- Roy Painter
Roy Painter (born c. 1920s) is a Conservative politician who for a time became one of the leading figures on the British
far right .Painter, who enjoyed a distinguished career in the Army, being decorated for his services during the
Korean War fact| date=October 2007, was initially a leading member of the Conservatives inTottenham and had stood as a candidate for them in theGreater London Council . A supporter ofEnoch Powell , he was heavily involved with theConservative Monday Club , although he resigned from the group (and the Tories) in 1972 when the Club began a process of removing its most extreme members. [M. Walker, "The National Front", Glasgow: Fontana, 1977, p. 131]Following his resignation Painter joined the National Front, although he made a weak start when, as party candidate for Tottenham in the February 1974 general election he finished behind the National Independence Party candidate. A marked improvement was shown in the October election when he captured 2211 votes in the same seat, for an 8.3% share. It has been argued that the vote was as much a personal one for Painter, a popular businessman in
Haringey , as it was an endorsement of the NF. [S. Taylor, "The National Front in English Politics", London: Macmillan, 1982, p. 42] Painter felt that a firm line against theProvisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) was central to NF success and argued in the wake of theBirmingham pub bombings that 'they [the IRA] couldn't have done more to help us if we paid them'. [M. Walker, "The National Front", Glasgow: Fontana, 1977, p. 160]A dapper, dashing and charismatic man, Painter rose quickly through the ranks of the NF and by 1974 had a seat on the party's Directorate. He soon came into conflict with John Tyndall,
Martin Webster andNick Griffin , with rumours rife that he was leading a movement to expel the trio. Painter became a staunch exponent of populism and wrote an article in a 1974 issue of "Spearhead" entitled 'Let's Make Nationalism Popular' which extolled the virtues of this path. It was followed by a strong rebuttal from Tyndall, which helped to intensify the feud between the two. [M. Walker, "The National Front", Glasgow: Fontana, 1977, p. 151] Having initially considered a direct challenge to Tyndall's leadership himself, he soon threw his weight behind the campaign ofJohn Kingsley Read . [M. Walker, "The National Front", Glasgow: Fontana, 1977, pp. 173-6] The bad blood with Tyndall continued, with a pamphlet produced by Tyndall's supporters dismissing Painter as 'a vain, bumptious and insufferably conceited little man who has limitless ambition'. [M. Walker, "The National Front", Glasgow: Fontana, 1977, p. 182] Painter in turn dismissed Tyndall as a 'tin potFührer ' in the pages of "The Beacon", a pro-Kingsley Read NF paper. [M. Walker, "The National Front", Glasgow: Fontana, 1977, p. 187]Painter became effective deputy to Kingsley Read during his leadership and as a result was one of the leading figures in the National Party of the U.K. when it was set up in 1976. Initially a central figure, notably due to his considerable experience as a political organiser from his days in the Conservatives, Painter soon began to devote more time to his highly successful contract cleaning business and drifted away from the NPUK as it became rife with internal bickering. [M. Walker, "The National Front", Glasgow: Fontana, 1977, pp. 193-4] Effectively off the far right scene, Painter rejoined the Conservatives in 1978, although his role was confined to local politics. [G. Gable, 'The Far Right in the United Kingdom', L. Cheles, R. Ferguson & M. Vaughan (eds.), "Neo-Fascism in Europe", London: Longman, 1991, p. 249]
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