An early member of the
British Fascisti, Blakeney succeeded
Leopold Ernest Stratford George Canning, 4th Baron Garvagh as president of the movement in 1924, and at the same time was made editor of their journal
The Fascist Bulletin. He insisted that the BF be run in "the spirit of intelligent patriotism" and sought to build links with mainstream
right-wing pressure groups such as the
Anti-Socialist Union. Despite his role as president, Blakeney's knowledge of fascism as an
ideology has been portrayed as somewhat sketchy. For Blakeney, the BF were the adult version of the
Scout movement, arguing that they shared such values as fraternity, duty and service. He felt that the main enemy of the BF was
communism. Indeed, Blakeney believed that one of the main duties of the BF was to be prepared to defend established society in the event that "the swarms from the slums" came out in revolution. Along with his close ally Rear Admiral A. E. Armstrong, Blakeney supported BF involvement with the
Organisation for the Maintenance of Supplies and accepted government terms that the movement should, at least temporarily, abandon references to fascism in order to participate in the government-backed group. He was opposed in this by BF founder
Rotha Lintorn-Orman and the BF Grand Council opposed Blakeney's position, voting 40–32. Unperturbed, Blakeney and his supporters split from the BF to form a group called the Loyalists; this group was absorbed by the OMS immediately following the outbreak of the
1926 General Strike. The
Earl of Glasgow and
Lord Ernest Hamilton—like Armstrong, two influential BF members—also endorsed Blakeney's approach and followed him into the Loyalists. ==Later activities==