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How Labour feared a BNP Barking win

A new film will reveal the extent of Labour fears that the British National Party would seize the seat from Margaret Hodge at this year's general election.

October 21, 2010 12:59
Nick Griffin meets the media

By

Martin Bright,

Martin Bright

2 min read

A new film to be screened next month will reveal the extent of Labour Party fears that the British National Party would seize the seat from the long-serving MP Margaret Hodge at this year's general election.

The Battle for Barking, a feature-length documentary for More4, shows that Labour strategists believed white working-class voters were deeply sympathetic to the BNP's anti-immigration message, and in parts of her constituency 70 per cent of voters were considering voting for the far-right party.

In one key scene, Gordon Brown's pollster Deborah Mattinson carefully explains that many voters in the borough are deeply hostile to Labour, which they blame for letting immigration run out of control.

For the first time, the party's unorthodox, but ultimately successful, strategy is revealed. Mrs Hodge, 66, was urged to represent herself as
a "battling granny", fighting against the odds, although she was advised never to make this explicit
-as she would make herself look "absurd".

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