A very small party, the NLP secured some decent results in the
London council election, although the
Labour Party objected to the NLP's use of its name. At the time, however, ballot papers listed only the names of the candidates, not the names of the parties, so it was probably less likely than it would be today that Labour voters might vote for the NLP by mistake. Buoyed by its minor success, the party organised a
Stop the Coloured Invasion rally in
Trafalgar Square with banners displayed proclaiming
Keep Britain White in May 1959 which drew a crowd of 3,000 to hear speeches by Bean, Fountaine and
White Defence League leader
Colin Jordan. The monitors at the rally wore white armbands emblazoned with a
black sun. The party was even briefly linked to the
London gangster
Albert Dimes, who hoped to use NLP members against his rival, Jack Como (alias
Jack Spot), a
Jewish gangster who was involved in funding the
43 Group, an
anti-fascist group set up by Jewish ex-servicemen. Other 43 Group funders included the boxing promoter
Jack Solomons, the businessman Sir
Charles Clore and
Bud Flanagan, the music hall entertainer, who sent a £30 cheque every month. The party stood a single candidate in the
1959 general election with former boxer Bill Webster running in
St Pancras North. The decision to run a candidate was largely driven by the realities of racial tension in the area, as exposed by the previous year's riots. During the campaign, a number of NLP supporters attacked a meeting at the local Town Hall where
Kenneth Robinson was a featured speaker. A number of arrests were made over the incident, which made national news and thus served to publicise the name of the NLP. In the election, the party received 4.1% of the vote in St Pancras North, and lost its deposit. ==Election results==