The British National Party (BNP) could face prosecution for breaking electoral law over its annual accounts after it filed financial records which its accountants refused to sanction and the far-right group’s own leader admitted were “inadequate”.
The party has been fined £1,000 by the Electoral Commission after it filed its accounts for 2008 nearly six months after the original deadline and warned that it must provide further information after the BNP’s independent auditor declared the records did not “give a true and fair view” of the state of its finances.
The accounts, which are prefaced by a statement from the party leader Nick Griffin insisting that 2008 was “the most successful” in its history, show that the BNP made a loss of more than £80,000 that year despite a substantial leap in its income from donations to more than £660,000. Its expenditure ballooned from £662,000 to £1.1m.
The book-keeping wrangle with the elections watchdog raises fresh questions about the financial controls of the party after Mr Griffin appealed for extra donations and warned earlier this year that it was “suffering acute financial pressure” following a fall in its income and a £600,000 bill for its campaign in the June European elections. Electoral law requires all political parties with an income or expenditure in excess of £250,000 to provide fully audited annual accounts with a sliding scale of fines for late submission and separate criminal sanctions against the party for the financial period in question if satisfactory records are not provided.
In his preface to the accounts, Mr Griffin blamed upheaval in the headquarters operations of the BNP and said there had been a subsequent “outsourcing” of its record-keeping to a chartered accountant “with the aim of presenting acceptable accounts for 2009”. It has now been fined five times in the past two years for breaking rules on filing financial records. Admitting that the party was once more in breach of the rules, Mr Griffin said: “We recognise that it is not acceptable to present inadequate accounts.”
The BNP’s auditor, whose name is blanked out on records published on the Electoral Commission website but who works for a Staffordshire firm of chartered accountants called Silver & Co, said the party had not submitted sufficient records to a provide a “true and fair” view of the party’s 2008 results. In a statement, the auditor said: “In our opinion it cannot be said the accounts comply with the requirements of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 [PPERA] as adequate records have not been made available.”
The Electoral Commission said it was considering the options available to it, including an eventual prosecution. A spokesman said: “We have reviewed the statement of accounts and have concerns about them. We have written back to the party requesting additional information. Until we have received that information we cannot say what further action will be taken.”
More Comments by VoteNo ToBNP
General Election 2010 Poll Results
And a message for David,
You did a great job with this website besides all the dross you had to contend with from certain elements of the BNP.
I bet you are …
General Election 2010 Poll Results
Sorry I haven’t responded to any of the replies sent re my original I told you so post, been busy doing some other things, including finally taking a few days …
General Election 2010 Poll Results
I have to agree, by not voting you are wasting your vote on a party that you may not have wanted to win.
Every person that doesn’t vote may as well …
BNP Manifesto 2010 : Immigration: An Unparalleled Crisis Which Only the BNP Can Solve
Which is why we need a sensible Gov to invest in training for British workers, but the BNP certainly isn’t that sensible Government.
If you have seen one of their plans …
General Election 2010 Poll Results
OOps lol, you can delete these two as well then David you beat me too it :) …
More Comments on Reasons to Vote British National Party by VoteNo ToBNP
Reasons to Vote British National Party : BNP 2010 General Election
Oh an i’ll just add another little set of stats for you to blow your deleded BNP will be a main party bubble:
There have been 12 council by-elections in 2010 …
Reasons to Vote British National Party : BNP 2010 General Election
“After this election the main 3 parties will be BNP, Liberals and UKIP. Labour and the Tories are not fit to govern a Kindergarten after their show down!!!!”
PMSL, I mean …
Reasons to Vote British National Party : BNP 2010 General Election
I would just like to point out the BNP position on companies sending call centre staffing abroad.
The FACT is they won’t be bringing those jobs back to the UK, the …
Reasons to Vote British National Party : BNP 2010 General Election
I do indeed remember Potter, the same person who posted a group on the BNP’s main party website trying to identify me, made me laugh.
I’m not daft enough to leave …
Reasons to Vote British National Party : BNP 2010 General Election
I see not much has changed on here then David, the BNP Supporters getting so desperate that they have to post in multiple names, effectively talking to themselves to give …