A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject. (December 2019) |
Veterans and People's Party | |
---|---|
Leader | George Reid[1][2] |
Founder | Damian McAndrew |
Founded | May 2017 |
Headquarters | 20-22 Wenlock Road London N1 7GU United Kingdom[2] |
Ideology | Right-wing populism British nationalism Hard Euroscepticism[3] Paternalistic conservatism[4] |
Colours | Gold |
Website | |
ukvpp.org | |
The Veterans and People's Party (VPP) was a minor political party in the United Kingdom. It was founded in mid-May 2017 by seven British military veterans to contest the 2017 United Kingdom general election and claimed to have gained 8,000 members in its first month of existence.[citation needed] It was statutorily deregistered by the Electoral Commission in 2022.[2] The party described itself as conservative and "anti-sharia-law".[4][5]
In the 2019 United Kingdom local elections, the party gained its first two councillors from eight fielded candidates.[6]
In September 2019, with the Independent Union councillors, the VPP councillor who made up the coalition at Hartlepool Borough Council defected to the Brexit Party, renaming their already existing coalition with the three Conservative councillors as the "Brexit and Conservative Coalition".[7]
In February 2020, its councillor returned to the VPP after the government's Brexit agreement.[8]
The mood among the pro-Brexit marchers was one of anger and defiance as far-right groups such as The White Pendragons and For Britain took their place alongside Veterans' and People's Party and Ukip with the sound of God Save the Queen and "Free Tommy" booming through the streets.
The philosophy of the Veterans' and People's Party is a moderate, centrist philosophy founded on decency, integrity and honour. The Party want to take the best of conservatism and socialism and create a strong, brave society that has high moral standards.