…

“So, I’m prepared to believe that a lot of people who aren’t actually active members must have voted, and all voted for Lois. I’m prepared to believe that…

“I believe, actually that Father Christmas sometimes delivers my Xmas presents and that when kids lose a tooth, the tooth fairy puts a little penny under them…”

And, when it’s put to him by host James Freeman that: “…it looks like Farage and Lee Anderson have managed to convince Lois that UKIP don’t stand a chance and so she should collapse the party and put the party into disarray, right before the general election” Etheridge goes full Francis Urquhart:

“What an interesting theory. I couldn’t possibly comment on that theory other than to say I find it fascinating…”

Watch the whole excoriating performance here: https://facebook.com/watch/?v=1576188209779767