How Islamic sectarianism is changing politics from below

Islam politics

from Christian Concern

Public Policy Researcher Carys Moseley comments on the recent election results and the continued rise of political Islam

The results of the local council elections in England have signalled a momentous and historic defeat for the Labour Party. Both the Green Party and Reform UK took many English council seats from Labour. The Greens gained control over three councils in London and got a mayor elected in Hackney. Over a hundred Muslim pro-Gaza independent councillors were also elected.

The Green and independent surge was the result of long-term campaigning by The Muslim Vote (TMV), an Islamic supremacist outfit. The collapse of Labour and the mass switch of hardline Muslim voters towards the Greens and independents has caused what may well turn out to be a once-in-a-lifetime political change.

Whilst all this has understandably attracted a lot of concern, what is missing from the existing commentary is the underlying motivation – the Islamisation of British politics from below.

My purpose here is to expose this as the real reason for what has been going on.

Pact between Greens and sectarian Muslim leaders

The Policy Exchange authors claim that there has been an electoral pact between The Muslim Vote, Zac Polanski the leader of the Green Party and Your Party. The allegation is that they would not stand in the same seats.

In fact, very few Muslims were elected as Green councillors, yet TMV endorsed the Greens as a party and the Greens were happy to thank them. This therefore inflates the number of councillors elected who were effectively endorsed by TMV.

Read here