"Race Chief 'Trevor Phillips' Page 2"

You have to wonder just what more 'Race Chief' Trevor Phillips wants

Liam Byrne is the MP for Birmingham Hodge Hill, and Chief Secretary to HM Treasury. On the BBC's 'Question Time' Thursday 21/1/10 he said that 55% of the Birmingham population are Pakistani, how many other areas/towns are the same! - Liam as 'HM Treasury' knows a thing-or-two about 'expenses

During her Radio 2 show on Wednesday 21/1/10, Sarah Kennedy described Enoch Powell, who was sacked from the shadow cabinet by Ted Heath in 1968 for his 'Rivers of Blood' speech about the dangers of mass immigration, as "the best prime minister this country never had".

--------------

There is something wrong when a white person is told "she is wrong kind of white (English)" and 'unsuitable' but when a mixed race person is told "You are the wrong colour and culture" gets £333,000.

I would quote the last sentence of Enoch Powell's "River of Blood" speech made on April 20 1968
"All I know is that to see, and not to speak, would be the great betrayal".

When you go to the 'Polls' this year you must ask questions.
Back
---
This Labour MP has one foot on the BNP's 'Bandwagon' and is scooting along hoping to get the other foot in front of Nick Griffin at the next General Elections whom she is in competition with in Barking this year.

Hodge and the BNP
In April 2006 she commented in an interview with The Sunday Telegraph that eight out of ten white working class voters in her constituency may be tempted to vote for the British National Party (BNP) in the local elections on 4 May 2006 because "no one else is listening to them" about their concerns over unemployment, high house prices, and the housing of asylum seekers in the area.

In an article for The Observer on 20 May 2007 Hodge argued that established families should take priority in the allocation of social housing over new economic migrants.

There was wide media coverage of her remarks, and she was strongly criticised for giving the BNP publicity in the local election campaign. The BNP went on to gain 11 seats in the election out of a total of 51, making them the second largest party. Local Labour activists blamed Hodge, and it was reported that moves were under way to deselect her. The GMB wrote to Hodge in May 2006, asking for her to resign as a result of the election.

In November, 2009, the leader of the BNP, Nick Griffin, announced that he intended to stand for election in Barking against Hodge at the next General Election, in 2010.
Margaret Hodge says the BNP tap into people's frustrations and that's why we've seen a rise in support for them.
That sounds like 'The Teapot calling the Kettle black'
2010 General Elections Voting?? You must ask questions!