Tories Urged Not To Ally Themselves With 'Anti-Immigrant Xenophobes' In Brussels

Tories Urged Not To Ally Themselves With 'Anti-Immigrant Xenophobes' In Brussels
|
Open Image Modal
Prime Minister David Cameron makes a speech on Europe, in central London, where he promised an in/out referendum on the UK's membership of the European Union by the end of 2017, if the Conservatives win the next general election.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Archive

David Cameron's Conservatives have been urged to rule out sitting alongside "anti-immigrant xenophobes" in the European Parliament ahead of Thursday's European elections.

Dirk Hazell, a former London region chairman of the Conservatives who is now head of the 4 Freedoms Party, told Huffington Post UK: “Londoners will be stunned if Conservative MEPs sit with anti-EU, anti-immigrant xenophobes - some of whom have been convicted for their statements."

In a letter to Syed Kamall, the Muslim leader of the Tories in the European Parliament, seen by HuffPost UK, Hazell wrote:

"Leading members of both the Danish People's and the Finns parties have made shockingly xenophobic and lslamophobic comments, some of which have resulted in convictions. I find it incredible that Conservative MEPs would even contemplate talking to these parties, yet alone associating with them."

"Can you please confirm that while you are the leader of the Conservative Party delegation in the European Parliament, you will withdraw the Conservative Whip from any MEPs who sit with AfD, the Finns Party, the Danish People's party and any parties excluded when the ECR was created and / or any other parties representing views that are similarly deplorable?"

"While London Region Conservative Chairman, l scrupulously adopted a non-discriminatory approach in selections and in all other matters. lt is a great sadness to me that your party now engages with such people."

Lib Dem MEP Edward McMillan-Scott, who used to be leader of the Conservatives in the European Parliament, also wrote a letter to Kamall urging him to rule out uniting with far-right parties.

He wrote: "As you know, when I was leader the Conservative MEPs were at the heart of European decision-making as part of the influential EPP group, alongside the likes of Angela Merkel’s CDU Party. Cameron’s decision to withdraw and form the new fringe ECR group, memorably described by the Economist as a “shoddy and shaming alliance,” was a severe blow to British influence in Europe which prompted me to join the Liberal Democrats.

"Will you sit again with whatever political alliance is formed after the election on Thursday, no matter how distasteful and isolated your newfound allies may be? Or will you do what’s right for Britain, and re-establish the Conservative's presence in the mainstream centre-right by rejoining the EPP?"

The Conservative Party was reported to be trying to cosy up Ukip's far-right friends like the Danish People's Party and the Finns Party, two hard-right, anti-immigration that currently sit with Ukip, in a bid to stop their group from collapsing.

Morgens Camre, former senior MEP for the Danish People's Party, previously said that Bulgarians and Romanians were not intelligent enough to make decisions for the EU.

Speaking in 2011, he said: “Nobody should be in doubt about my attitude towards Nazism, but the German soldiers in our streets behaved better than the Muslim boys. Much better.”

Tory MEP Sajjad Karim told HuffPostUK: "As far as the ECR group is concerned, we will not be forming alliances for groupings with anybody who is either racist, homophobic, a racist in any use of the description.

However, Karim refused to say if he opposed allying with the True FInns and Danish People's Party as "I do not know if they fall into either category".

This comes as Martin Callanan, the Tory chairman of the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group in the European parliament, has confirmed he has been in contact with Morten Messerschmidt, a Danish People's Party MEP: "We have a very good relationship with Mr Messerschmidt.. and his views on Europe are close to the ones held by the ECR."

Also, influential Tory MEP Daniel Hannan visited Helsinki to have talks with Finns Party leader Timo Soini, prompting Labour's Gareth Thomas, the shadow Europe minister, to remark that a Tory alliance with parties holding "dangerous, extreme-right views, is a very troubling development".

HuffPost UK asked Kamall for comment but received no response.

New Tory Europe Friends
Who Are The Finns Party?(01 of03)
Open Image Modal
The Finns Party, formerly the True Finn party, is led by Timo Soini. The anti-immigration party won 19% in the 2011 Finnish general election. MEP Teuvo Hakkarainen suggested gay people and Somali refugees be exiled to an island in the Baltic and is alleged to have used the N-word to refer to black people. And MEP Jussi Halla-aho was briefly suspended for the party after comparing Islam to pedophilia and suggesting Greece might need a military junta to sort out its economic problems. (credit:PA)
Who Are The Danish People's Party?(02 of03)
Open Image Modal
The Danish People's Party, led by Kristian Thulesen Dahl, is not short of controversial members. MEP Morten Messerschmidt's youth organisation was convicted of incitement to racial hatred in 2002 for arguing rape was a product of a multi-ethnic society.And the party's defence spokesperson Marie Krarup MP said Denmark should not accept any more Muslim immigrants. "We should limit the size of the Muslim minority in Denmark," she said. (credit:AP)
And Remember This Guy?(03 of03)
Open Image Modal
The reports suggest Tory MEPs will be allied with people to the right of Michal Kaminski, who was initially chair of the ECR. Kaminski's views on some issues were so controversial it was reported that the US government raised them with David Cameron. Among many things, Kaminski has said the affirmation of homosexuality will "lead to the downfall of civilization" and also faced accusations of antisemitism. (credit:Getty Images)