The League was formed around 1974 as a political club by
Keith Thompson and Mike Griffin as a breakaway from the
Action Party, founded by British
fascist Oswald Mosley. The League sought to continue what it saw as a purer form of the ideas of Mosley than those offered by then leader
Jeffrey Hamm. In the 1970s the League became a political home for the more intellectual adherents of "Neo-Nazi" ideology, particularly those who wanted a united Europe with a European-derived population, a continuation of Mosley's
Europe a Nation policy. Alongside this the League also followed Mosley's lead in endorsing
Irish republicanism, something of a change from their contemporaries in the British far right who reserved their support for
Ulster loyalism. The League was never intended to be a political party, but more of a social, intellectual, and cultural organization, albeit with the ultimate political aim of promoting European people and their culture. Intended as an exclusive club for what were seen as the leading minds on the British far right, its membership tended to be restricted to around 50–100 members. Indeed, membership of the League was restricted to those invited to join only. The group often had a torrid relationship with the
far right parties, and indeed the
National Front barred its members from joining the League in 1977. Around this time
Spearhead even included articles claiming that the League was in fact a
cult dominated by clandestine leaders, secret oaths and profane initiation ceremonies. Nonetheless, individual members maintained ties to both organisations, with some contributing to both
Spearhead and
The League Review. Similarly the
British Movement, which had originally co-operated with the League, eventually severed its ties over the Northern Irish issue.
The Enemy Within is an account of the League of St George written by a former member, the cartoonist Robert Edwards, who founded the pro-Mosley
European Action UK pressure group in 2005. ==International contacts==