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British Movement
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==Formation== The NSM had come to an end sometime after Colin Jordan was imprisoned in early 1967 for distributing a racist leaflet ''The Coloured Invasion'' and following his release Jordan had met [[John Tyndall (politician)|John Tyndall]] in [[Denis Pirie]]'s house about the possibility of joining the [[National Front (United Kingdom)|National Front]].<ref>Martin Walker, ''The National Front'', Glasgow: Fontana, 1977, p. 77.</ref> These talks came to nothing however and with the [[Race Relations Act 1968]] passed the notion of openly parading Nazi credentials in a party name had to be abandoned, leading to Jordan forming a new group to known as the British Movement.<ref>R. Hill & A. Bell, ''The Other Face of Terror - Inside Europe’s Neo-Nazi Network'', London: Collins, 1988, p. 116.</ref> Whilst the new party intended to continue the old group's role of being Nazi apologists and endorsing [[anti-Semitism]] it aimed to do so within the restrictions brought in by the newly enacted law.<ref>Hill & Bell, ''The Other Face of Terror'', p. 117.</ref>
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