The Herald on Sunday

Inside the shadowy world of Scotland’s most influentia­l far-right activist

THE TENTACLES OF JIM DOWSON – A SELF-STYLED CRUSADER AGAINST LIBERALISM – STRETCH AROUND THE WORLD. HERE CHIEF REPORTER JUDITH DUFFY INVESTIGAT­ES JUST HOW POWERFUL HE IS GLOBALLY

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ONCE he was notorious as the militant face of the anti-abortion movement in Scotland. Now Jim Dowson is once again back in the spotlight of extremism after being named one of Britain’s most influentia­l far-right activists.

The Sunday Herald can reveal Dowson claims he is an adviser to more than 150 companies, groups and parties around the world, running offices in Budapest, Fort Worth in the US, and Belgrade. His activities in the US and Europe led to anti-fascism campaign group Hope Not Hate placing Dowson at number one in a “Dirty Dozen” list of Britain’s most influentia­l far-right activists in its annual State of Hate report last week.

Dowson, 52, who was born in Airdrie, has a long history of extremist activities, including a spell as a prominent member of the BNP and founding the far-right, anti-Muslim group Britain First. His apparent global reach now is a far cry from the late 1990s, when he was living in a former council house in Cumbernaul­d and running his own church, the Reformed Evangelica­l Mission, from a Portakabin.

As a young man, Dowson was a member of the local Orange lodge. In one interview he claimed he “lost interest” in the Orange Order as it was just “mindless, sectarian Catholic-hating bigotry”. Other reports, however, state he was forced to leave as his views were too extreme, with senior figures in the Grand Orange Order of Scotland describing him as a “zealot”.

Perhaps little surprise, then, that Dowson soon became known for running militant pro-life groups including Precious Life Scotland. But the group’s campaignin­g sparked anger by mimicking shocking tactics of US campaigner­s such as using graphic images of aborted foetuses and threatenin­g to post the details of staff working in abortion clinics on the internet.

As his activities came under scrutiny, the Sunday Herald revealed his past involvemen­t in hardline Loyalist groups in the west of Scotland, as a former organiser of a flute band which produced a tape of music in tribute to Loyalist killer Michael Stone, who murdered three Catholics in 1988. In the wake of these revelation­s, the Catholic Church subsequent­ly moved to distance itself from the Precious Life group.

In the mid-2000s, Dowson became involved with the BNP, becoming its chief fundraiser and leader Nick Griffin’s right-hand man. He claims to have raised £4 million for the organisati­on between 2007 and 2010.

But that associatio­n was not to last. By 2010, Dowson had quit the party amid a fallout and an allegation he groped a female activist, which he denied.

A year later, he went on to found the ultra-right Britain First, which dubbed itself a “Christian” group opposing the rise of radical Islam and provoked huge controvers­y after invading mosques in England and Scotland and threatenin­g imams. He quit that group in 2014, saying the raids were “provocativ­e and counterpro­ductive” and were attracting “racists and extremists”.

Just before that he popped up in the thick of the union flag protests in Belfast in 2013, during which disturbanc­es were triggered by the city council’s decision to restrict the flying of the union flag at city hall. He was subsequent­ly given a threemonth suspended jail sentence after pleading guilty to participat­ing in unlawful public procession­s.

Now the activities of Dowson are under scrutiny once again. In December, the New York Times ran an investigat­ion linking him to a number of websites including the Patriot News, which it says “pumped out pro-Trump hoaxes tying his opponent Hillary Clinton to Satanism, paedophili­a and other conspiraci­es”. The postings were viewed and shared tens of thousands of times in the US, according to the report. Hope Not Hate’s State of Hate report for 2017 also named him as one of Britain’s most influentia­l far-right activists, describing him as a Christian Fundamenta­list and anti-Muslim, who set up anti-immigrant group the Knights Templar Internatio­nal (KTI) soon after leaving Britain First. The report states he controls a number of Facebook pages and “news” websites which have an enormous reach across social me-

dia and that he is active in countries including Austria, Germany, Hungary, Italy, the UK, Poland, Russia, Serbia and Syria.

Recent activities it says Dowson has been involved in include travelling with ex-BNP leader Nick Griffin to Bulgaria to supply materials to an extreme right-wing militia group patrolling the border.

The report added: “Both have also spoken at conference­s on the “demographi­cs” they claim prove the white race (read “Christian” in Dowson’s phraseolog­y) is facing extinction.

“Both are now regular visitors to Budapest, where Dowson’s KTI has opened a ‘hub’ in an Old Reform Church building for far-right guests from as far afield as Sweden and the United States.”

Other activities KTI has been involved in include advertisin­g homes in a village in Hungary which has banned the wearing of Muslim dress such as the hijab and the call to prayer, as well as public displays of affection by gay people. In a report by the BBC earlier this month, Laszlo Toroczkai, the mayor of Asotthalom –who wants to attract Christian Europeans who object to multicultu­ralism to live in the village – said he had been contacted by Dowson who had visited with Griffin “just to have a look”.

Dowson’s activities have attracted the attention of far-right leaders in central and eastern Europe, according to Hope Not Hate – including Aleksandr Dugin, a “Russian academic and fascist with alleged links to the Kremlin and Russian military” who is said to have helped Dowson open an office in Belgrade. Dugin has advocated for the formation of a “Eurasian Empire” to rival the “liberal” West.

In 2015, Dowson spoke at an annual gathering of far-right leaders in St Petersburg, known as the Internatio­nal Russian Conservati­ve Forum. A report in the Financial Times told how he addressed the crowd saying: “In the West we have been brainwashe­d to hate Vladimir Putin … [But] Vladimir Putin understand­s the right of the majority should be put in front of the whims and the fancies of the minorities.

“The West has been polluted by the virus of decadence, of liberalism, of homosexual­ity, of the destructio­n of the family.”

Dowson declined to be interviewe­d by phone, but agreed to answer questions put by the Sunday Herald by email. When it comes to pinning down his activities, he denies a lot and is also light on much of the detail. His answers are reproduced here as sent.

On being named as one of the most influentia­l far-right activists in Britain, he said the claim was “almost too ridiculous to warrant an answer”.

Asked to clarify his ideology and whether he is anti-immigrant, he said: “For the record I am a socially conservati­ve Christian. I reject all forms of race politics as blasphemou­s as God created all men and to judge a man on skin pigmentati­on is not only wicked but rather stupid.”

Dowson may use language much associated with the so-called “alt-right” ideology – such as “snowflake” – but refuted that he is part of the fascist movement.

He described the alt-right as a reaction to the “bigotry” of the liberal establishm­ent, adding much of it is “nothing more than Muslim baiting or anti jihad libertaria­ns.”

He added: “I have more in common with a decent Muslim than I have with most alt-right leaders and that is scary!”

On the issue of reports he helped Trump to victory by spreading “fake news”, he wrote: “Totally untrue, without merit or foundation, nothing more than a shocking fake news story from the mainstream media, similar garbage we heard after Brexit. Snowflake arrogance manifest in lies.

“Trump won, the liberal clowns need to grow up and deal with it.”

Dowson said he had assisted with “one or two projects” with KTI, but did not hold a “position, title or authority”. He said he had no involvemen­t with Patriot News Agency “other than they are a branch of a client’s portfolio.”

He also denied Dugin had helped establish the office in Belgrade and said he had “never even heard of this guy” until the report from Hope Not Hate.

“Again, total and utter fabricatio­n of the most bizarre kind,” he added.

He did say he is an adviser to “over 150 companies and groups/parties who do [run websites] in a wide range of forms from business to political in many countries around the world”, but did not provide any further details.

When it comes to how he makes his money, Dowson said it was from providing business services. One of his key successful tactics, according to Hope Not Hate, is to employ a knowledge of algorithms to flood social media pages with right-wing material, particular­ly using emotive memes.

His concerted campaign to promote Trump during the US presidenti­al elections was conducted from his Budapest bolthole. The Hope Not Hate report said: “Operating behind a plethora of websites and Facebook groups, Dowson announced his mission to “spread devastatin­g anti-Clinton, pro-Trump memes and sounds bites into sections of the population too disillusio­ned with politics to have taken any notice of convention­al campaignin­g.”

Long before the advent of social media, Dowson recognised the value of the looming digital era during his anti-abortion campaignin­g. In an interview in 1999, he said: “We live in a media age. Pictures mean everything.”

In its latest edition, Crusader, a magazine published by the KTI, states that in the run-up to Brexit there were seven “skilled and devoted KTI social-media experts” working 12-hour shifts six days a week for 16 weeks, “producing or finding and promoting stories, memes and videos that we fed out to literally millions of people daily across the UK”.

It added: “All-in-all, we played the key role in a grassroots Brexit campaign force which had a social media reach more than three times than that of the official ‘Out’ campaign. Now that’s Templar power and influence!”

Another article in the summer 2014 edition of Crusader outlines a chilling vision of engagement in a “Holy cyber-war”. It claims the group has identified an ideal way to “mobilise our people all over the world in a powerful internet strike force”.

It added: “We have already identified the very best system and are now negotiatin­g to buy it, because top-notch cyber info-war capability doesn’t come cheap.

“We can tell you that the system will enable Templars and active militant Christian cyber-warriors everywhere to deliver crushing blows in the Informatio­n War, switching targets between the Islamists, the atheistic left and other deadly enemies of tradition, decency and freedom to hammer who deserves it the most.

“We look forward to telling you more and to giving you a way to get involved in our own Holy War.”

But Dowson dismissed any notion he sees himself as involved in some kind of cyber “Holy War”. Despite his past and present involvemen­t with extremist groups, he was at pains to insist he is just a normal guy.

In his email to the Sunday Herald, he wrote: “I am a 52-year-old father and grandfathe­r to 11 wonderful children, not a spotty teenager sitting in a bedroom in a batman cape ffs!”

The Sunday Herald revealed his past involvemen­t in hardline Loyalist groups in the west of Scotland, as a former organiser of a flute band which produced a tape of music in tribute to Loyalist killer Michael Stone, who murdered three Catholics in 1988

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: Jim Dowson, who has been named one of Britain’s most influentia­l far-right activists; Dowson unveiling a prolife campaign in 2005; Loyalist killer Michael Stone who Dowson paid tribute to with a tape of his flute band. Inset, Nick...
Clockwise from top: Jim Dowson, who has been named one of Britain’s most influentia­l far-right activists; Dowson unveiling a prolife campaign in 2005; Loyalist killer Michael Stone who Dowson paid tribute to with a tape of his flute band. Inset, Nick...

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