TITVS ADVXAS - THE CENTVRION OF TRVTH On February 1st 2010, TITVS ADVXAS was reopened but will now be more light-hearted, being run by a third party. Titvs Advxas has agreed to this on the understanding that it continues with its Nationalist theme... Disclaimer: Please note that these posts are entirely the opinion of the authors not the British National Party nor anyone else. ,

Tuesday 8 September 2009

Welsh Secretary holds knife to David Dumbledorn's neck By TITVS ADVXAS

That well known supporter of government funded, and both trade union and fully cross-party supported UAF (Unite Against Fascism), The Secretary of State for Wales and MP for Neath, Peter Hain has publicly announced that if invited, he will refuse to share the platform of The BBC's Question Time with Nick Griffin.
Perhaps he will follow on from his henchman, Weyman Bennett, who in February this year, laughably refused to 'share' a radio platform with BNP deputy leader, Simon Darby, and face public ridicule by refusing to share a platform by asking Mr Griffin questions via David Dumbledorn. 
 
WELSH Secretary Peter Hain is to boycott the BBC’s flagship political debate programme Question Time over proposals to invite the British National Party to take part.
Mr Hain, a regular panellist on the weekly question-and-answer programme, last night urged other Cabinet ministers to follow his lead and decline to appear alongside BNP members.
Labour has long refused to share a platform with the BNP, arguing that to do so would give legitimacy to the party’s far-right views.
But the BNP’s performance in June’s European elections – it won two seats – has forced broadcasters to re-think the coverage they give the party, and handed mainstream political parties a similar dilemma.
The BBC said it was bound by law to treat all properly registered political parties with “due impartiality”.
Mr Hain – a veteran of the anti-fascist campaigns of the 1970s – insisted the “no platform” policy should remain in place.
He said: “I was horrified when I heard about this, because it makes them [the BNP] appear as if they are another political party sitting on a panel along with democratically-elected parties.”
The Neath MP said the BBC was “the best and highest-quality broadcaster”, but on this occasion had made a “shabby, shameful decision” it should reverse.
Some campaigners and MPs have questioned whether the “no platform” strategy needs to be re-thought in the wake of the election results.
In Wales the BNP came seventh with 5.4% of the vote, winning none of the four seats on offer. But the party won a seat in the north-west of England and a second in Yorkshire and the Humber, where it achieved 9.8% of the vote.
Mr Hain is seeking an urgent meeting with BBC executives in an attempt to persuade the corporation to re-think, and said he rejected any watering down of the “no platform” approach.
“I make no bones about it, this is personal for me,” he said. “The BNP have broken up ordinary public meetings that I have spoken at in previous years, and their like have thrown rocks through my front window when I lived in London.”
The BBC has yet to issue a formal invitation to the BNP, but the corporation is understood to be planning an installment of Question Time from London this year.
Labour is reviewing its position, but Mr Hain said: “I don’t think any Labour minister should go along with this quisling stance.”
The Conservatives have indicated they will make a senior figure available for the programme, as have the Liberal Democrats.
BNP leader Nick Griffin has already been interviewed on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme and has also appeared on the Andrew Marr show on BBC1.
A spokesman for the BBC said: “The BBC is obliged to treat all political parties registered with the Electoral Commission and operating within the law with due impartiality.
“Due impartiality is achieved both by ensuring appropriate scrutiny for each party and by the appearances of a range of politicians across a series of programmes.
“Our audiences – and the electorate – will make up their own minds about the different policies offered by elected politicians.”

What the BBC seem to be doing, is trying to pull away from the shackles that the Marxist Liberal Government hold over Auny Beeb.

Time will tell, however, and it may well be another NUJ stunt to try to put The BNP in a bad light.

Well if they think that they can do that to OUR NICK, then they are surely wrong, as he has the magic tongue, the gift of the gab (almost cetainly due to his gypsy ancestry), and the ability to run rings around any and all that they may try to throw at him.

Go Nick!

©TITVS-ADVXAS VIII-IX-MMIX
As Published



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