New Party (UK) (original) (raw)

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British fascist political party, 1931–32

New Party
Abbreviation NUPA
Leader Sir Oswald Mosley
Founder Sir Oswald Mosley
Founded 1 March 1931; 93 years ago (1 March 1931)
Dissolved 1932; 92 years ago (1932)
Split from Labour
Merged into British Union of Fascists (larger part)
Succeeded by Scottish Democratic Fascist Party (smaller faction)
Newspaper New Times, Action
Youth wing NUPA Youth Movement
Party Militia Biff Boys
Ideology AuthoritarianismProtectionismAnti-federalism
Political position Syncretic[1]
Politics of the United KingdomPolitical partiesElections

The New Party was a political party briefly active in the United Kingdom in the early 1930s. It was formed by Sir Oswald Mosley, an MP who had belonged to both the Conservative and Labour parties, quitting Labour after its 1930 conference narrowly rejected his "Mosley Memorandum", a document he had written outlining how he would deal with the problem of unemployment.

On 6 December 1930, Mosley published an expanded version of the "Mosley Memorandum", which was signed by Mosley, his wife and fellow Labour MP Lady Cynthia and 15 other Labour MPs: Oliver Baldwin, Joseph Batey, Aneurin Bevan, W. J. Brown, William Cove, Robert Forgan, J. F. Horrabin, James Lovat-Fraser, John McGovern, John James McShane, Frank Markham, H. T. Muggeridge, Morgan Philips Price, Charles Simmons, and John Strachey. It was also signed by A. J. Cook, general secretary of the Miners' Federation of Great Britain.[2]

Founding the New Party

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A flowchart showing the history of the early British fascist movement

On 28 February 1931 Mosley resigned from the Labour Party, launching the New Party the following day. The party was formed from six of the Labour MPs who signed the Mosley Manifesto (Mosley and his wife, Baldwin, Brown, Forgan and Strachey), although two (Baldwin and Brown) resigned membership after a day and sat in the House of Commons as independent MPs; Strachey resigned in June. The party received £50,000 funding from Lord Nuffield and launched a magazine called Action, edited by Harold Nicolson.[3] In addition, Nicolson produced a New Party propaganda film titled Crisis and aimed to get it shown in the cinemas but the censors banned the film as it was considered it would "bring Parliament into disrepute" due to its depiction of MPs asleep on the benches. In the event the film was only shown at New Party meetings. Mosley also set up a party militia, the "Biff Boys" led by the England rugby captain Peter Howard.[4]

The New Party's first electoral contest was at the Ashton-under-Lyne by-election in April 1931. The candidate was Allan Young, and his election agent was Wilfred Risdon. With a threadbare organisation they polled some 16% of the vote, splitting the Labour vote and allowing a Conservative to be returned to the Commons. Two more MPs joined the New Party later in 1931: W. E. D. Allen from the Unionists and Cecil Dudgeon from the Liberals. At the 1931 general election the New Party contested 25 seats, but only Mosley himself, and a candidate in Merthyr Tydfil (Sellick Davies stood against only one Independent Labour Party (ILP) candidate in Merthyr, while Mosley stood against both Conservative and Labour candidates in Stoke) polled a decent number of votes, and three candidates lost their deposits. Mosley's New Party general election campaign received prominent press coverage in various national newspapers during 1931 with The Manchester Guardian reporting that "The stewards were wearing rosettes of black and amber – the Mosley colours. Busy bees, hiving the honey of prosperity? That may be the symbolism of it."[5]

The New Party programme was built on the "Mosley Memorandum", advocating a national policy to meet the economic crisis that the Great Depression had brought. His desire for complete control of policy making decisions in the New Party led many members to resign membership. He favoured granting wide powers to the government, with only general control by Parliament, and creating a five-member Cabinet without specific portfolio, similar to the War Cabinet adopted during the First World War. His economic strategy broadly followed Keynesian thinking and suggested widespread investment into housing to provide work and improve housing standards overall and also supporting protectionism with proposals for high tariff walls.[4]

After the election, Mosley toured Europe and became convinced of the virtues of fascism. Gradually, the New Party became more authoritarian, with parts of it, notably its youth movement NUPA, adopting overtly fascist thinking and the wearing of "Greyshirt" uniforms.[6] The New Party's sharp turn to fascism led previous supporters such as John Strachey and Harold Nicolson to leave it. In 1932, Mosley united most of the various British fascist organisations to form the British Union of Fascists into which the New Party subsumed itself. Out of the Scottish section was formed the Scottish Democratic Fascist Party, headed by William Weir Gilmour.

An unrelated New Party was launched in Britain in 2003.

By-elections, 1929–1931

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By-election Candidate Votes % share Position
1931 Ashton-under-Lyne by-election Allan Young 4,472 16.0 3

1931 UK general election

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Constituency Candidate Votes % share Position
Ashton-under-Lyne Charles B. Hobhouse 424 1.4 4
Battersea South Leslie James Cuming 909 2.3 3
Birmingham Duddeston Jessie Williams 284 1.06 4
Birmingham Yardley E. J. Bartleet 479 1.0 3
Chatham Martin F. Woodroffe 1,135 3.6 3
Coatbridge William Weir Gilmour 674 2.13 3
Combined English Universities Harold Nicolson 461 3.4 5
Galloway Cecil Randolph Dudgeon 986 3.0 4
Gateshead John Stuart Barr 1,077 1.9 3
Glasgow Cathcart J. Mellick 529 1.5 3
Glasgow Shettleston W. E. Stevenson 402 1.2 4
Hammersmith North Ronald Eric Noel Braden 431 1.4 4
Limehouse Herbert L. Hodge 307 1.4 3
Manchester Hulme John Pratt 1,565 4.6 3
Merthyr Sellick Davies 10,834 30.6 2
North East Derbyshire Albert Vincent Williams 689 1.7 3
Pontypridd William Lowell 466 1.3 4
Reading E. R. Troward 861 1.6 3
Sheffield Brightside E. C. Snelgrove 847 2.2 4
Stoke Oswald Mosley 10,534 24.1 3
Shipley W. J. Leaper 601 1.4 3
Wandsworth Central A. M. Diston 424 1.6 3
West Renfrewshire Robert Forgan 1,304 4.0 4
Whitechapel and St Georges [Ted Lewis](/wiki/Ted%5F%22Kid%22%5FLewis "Ted "Kid" Lewis") 154 0.7 4
  1. ^ Love, Gary (2007). "'What's the Big Idea?': Oswald Mosley, the British Union of Fascists and Generic Fascism". Journal of Contemporary History. 42 (3): 447–468. doi:10.1177/0022009407078334. JSTOR 30036457. S2CID 144884526.
  2. ^ Labour Party statement on the New Party, 23 October 1931
  3. ^ Selwyn, Francis (1987). Hitler's Englishman: The Crime of Lord Haw-Haw. Routledge.
  4. ^ a b Jones, Nigel (2005). Mosley. Haus Publishers Ltd.
  5. ^ "From the archive, 26 October 1931: Sir Oswald Mosley captures an audience in Manchester". The Guardian. 26 October 2012.
  6. ^ Worley, Matthew (2010). Oswald Mosley and the New Party. Palgrave MacMillan.