UK far-right backs party ballot on non-white entry

The Equality and Human Rights Commission launched legal  action against the BNP earlier this year, arguing the party’s  exclusion of potential members on ethnic grounds broke the Race  Relations Act.

BNP leader Nick Griffin had warned the party faced  potentially crippling legal bills if it fought the case and  agreed to revise its constitution accordingly.

On the first day of the BNP’s annual conference in Wigan,  northern England, delegates debated whether its membership  policy should discriminate on the grounds of race or religion.

“Today we, some 300 members, voted overwhelmingly in favour  of changing the constitution. At a later stage it will be put to  the entire membership of the party,” said John Walker, deputy  press officer for the party.

He said there were 13,500 BNP members across Britain.

Griffin told the BBC “we have changed under duress, but  nevertheless once those people are in the party, they will be  welcome.”

He is due to give a keynote speech to delegates today,  the last day of the conference after 12 policy motions are  debated.

Members of the public and journalists have been barred from the meeting, though a small group of protesters marched to the conference venue shouting “Black and White unite and fight”  media reported.

The BNP, which campaigns for a halt to immigration, voluntary repatriation of immigrants and Britain’s withdrawal  from the European Union, is at the fringes of British politics  and has no seats in the national parliament.

But its popularity has grown in recent years and it now has a number of local councillors and in June won two seats to the  European Parliament.