UK "OPPOSITION" CAUGHT IN
CYNICAL STING OVER RACISM
By David Icke

The UK's Labour Party government led by Illuminati yes-man, Tony Blair, has caught their "opposition" Conservative Party in a propaganda sting just ahead of the June General Election.

They have packed the, supposedly non-partisan, Commission for Racial Equality, with Labour Party place men and women and used this body to attack the Conservative Party for being racist. They have insisted that all Members of Parliament sign a pledge not to make race an issue at the upcoming General Election, thus ensuring, of course, and on purpose, that race is made an issue in the run up to the General Election. The Labour Foreign Secretary, Robin Cook, who is so far out of his depth in government office that he needs a frogman's suit, made a carefully-timed speech to co-incide with the "independent" Commission's offensive on the Conservative Party.

The sting has also focussed on the retiring Conservative MP, John Townend, for his remarks about immigration and what he calls "bogus asylum seekers". Ironically, the Labour Home Secretary, Jack Straw (another frogman's suit) has made similar remarks on asylum seekers. John Townend may well be a racist, but I know from my own experience in British politics that the Labour Party is itself full of people who have similar views to Townend, and the Liberal Democrats, who portray themselves as whiter than white on race and sexual orientation, are quite willing to emphasise the fact that an opposition candidate has a black wife or is a homosexual if they think it will win them votes from the very racial and sexual bigots they claim to oppose.

There are racists and bigots and non-racists and non-bigots in EVERY party and this latest propaganda coup on the Conservative Party has nothing to do with the other parties caring about the rights of non-white people. In fact it is, in truth, the opposite. They are cynically manipulating the black and Asian voters in the UK because they know that their votes have become very significant in deciding the General Election, which is due to take place in a few weeks time. So they use the time-honoured and proven technique of spreading fear to attract those votes to them. What could be more racist than that?

I do not write this as a Conservative supporter. I have never voted for them in my life and I find their administrations grotesque, not least those of Ted Heath and Margaret Thatcher. In fact, I find them just as grotesque as Labour adminstrations and, god, the thought of it, a Liberal Democrat government. I merely make the point that here is another cynical manipulation of the UK population, especially its non-white members, that is designed for no other reason than to maintain the Illuminati-led Labour Government in power for another five years.

  

Here is a news story showing the way the sting is being played out in the media and the way that both the knowing and unknowing are playing their part in this propaganda coup. I also find it rather ironic that someone like Lord Taylor of Warwick, who has progressed through the British establishment to become a member of the elite House of Lords, should condemn in this way the very party who put him there. If he only realised how he is being used by racists in other parties to achieve a desired end, maybe he would take a deep breath and think again.

[My comments are in brackets].


David Icke

William Hague was today facing the threat of losing the Conservatives' most senior black figure unless he expelled "racist" MP John Townend from his party.

Lord Taylor of Warwick has warned the Tory leader he could quit unless Mr Townend is axed for suggesting immigration was making Britons a "mongrel race". [Personally, much as I disagree with Townend's view, I defend his right to say it. What is a healthier society - one in which people speak their mind and everyone else knows where they stand, or one, symbolised by the Labour Party, in which those who have similar views to Townend keep quiet, but work behind the scenes to achieve the same ends?]

The threat came after Mr Hague tried to end the race row engulfing him by warning the veteran East Yorkshire MP to stay silent or be expelled.

Instead Lord Taylor was incensed that his call for Mr Townend to lose the party whip had been rejected and demanded the ultimate sanction of expulsion.

"If John Townend is still in the party at the start of the election, my position may well be untenable," he told The Times.

The peer said he was looking for "certain signals" before deciding whether to quit the party he has repeatedly said he wants to stay in and reform.

Earlier Lord Taylor condemned Mr Hague's warning to Mr Townend - rather than action - as "disgraceful".

"This is pathetic and typical of weak leadership," he told PA News.

"On at least three separate occasions Mr Townend has uttered racist remarks and William Hague has done nothing.

"What this decision amounts to is an acknowledgement that the party has a racist MP but that he can remain a Conservative MP as long as he keeps his mouth shut. [A bit like being a Labour MP, then?]

"This means William Hague can make all the clever speeches he wants to about race relations, but people will not forget that he refused to act against a racist MP in his own party."

The peer has made it clear his future in the party has been in doubt since he received a summons to explain earlier criticism of Mr Hague to the Tory chief whip in the Lords.

The leadership has bent over backwards to make it clear there was no question of disciplinary action being taken.

And shadow social security secretary David Willetts, who first said Mr Townend could still be disciplined, today praised Lord Taylor as "a valued member of the team in the House of Lords." [Decoded = My god, I better not say what I really think, we are in enough trouble already.]

Mr Hague repeatedly argued that taking the whip from Mr Townend would be a mere "gesture", because he stands down as an MP at the general election.

But he decided to issue his ultimatum after Mr Townend's latest attack overshadowed his visit last week to his home turf of Yorkshire, where he was heckled on the issue, a senior Tory official revealed. [In other words, Hague has been caught in a sting and he has no idea how to respond to it because heads he loses and tails he does the same.]

"Removing the whip would have been no more than a gesture because he will not be a Member of Parliament very much longer," the source said.

"However, what William has now decided to do is go further than that and say unless Mr Townend steps into line with the broad thinking of the party on this issue, he will be expelled, and that is not gesture politics." [De-coded = I better make a gesture because I am getting myself in deep trouble here and it is all getting out of hand.]

Before the ultimatum was issued, Lord Taylor said Mr Hague's inaction makes it "very difficult" for him to remain in the party. [Well go then, darlin', I am sure we will all survive. Join the Labour Party, there's a life's work for you there, also. I wonder if he's heard the one about the Devil and the deep blue sea?]

"I have always said it would be too easy to walk away from it," he said.

"I am determined to stay and fight but having said that, if a situation arises where it is obvious I cannot square remaining in the party with my conscience I would have to reconsider."

That decision, he said, "is not in my hands. It is being driven by John Townend and William Hague".

Trade and Industry Secretary Stephen Byers rubbed salt in Tory wounds, praising said Lord Taylor as "a politician of great principle" who would be welcome in the Labour Party.

[Yes, that would be good to attract the black vote, wouldn't it Mr. Byers, which is all this is really about. Mind, when you have a racist bigot like George W. Bush pictured on the front pages of US newspapers kissing a black child during his presidential campaign, it shows what levels of cynicism politicians are capable of. If Lord Taylor was attacking the Labour Party, of course, he would immediately cease to be, to Mr. Byers, a "politician of great principle". ]

Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy, a stern critic of what he sees as an "extreme" Tory Party under an irresponsible leader, echoed Lord Taylor's sentiments. [This would have nothing to do, of course, with the fact that the main opposition to the Liberal Democrats in many English electoral consituencies where they have any chance of winning is the Conservative Party.]

"Today's confusion and prevarication is a damning indictment of William Hague's leadership," Mr Kennedy said.

"William Hague's Conservative Party has been tested and yet again found seriously wanting."

[He would feel at home in your party then, Mr. Kennedy, eh?

And a few people can't control the world....?]


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