Rupert Lowe’s Path to Power — If He Does the Right Thing

Rupert Lowe’s Path to Power — If He Does the Right Thing

Not since Mosley has a British nationalist figure had so much potential to achieve great things – or to throw it all away in one colossal error of timing.

I’m not against Rupert Lowe. Commentators who think I am are quite wrong to say that I am, so let’s get the record straight.

I am against Rupert Lowe’s Zionism, but every other party in the opinion polls -including all those lumped in with Restore among ‘Others’ (with the exception of the Corbynistas and Muslim independents) – is Zionist as well. British voters really don’t have any choice on this front.

In any case, Britain is now such a military and diplomatic minnow that it really doesn’t matter where a UK political party – or even government – stands on occupied Palestine.

Even Restore’s proposal to restrict free speech for those of us who support the Palestinians – very wrong though it is – doesn’t really bother me, because all the other choices on the ‘right’ are similarly wrong, so this too would not make a jot of difference in real life.

I’ve made my personal position crystal clear but, even if a political Santa turned me into the Prime Minister tomorrow , I wouldn’t send a single British soldier or spend a single borrowed pound to intervene in the Middle East. It just isn’t our war, and politicians do not have the right to spill other people’s sons’ blood, or waste their taxes, to advance their personal hobbyhorses.

So I discount Mr. Lowe’s extremely pro-Israel stance, because it makes no difference to Britain, and because he is never going to be in a position to send British troops to die for Netanyahu.

Rupert Lowe’s Path to Power

Actually, that’s not quite true. Rupert Lowe does have a ‘path to power’, probably not to Downing Street, but to leading a serious block of Restore MPs big enough to make him a future coalition king-maker. And, if he got to that position, he could in theory make Britain declaring war on Gaza a condition of his support for a rightist coalition – except, of course, that he wouldn’t, so the risk doesn’t exist. Hence, his Zionism doesn’t effect my calculations.

Those who complain that I am hostile to Mr. Lowe generally suggest that I criticise his running of the Restore challenge to Reform and Nigel Farage out of jealousy at his “success”. Now, it is true that Restore has around ten times more members than the BNP ever had. But it wasn’t Rupert Lowe who stopped the British National Party, it was the unholy alliance between Farage and the BBC (as Nigel has often boasted).

If I based my political stance on jealousy or resentment, I would not be consumed with hatred for Mr. Lowe, who never did the slightest harm to my career, but for the snake-oil salesman Farage. I would, logically, support Rupert Lowe to the hilt – quite literally, striving to drive him and his party deep into Nigel’s back.

But I don’t. I’m not motivated by personal sentiment, neither revenge nor ambition. I am motivated by a desire to secure the best possible future for the indigenous peoples of Britain and their future – in which, with eleven grandchildren (and another due shortly), I have a greater stake than most.

Which is why, far from being hostile to Rupert Lowe, I am quite literally the only political analyst in the world pointing out to him his real path to power. “Never interrupt your enemy while he is making a mistake”, said Napoleon. Well, Mr. Lowe is making a mistake (as the local election results will show all but the most witless on 7th May, and as even they will learn by 2029 at the latest) and I keep trying to interrupt him.

Restore_britain
With 120,000 members, and rising, Restore could become a hugely important force in British politics, but through organisation, not fantasy election wins

If I regarded him as my enemy, I would say nothing, merely leaving him to carry on with it. Instead, I have repeatedly written to and about him, explaining his mistake. I haven’t blamed Mr. Lowe for being wrong. Why would any fair person expect a man who has spent his life as a financial trader and who became an MP two years ago thanks to Nigel Farage, to have the political experience and skills of a man who has been a front-line activist for more than fifty years, and who created the ten-year nationalist electoral insurgency that blew British politics wide open for newcomers in the first place?

If you see a toddler reaching to touch the pretty flame in a fire, you sharply tell the little one ‘no!’ It would be absurd for anyone to conclude from your sharp word that you are “anti-toddler”, when in fact you are simply doing your job as an adult, protecting the child from its own inexperience.

It’s time to be adult about Restore. Mr. Lowe and – even more so – his followers, are greatly excited by the push poll which gave Restore 10% support. The rise of the ‘Others’ category in genuine polls to 6% (I’ve even been told 8%, though I’ve not seen it personally) has also got them saying “that’s Restore, but the pollsters don’t want to admit we exist”.

Biggest Party

There may be a bit of truth in that, and I have no doubt that Restore is now the biggest party lumped in with ‘Others’. But its supporters must also recognise that the category existed long before their party was launched, and that several of its six percent, or whatever it is, represents support for the Corbynistas, Galloway and the Gaza independents. If a poll puts ‘Others’ on 6% the maximum support for Restore is 4%.

That’s not to be sniffed at. It’s roughly where the BNP was when it was winning council seats and regularly taking more than 20% in most local elections, even in quite unpromising areas.

But even Restore’s artificially inflated 10% from the push poll is still less than half what the BNP was on in the week after the BBC’s Question Time lynching. Contrary to the lies peddled by the left and Britain’s Nazi fringe – we went up to 22% in the definitive Sunday Times poll.

When the actual general election came, after another year of relentless BBC promotion of Farage, we got just over half a million votes, less than 2%.

Now let us look at the latest big UK opinion poll

Not, “falling to Restore”. Falling to Reform. I’m not pointing this out because I prefer Farage to Lowe, I do not. I am doing it because, when making political plans, it is important to base them on reality, not wishful thinking.

A screenshot from the same article last week, Again, look at the reality. It is Reform which – even in their current ‘downturn’ would win 324 seats, and even then they would be one short of forming a government.

For Restore to win, they would have to take every single Reform vote and seat in the country – and then win some more on top of that. Anyone telling you this is remotely possible, let alone a done deal which means you can stop worrying about the state of Britain, is either a total imbecile, a conman or working for our country’s enemies.

When I point out that Rupert Lowe is not going to win the 2029 general election, I am not attacking him, but merely trying to dampen the ludicrously and dangerously false optimism currently surrounding his party. I do so in the hope that, if he and his followers can get their feet back on the ground, he will settle down and make a plan based on reality instead of childish fantasy.

This is particularly important because, as I have pointed out in various ways, Rupert Lowe DOES have a real path to power – though of course he would have to take it to get to its successful and truly historic end.

To recap my previous analysis. If Restore go up against Reform before Farage has been in office and let his voters down (as is guaranteed), then they will be obliterated. Even the very best (because it was a marketing stunt, not a real one) poll puts them on 10%. Even this figure wouldn’t give them a single seat, though it would hand Britain over to a Marxist/Green/Islamist coalition, which would open our borders and see five million of our own people emigrate before the foregone conclusion ‘contest’ of 2034.

This is going to be the only choice the public feel they have. The resulting squeeze will crush Restore Britain. That’s not a criticism of Rupert Lowe, it’s just simple political reality. He must take it into account and keep his electoral powder dry.

Faced with the choice between that or Farage’s pledge to stop only illegal immigration, the vast majority of would-be Restore voters will reluctantly vote Reform. The Labour vs Reform squeeze will slash Restore’s vote. If I was a betting man, I’d have a punt on 3%. That means lost deposits, disillusionment, and a by then 72-year-old Rupert retiring to the Cotswolds with his millions and his race-horses.

Rupert Lowe’s Winning Message

Or, he could say to his 120,000 members:

“Look chaps, we’re not going to win in 2029, but once Farage is in and lets people down, our time will come. So to prepare for that time, we’re going to get to work building the most powerful grass-roots nationalist movement this country has ever seen. I’m going to pour your £2million a year in memberships into setting up a network of community hubs and advice centres. We’re going to raise money for lawfare offensives against anti-white leftist councils, on behalf of grooming victims against the police, and to support the right of our people to set up businesses and charities for the native folks of these islands of ours.

“The Raise the Colours stalwarts are under lawfare attack from Labour and LibDem councils, and they need our help to fight back and keep our flags flying. Major fuel protests are just around the corner, and the protests needs a political voice and a political purpose. That’s another one of our jobs, and we’re going to do it.

“We’re going to work towards winning elections when the time is right. I’m going to organise you into 2,000 well-trained local branches which – along with real community politics initiatives – will each find and enthuse 1,000 of our people who aren’t on the electoral roll. Eight million Brits aren’t, and with most of them it’s because they believe that all politicians are the same. Well, we’re not, so we’re going to get two million of them registered to vote in the next year. And we’ll keep doing the same every year until we’ve registered more new voters than have ever voted for Farage in total.

“While we’re doing that, we’re going to use my Great Yarmouth seat for the most intensive and sophisticated training programme in electioneering Britain has ever seen. That will mean that, after the 2029 general election, as well as having me back in parliament for another five years, we will also have thousands of people from all over the country who’ve been to Yarmouth and learnt to win elections in their own backyards.

“Once Farage is in power, he’ll immediately start upsetting many of his new MPs, and – seeing the powerful grass-roots machine we’ve built – many of them will defect to Restore. That’s when we’ll wade into the electoral battlefield, and when we’ll wipe the floor with them. Are you with me?”

And, yes, that version of Restore, at that time, would wipe the floor with Reform, and all the others for that matter. And, yes, the 120,000 current members, and many more besides, would be with Rupert all the way, on the road towards real political power.

So please don’t go saying I’m against Rupert Lowe when I’ve just told him, yet again, exactly what he needs to do to win. If he does it, he would become the most important figure in the entire history of political British nationalism. Far from being jealous, I would cheer him to the rafters.

If he doesn’t heed my advice, however, he will lead his band of loyal and well-meaning followers to crushing defeat. And turn out to have wasted five years which we didn’t have to waste.

It may have escaped some people’s attention, but a massively-funded and extremely influential network of counter-jihad influencers are pushing Britain towards a civil war.

I don’t believe they will get one, but I do think they – and the baneful consequences of successive government’s destructive immigration policies – are very likely to lead to major disturbances, in which unprepared white working-class communities will suffer terrible damage at the hands of punk-Islamist gangs and official injustice.

A Restore machine which is already working to organise local communities would provide the leadership, voice and legal protection which they will desperately need.

I’m not suggesting waving guns around, I’m talking peaceful mass mobilisations to show strength and deter violence, highly organised boycotts, practical help for the victims of anti-white ethnic cleansing, pressure on the authorities to respect and defend the rights and safety of our people.

Legal and moral things like that which, if Rupert Lowe does the right thing now, would follow automatically when the time comes. And which, if he doesn’t, will largely go undone until after the first hammer blows have fallen.

To refuse to take on this role, claiming instead that you can win a civil war by pretending you’re going to win at the ballot box, would be a new version of what Enoch Powell said “would be the great betrayal.”

I prefer to think that Rupert Lowe is a good man sorely lacking in political experience. I am not calling him a great traitor, But if he fails to grasp this opportunity and to do the right thing, that is how history will judge him. And those who swallowed the easy victory lie, as great fools.

https://nickgriffin544956.substack.com/p/rupert-lowes-path-to-power-if-he