W Post
 
British Anti-Islam group 
seeks US Tea Party ties

 
   
By GREGORY KATZ
The Associated Press 
Thursday, October  14, 2010; 4:45 PM  
 
LONDON -- Tentative links are developing between supporters of the Tea 
Party  movement in the United States and right-wing fringe groups in Britain 
that are  opposed to what they call the "Islamification" of Europe.  
 
The movements are not formally aligned, but the relatively new English  
Defense League - which warns that Islamic fundamentalism will soon engulf  
Britain - is seeking guidance and inspiration from some U.S. figures taking a  
similar stance.  
The British activists are less drawn to the anti-tax, anti-big-government 
Tea  Party message and more attracted to elements taking an active stance 
against the  spread of Islam, like Rabbi Nachum Shifren, a long-shot Republican 
candidate for  the California state legislature who plans to visit England 
next week in a trip  sponsored in part by the English Defense League.  
The trip was organized by Roberta Moore, an English Defense League activist 
 who has formed a "Jewish division" of the group. She said the rabbi will 
speak  at an Oct. 24 rally in London.  
 

 
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"He plans to speak about the dangers of Islamification both in this country 
 and in America," Moore told The Associated Press. "He will talk about the 
issues  we have with immigration and the danger of Sharia law coming to the 
UK. We have  the same objectives as the groups in the USA, and we want to 
exchange  information and work with them."  
Matthew Goodwin, a University of Nottingham professor and author of a new  
book about extremist groups in Britain, said the links being developed with  
American activists are potentially important.  
"We're seeing groups across Europe trying to form a transnational challenge 
 to Islam," he said. "Going to the United States is particularly 
interesting  because the far right in Britain has never gone that way, it has 
always 
gone  toward Europe. If it did forge strong links to the Tea Party, it would 
be  important because the Tea Party has significant resources."  
He said the English Defense League has gained momentum in the last year and 
 can now draw roughly one thousand people to its confrontational rallies. 
The  membership includes mostly white, working class men, including many with 
links  to football hooliganism, he said.  
Some English Defense League protests have turned into clashes with police 
and  the group Unite Against Fascism, which opposes the anti-Muslim movement. 
 
Shifren - sometimes called the surfing rabbi because of his penchant for  
riding the waves - has given talks at Tea Party events. He said in a 
telephone  interview that he plans to warn Britons that their country is being 
lost 
as  fundamentalist Islam gains strength.  
"I see England going down and I want to cry out and do everything I can to  
prevent that, to work with the EDL," he said.  
Moore said the English Defense League has also reached out to Pamela 
Geller,  the prominent U.S. activist who leads an organization called Stop 
Islamization  of America.  
Geller said she supports the English group's approach but has not met with  
its leaders or agreed to any joint projects.  
"I share their goal of resisting Islamic supremacism and defending free  
societies," she said.  
British businessman Alan Lake, who said he is "heavily involved" with the  
English Defense League and other like-minded groups, believes it is 
important to  reach out to activists in the United States and on mainland 
Europe.  
"The benefit of joining with these other organizations is logistical and  
political, but also emotional," he said. "It's such a relief to find people 
in  other countries who feel the way you do."  
(This version corrects name of group to "Unite Against Fascism" instead of  
"United.") 


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