A group calling itself the British Movement continued to operate after September 1983 under the leadership of Stephen Frost, a
Yorkshire member of the original BM. At its 1985 yearly meeting the BM established a new group to be known as the
British National Socialist Movement (
BNSM). Whilst the BM continued to exist alongside the BNSM the latter gave more freedom to activists by operating as a cell-based structure within the BM. The new group attempted to act as a rallying-point for white power skinheads, although this role was later filled more successfully by
Blood and Honour. The BNSM was soon attempting to re-activate the old BM membership and followed the old template of encouraging members to undergo military training through the
Territorial Army or other means. The BNSM built up links with the
Ulster Defence Association and
Ulster Volunteer Force and BNSM members served with the English companies of these
Ulster loyalist paramilitaries. The group, which had about 300 members by 1990, also sought links with European groups and was close to the
Dutch former
SS man Et Wolsink who was variously connected to
Dutch People's Union and the Dutch sections of the
Wiking-Jugend and the
Action Front of National Socialists/National Activists. Links were also built with the
white power music scene of
Blood and Honour and in particular with
Ian Stuart Donaldson who, despite his previous membership of the NF, was close to Cat Mee, a BM organiser in
Derbyshire. Donaldson's attempts to leave the skinhead scene and scale back his involvement in music soured the relationship, however, and links were severed in 1990 after a group of activists turned up at Donaldson's local pub and told him to play for them or face assault. The progress of the BNSM was halted in the early 1990s by the emergence of
Combat 18 with much of the membership switching allegiance to this new group. The new BM re-emerged during the mid-1990s by becoming heavily involved in the distribution of white power music. By this time Michael 'Micky' Lane had taken over as leader (BM National Chairman) of the group from Daniel Tolan (with Stephen Frost becoming BM National Secretary), a position that meant Lane's name appeared on an alleged Combat 18 hitlist due to the rivalries between the groups. Although a British Movement still exists, it has a tiny, largely inactive, membership. It does, however, maintain a presence on the internet, publishes a monthly newspaper called
The Emblem, a monthly BM members' newsletter called
The Sunwheel and a quarterly magazine called
Broadsword, and is occasionally the subject of newspaper reports and media attention. The Annual
State of Hate Report for 2021 published by
Hope Not Hate says that while the British Movement is a "mere shadow of its heyday self from the early 1980s" it has been "surprisingly resilient" and remains active during a period when many far-right groups have folded. "It has active units in south London and Kent, South Wales, the East Midlands, Yorkshire and Humber, Scotland and Northern Ireland," the report says. "Its activists hold meetings, host white power concerts, coordinate leafleting and postering sessions for activists and attend demonstrations and protests. It also produces a quarterly magazine and regular newsletters." A spokesperson for
Campaign Against Antisemitism said, "The persistence of far-right activity is totally unacceptable. It is particularly worrying that many of these groups deliberately target and recruit impressionable youngsters. The apparent endurance of the neo-Nazi British National Socialist Movement is especially disconcerting, as is the formation of newer groups peddling similar antisemitic and racist ideologies."
Michael Gove assessment On 14 March 2024,
Michael Gove, the
secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities, speaking in Parliament, named the organisation as one of several regarded as "a cause for concern" and which will be assessed against a newly introduced official UK government definition of
extremism. ==Footnotes==