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・ Flag Day (United States)
・ Flag Day in Mexico
・ Flag days in Finland
・ Flag days in Sweden
・ Flag debate
・ Flag desecration
・ Flag Desecration Amendment
・ Flag dipping
・ Flag Fen
・ Flag field
・ Flag flying days in Mexico
・ Flag flying days in Norway
・ Flag football
・ Flag Football World Championship
・ Flag Fork, Kentucky
Flag Group
・ Flag Grove School
・ Flag Hill
・ Flag Hill (Houtman Abrolhos)
・ Flag Hill Winery
・ Flag House & Star-Spangled Banner Museum
・ Flag House Courts
・ Flag in Exile
・ Flag in the Ground
・ Flag Institute
・ Flag iris
・ Flag jacking
・ Flag of Aargau
・ Flag of Abkhazia
・ Flag of Acadia


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Flag Group : ウィキペディア英語版
Flag Group
The Flag Group was a British political party, formed from one of the two wings of the National Front in the 1980s. Formed in opposition to the Political Soldier wing of the Official National Front it took its name from ''The Flag'', a newspaper the followers of this faction formed after leaving and regrouping outside of the main and diminishing rump of the rest of the party.
==Emergence==
During the early 1980s the Political Soldier wing of the NF held sway within the party and was on good terms with chairman Andrew Brons who, although a Strasserite by conviction rather than a disciple of Julius Evola and ruralism, largely supported the young radicals and co-operated with them to remove Martin Webster, the former ally of Brons' predecessor John Tyndall, from the party in 1984.〔Gerry Gable, 'The Far Right in Contemporary Britain', L. Cheles, R. Ferguson, and M. Vaughan, ''Neo-Fascism in Europe'', London: Longman, 1992, p. 252〕 However cracks between the two factions soon began to show and a power struggle ensued. This culminated in 1986 when the two wings of the party split, with around 3000 of the 5000 registered NF members breaking away with Brons to form a new separate group.〔Gable, 'The Far Right in Contemporary Britain', p. 255〕 The immediate actual cause of the split had been the refusal of the Political Soldiers to contest elections and the Brons group made this the issue on which they started their own group, initially called the National Front Support Group before adopting their more usual Flag Group moniker.〔N. Copsey, ''Contemporary British Fascism: The British National Party and the Quest for Legitimacy'', Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004, p. 36〕 Activists such as Martin Wingfield, Ian Anderson, Joseph Pearce and Tom Acton emerged as the new leading figures within this group and the Flag Group initially grew at a much faster rate than the Official National Front, although this was in part due to the Political Soldiers closing off membership of their wing.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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