The Friends of Oswald Mosley is the last vestige of Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists and its successors, the Union Movement and the Action Party. Their motto is "The spirit lives... the rest will follow". The group is not politically active but has described itself as "pro-Arab, pro-EU, against US global supremacy, anti-capitalist, anti-state socialism, pro-syndicalism".
History
The Friends of Oswald Mosley was formed in 1982. It represents the last vestige of Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists and its successors the Union Movement and the Action Party. Their motto is "The spirit lives... the rest will follow".
Activities
The Friends are not politically active. They publish a journal, Comrade, which consists mainly of reminiscences and obituaries of figures active in the pre-Second World War days of the BUF. The Daily Telegraph, in its obituary of John Warburton, described Comrade as "the newsletter for veteran Blackshirts which soon developed into a journal that provided much primary material on the movement's history." The Friends also organise dinners, reunions, social events and film-shows of speeches by Oswald Mosley and BUF rallies, which are attended by veteran former members of Mosley's post-war Union Movement and younger sympathisers. Diana Mitford, Mosley's second wife was associated with FOM and spoke at a number of their functions in London. In a 2016 article on the British far rightpublished by The Guardian, a spokesperson described the group's views as "...pro-Islam, pro-EU, against US global supremacy, anti-capitalist, anti-state socialism, pro-syndicalism". However, FOM spokesperson, Gordon Beckwell subsequently stated on the StormfrontBritain forum claiming that he actually said to the Guardian reporter at the time that FOM was "pro-Arab" and therefore sympathetic to the Palestinians not specifically "pro-Islam" per se.
Membership
The first issue of Comrade explained that the FOM "is organized by an unofficial council of five, four of whom were personally chosen by Mosley for the MOSLEY DIRECTORATE when he retired from active politics in 1966." Among the Council was John Warburton who was also the founding editor of Comrade.