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The National (Scotland)
The National (Scotland)
National
Abbi Garton-Crosbie

Ultra-Unionist fringe group fails to reach crowdfunder target for migrant protest

AN ULTRA-Unionist group has failed to reach a crowdfunder target to stage a protest in Dover over immigration.

Fringe group A Force For Good (AFFG) is run by Holocaust denier Alistair McConnachie, who was barred from Ukip over his views. Recently, he led a small protest outside of the First Minister’s anti-far-right summit in April.

Holding signs that said “mass deportation now”, the group claimed they were “not far-right”. They were joined by activists from Reform UK. 

And now, McConnachie’s latest fundraising effort for a second volume of “A Big Book For The Union” titled "Protect Our Country: Policies To Stop Mass Immigration", appears to have fallen flat. 

The group said the funds would be used to launch the publication in Dover “to take our team there for a weekend's activism”, the crowdfunder said, as well as a large banner.

AFFG set their crowdfunder target at £2400, but have so far only raised £1800. While the crowdfunder was set to end on Wednesday, July 9, it has been set as “always on”.

A total of 49 people had donated at time of writing, the largest donation was £100. 

In a four-and-a-half-minute-long YouTube video on the page, McConnachie says: “Since post-war, they’ve created a system in Britain, where the taxpayers pay millions and millions of pounds to NGOs and charities whose sole purpose is to destroy the country.

(Image: Crowdfunder) “We pay millions … billions to lawyers for legal aid who represent ne’er-do-wells and people who shouldn’t be in the country.

"If you want to have a career in messing up Britain, you’ll have a very easy career and there will be no shortage of people giving you millions of pounds.

"But if you want to save the country, then I’m afraid you need to make other sacrifices … because you simply won’t get any of the taxpayers' money that the others get,” he adds, laughing. 

McConnachie said that the £2400 target would get the fringe group “through to December”, adding that it would pay for running costs and “occasional payments” to various “helpers”. 

AFFG has had 10 other fundraisers on the website, now closed, most of which relate to “defending” and “maintaining” the Union. 

Ross Greer, Scottish Green MSP, said: “McConnachie is a serial loser who was kicked out of Ukip for Holocaust denial. 

“His toxic, white supremacist rhetoric is not welcome in Scotland, as proven every time he has stood for election.”

Despite failing to reach their target, AFFG celebrated their fundraising on Facebook.

“Our crowdfunder was a success with our fantastic supporters raising £1770 towards our summer campaign,” one post read.

“Thanks again. We couldn't do this without you.”

In an earlier post, they begged followers on the final day of the crowdfunder to reach 75% of the target. 

McConnachie (above) has previously contested elections under the banner of “Independent Green Voice”, which was described as a “fascist front” by the Scottish Greens.

During the Holyrood 2021, the party suggested the similarity between their branding and IGV’s cost them two list seats. Despite hundreds of complaints to the Electoral Commission from voters who felt they were “misled”, no action was taken.

McConnachie then used the IGV party banner to run in the Hillhead by-election for Glasgow City Council in 2024.

He was previously Ukip’s Scottish organiser from 1999 to 2001, standing as a candidate for the right-wing party five times, unsuccessfully.

The party refused to renew his membership in late 2001 after he claimed in an email that he didn’t “accept” that gas chambers were used to “execute Jews for the simple fact there is no direct physical evidence to show that such gas chambers ever existed”.

“There are no photographs or films of execution gas chambers ... Alleged eyewitness accounts are revealed as false or highly exaggerated,” he wrote.

McConnachie stood by his comments in an interview with the Sunday Herald in 2018, but claimed he was not a Holocaust denier. 

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