al Enemies of Free Speech Monday August 11, 2003 Plaid leadership race hit by ‘immigrants’ speech Press Association Plaid Cymru’s [The Welsh Nationalist Party] vice president, Dafydd Iwan , was today facing calls from within his own party to abandon a bid for the party leadership. David Irving comments, from the relative safety of Key West: NO, it seems like the native English are not going to take it any more.

While the powers-that-be have inflicted on us multi-millions of immigrants and bogus “asylum seekers” from every quarter of the globe, inundating our famous culture with every species of cultural, religious, and ethnic pond-life alien and offensive to our own, and are inflicting draconian fines and prison sentences on those of us who venture to protest, there is no law to prevent the English from abandoning their hearth and home while there is still time, and moving to more distant and familiar

climes. This time the English Channel has not saved us. It is a measure of the desperation of the English, that they are prepared even to move to Wales. For myself I would prefer Scotland, or the furthest reaches of the south-west, where the warm zephyrs first generated around about these parts — the Gulf of Mexico — finally cool down. The Stain has not yet spread that far. Not yet. The politicians don’t protest, as they are all falling over each other to pander to these new arrivals.

The newcomers all get The Vote from day one. As for the other voters, few dare to speak out against this abdication of our culture, power, and heritage — this unconditional surrender that has gone on, unannounced, ever since 1945. Those who do so are excoriated. As a High Court-designated “racist” — what an irony: the real racists are those who have replaced Class War with Race War as their political Geheimwaffe — I can speak my mind, where millions cannot.

I predicted three years ago that within ten years everything within a one-mile radius of Marble Arch, including even vast swathes of Mayfair, would have turned completely Black, as Black as Brixton or Rachman’s North Kensington; and my prediction is sadly becoming true.

I was born in the heart of a great Empire, which settled and brought prosperity to vast areas of the globe; I was brought up in the England of heroically unarmed “bobbies”, of Jack Warner , Pc.49, Dixon of Dock Green , and The Blue Lamp. Drugs, murders, non-stop street noise and violence were virtually unknown; a murder was not a commonplace, it was a story that might fill the pages of The Daily Graphic for weeks.

I still remember the sensation of the Joan Woodward murder case in 1947, her body found in the grounds of Arundel Castle, a case that was never solved. Now murders, gun battles, kidnapping, and all the other violence are on the increase in London and the other immigrant-rich cities. That may be their culture, it was never ours.

If there are those rare Englishmen who want those qualities, curious creatures indeed, let them move out to the countries where they will find them in an abundance, one long round-the-clock Notting Hill Carnival, and let them leave our native England untouched.

Clear-thinking English home-owners, particularly those with families, are moving out while they still can: before Tony Blair , or Ian Smith — the flaccid, bald-pated, one-eighth-Japanese leader of the Conservative party, not the WW2 fighter-pilot hero Ian Smith who was prime minister of a rebellious Southern Rhodesia — passes a law telling them to stay put. Even King Canute cannot halt this tide. It is the Native English, voting with their feet.

Mr Iwan has been under pressure from opposition politicians to drop out of the race for the party’s presidency following his comments that many English people were moving to Wales to get away from immigrants. Now a member of Plaid Cymru has stated his support for those calls. Adam Rykala , who was Plaid’s 2001 parliamentary candidate in Blaenau Gwent, south Wales, has posted a message on the New Wales website.

Underneath a headline saying: “Dafydd Iwan commits political suicide,” Mr Rykala’s message says: “The comments have caused many opposition politicians to rightly claim he should stand down from the presidency.” The row started last week when Mr Iwan made his controversial remarks in a speech at the National Eisteddfod in mid Wales. He said people were moving to Wales to “avoid all the Pakistanis and all these Indians who have moved to English towns”.

Mr Iwan has since said he is a life-long campaigner against racism and would fight it “wherever it raises its ugly head”. His speech drew criticism from Labour. Wales’s first minister, Rhodri Morgan , described the comments as crass, saying: “The ethnic minority communities in Wales will not be happy about the implication that Wales is an ethnically pure, all-white country, when it clearly is not.

It is one of the most cosmopolitan countries in the world. “If this was a Labour candidate there would be an enormous reaction. A candidate who had made that kind of comment would be under a lot of pressure to cease being a candidate.” Labour has already called on Mr Iwan to withdraw from the race to become Plaid Cymru’s new president, saying his comments were reminiscent of the far-right British National party.

The row over Mr Iwan’s comments is the latest in a series of accusations of racism made against leading figures in the party. Most famously, a past vice president, Gwilym ab Ioan , was forced to resign in 2001 after saying that Wales was becoming a dumping ground for England’s “oddballs, social misfits and drop-outs”.