Front National (South Africa)

Front National (Afrikaans: Front Nasionaal, FN) is a South African far-right political party formed in late 2013 as a successor to the Federale Vryheidsparty.[1] The party promotes secession and Afrikaner self-determination. Front National strikes no distinction between English-speaking Whites and Afrikaners in South Africa.[2]

Front National
LeaderDaniel Lötter
ChairpersonGordon Fox
SecretaryBabs Lotter
Operational HeadLenel Wessels Cotty
Head of InformationDaniel Lotter
Election officerJaco de la Rey
TreasurerJaco de la Rey
Youth LeaderAbrie Venter
FoundedDecember 2013
Preceded byFederale Vryheidsparty
HeadquartersPretoria, Gauteng
Student wingFront National Student Movement / Front Nasionaal Studente Beweging
Youth wingFront Nationaal Jeug / Front National Youth
IdeologyWhite nationalism
Cultural conservatism
Self-determination Volkstaat
Political positionFar-right
International affiliationWorld National-Conservative Movement
Colours            
Red, white and blue
SloganJou stem bepaal jou toekoms en die van jou kinders
National Assembly seats
0 / 400
Website
Official website

Land claim

On 24 April 2014, FN submitted a land claim to the Land Claims Commissioner in Pretoria on behalf of the Afrikaner nation. The new land claims process has not yet been finalised however.[3][4][5]

Activism

Clive Derby-Lewis

Front National has been advocating the release of Clive Derby-Lewis, as of 2015, the oldest prisoner in the South African Correctional Services at the age of 79. He has been behind bars since 1993. Derby-Lewis has made various bids for parole since June 2010, when he was diagnosed with lung cancer.[6] In February, 2014, Derby-Lewis and his co-conspirator in the Hani murder, Janusz Waluś, lives were threatened when they were stabbed several times and had their heads struck with locks by fellow inmates.[7] It has been the stance of Front National that there has been political interference with his parole application.[8][9]

The party has approached the United Nations Commission on Human Rights over the handling of Derby-Lewis's medical parole application.[10]

South African Human Rights Commission

On 14 January 2016 the party declared intentions to make a complaint against Democratic Alliance Leader Mmusi Maimane with the South African Human Rights Commission concerning remarks he made on Twitter stating "I am angry when I go shopping at certain shops – white people are shopping and black people are working.”[11][12]

In January 2019 Front national submitted charges of hate speech and racism against leaders and followers of the Black Land First Movement for expressing delight at the death of 4 white children in Vanderbijlpark after the collapse of a footbridge at Driehoek High School.

On 24 January 2019, Willie Cloete, the leader, and a number of followers of the National Conservative Party joined Front National.

Affiliation

Front National has civil affiliations with Boere Krisis Aksie (BKA),[13] which is self-described as a "Politieke drukgroep vir selfbeskikking en wit belange in Suid Afrika", translated as "[a] Political pressure group for self-determination and white interests in South Africa".[14]

Front National has media affiliations with South Africa Today (SAT).

Elections

The party contested the 2014 general election in the national ballot and the provincial ballot for Gauteng.[15] and the 2019 election on the national ballot only, failing to win any seats on either occasion.

Parliament

National Assembly
Election year # of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/–
2014 5,138 0.03%
0 / 400
2019 7,144 0.04%
0 / 400
±0

Provincial ballot

Election Eastern Cape Free State Gauteng Kwazulu-Natal Limpopo Mpumalanga North-West Northern Cape Western Cape
% Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats
2014[16] 0.05% 0/73 -

See also

References

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