Labour is facing pressure after one of its MPs joined forces with a far-right group in attacking the party, DeSmog can reveal.
Over recent months, Graham Stringer โ who has been the MP for Blackley, Manchester since 1997 โ has been cosying up to individuals and groups involved in spreading radical anti-migrant, anti-abortion, anti-climate views.
In September, Stringer signed an open letter drafted by Great British PAC, a group founded by former Reform deputy leader Ben Habib, who has called for the mass โrepatriationโ of legally-settled migrants.
The letter said that the Labour governmentโs decision to hand over the Chagos archipelago to Mauritius is a โdeliberate act of strategic self-harm that threatens both British and American securityโ.
The letter, signed by Stringer, added that the decision was โan act of self-sabotageโ and a form of โsurrenderโ.
Meanwhile, a fortnight ago, Stringer spoke at the Battle of Ideas Festival โ a right-wing debating forum โ and shared a stage with James Orr, a newly-appointed senior advisor to Nigel Farageโs Reform UK, and a man who does not think abortion should be allowed at any stage of foetal development, including pregnancies resulting from rape.
โLabour MPs are losing the whip for resisting savage benefit cuts for the disabled and families in abject poverty but there is tolerance without limit to those who share platforms with the far-right, anti-abortionists and climate change deniers,โ said Jolyon Maugham, executive director of the Good Law Project.
โThis is a party that has not so much lost its moral compass as wittingly thrown it into an industrial shredder and sold the proceeds for scrap.โ
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Stringer is a director of the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF) โ the UKโs foremost climate science denial group. The GWPF has stated that carbon dioxide has been โmercilessly demonisedโ, when in fact it is a โbenefit to the planetโ and should be โtwo or three timesโ higher than current levels.
The GWPF is run by Conservative peer Craig Mackinlay, while its board members include former Conservative MP John Redwood, and ex-Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott. The GWPFโs campaign arm, Net Zero Watch, is chaired by Tory donor Neil Record, while its board includes Conservative peer David Frost.
Stringer has increasingly been echoing right-wing, anti-Labour talking points in recent months, claiming in an interview with Sky News on 15 October that itโs โpatheticโ for the government to be blaming some of the countryโs economic problems on Brexit.
The Chagos Letter
The Chagos Letter was organised by Great British PAC, a far-right campaign group whose senior figures have advocated for the mass removal of legally-settled migrants.
The groupโs advisory board includes far-right YouTuberย Carl Benjamin (also known as Sargon of Akkad). Benjamin has advocated for the mass deportation of migrants, including those with formal legal status, has said that the UK is experiencing a โMuslim takeoverโ, and has suggested that British-born MP Zarah Sultana should be deported because sheโs a โPakistani Muslim communistโ.
In 2016, Benjamin speculated on Twitter about whether he would rape Labour MP Jess Phillips โ a post that was investigated by the police in 2019 when Benjamin stood as a UK Independence Party (UKIP) candidate in the European elections.
Signatories of the letter included a number of notable voices from the British right and far-right. They included Nick Tenconi, the current leader of UKIP. Tenconi has called for โmillionsโ of people to be deported, including British-born Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar, has said that Islamophobia โisnโt a thingโ, and that anti-racism campaigners are โdemocratic terroristsโ.
โMy government would lock them up or deport them to North Korea,โ he claimed.
Other signatories included Reform MP Danny Kruger, former Reform MEPs Alexandra Phillips, John Longworth, and Jonathan Bullock, Heritage Foundation director Nile Gardiner, and Tory politicians Suella Braverman, Steve Baker, Mark Francois, Daniel Hannan, and Grant Shapps. No other Labour MP signed the letter.
Great British PACโs CEO Claire Bullivant said it was โnonsenseโ for the group to be labelled far-right and instead described it as โmainstreamโ.
In a statement to DeSmog, she added: โAs for comments made by individual PAC members, supporters, and advisors, we donโt all have to agree on everything. Weโre not a political party, weโre a group of patriots representing people from every party and every walk of life. That diversity of thought is exactly what free speech and democracy are about, and itโs something we champion wholeheartedly.โ
Habib formally launched a new party, Advance UK, in September 2025.
The party claims that โmass migration is eroding our culture and destroying our economyโ, while Habib has advocated for the โmass repatriationโ of migrants who are legally settled in the UK.
In July, far-right anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson (real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon) announced he would be joining Advance UK. The party has received the backing ofย far-right tech entrepreneur Elon Musk, the worldโs richest man, who is reportedly paying Robinsonโs fees for multiple legal cases.
Advance UKโs โcollegeโ includes Paul Burgess, the former environment spokesperson for the now-defunct far-right For Britain movement, and Kathryn Gyngell, the founder of anti-climate website TCW Defending Freedom and a former GWPF director.
In a comment to DeSmog, Burgess previously claimed that For Britain was not a far-right party โ despite its history ofย fieldingย former members of the far-right British National Party as candidates,ย as well asย those that have expressed racist views online. Burgess said that he has never been associated with the BNP, โthe motives and aims of which I deplore.โ
Advance UK and Habib declined to comment.
Battle of Ideas Festival
Stringer also spoke on several panels at the Battle of Ideas Festival in London on 18 October.
The festival is run by the Academy of Ideas, a group fronted by former Revolutionary Communist Party member Claire Fox and closely associated with the radical right-wing Spiked magazine. Fox became a peer in 2020 following a nomination by former Conservative Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
In one session, โWhoโs afraid of the populist revolt?โ, Stringer shared the stage with Reform UK senior advisor James Orr, and Mathias Corvinus Collegium Brussels director Frank Fรผredi, who co-founded Spiked alongside Fox, who moderated the discussion.
MCC is a Hungarian think tank and lobby group closely tied to Viktor Orbรกnโs government and funded by the countryโs national oil company MOL. Its head of policy Jacob Reynolds is an associate fellow at the Academy of Ideas.
However, there wasnโt universal agreement between the panellists. According to the New Statesman, when Stringer voiced concern about the presence of Nazis in Germanyโs far-right party, Alternative for Germany (AfD), Orr responded: โAs far as I know, itโs a group of egghead economists. No doubt along the way theyโve picked up some unsavoury types, but look how theyโve been treated.โ
The AfD was officially deemed a โright-wing extremistโ organisation by Germanyโs domestic intelligence services in June.
Orr, a close friend of U.S. Vice President JD Vance, is a hardline conservative and a critic of Europeโs pro-Ukraine policies. As revealed by DeSmog, Orr accused the West of having โUkraine brainโ at MCCโs festival in August and praised Hungaryโs Putin-friendly approach to the war, which he has repeatedly labelledย a โregional Slavic conflictโ.
The New Statesman also reported that one Battle of Ideas speaker, GB News commentator Charlie Downes, said that Bob Marley was โmore Britishโ than former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak โby virtue of having an ethnically British ancestorโ.
Downes is the campaign director for Restore Britain, an activist group fronted by former Reform MP Rupert Lowe that has proposed entirely abolishing the asylum system and doubling โthe annual departure of legal migrantsโ.
Festival of Ideas โpartnersโ included the GWPF and GB News, while its โsupportersโ featured Together โ a conspiracy theory group that has campaigned against mandatory vaccinations.
Stringer, the Labour Party, James Orr, and the Academy of Ideas were approached for comment.
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