Hope Not Hate Never Letting Facts Getting In The Way Of Calling Anyone Fascist Or Racist (Talking S***te About The Isle Of Wight)

It’s been a while since last looking at these skeets, not least of all because outside of the Labour Party and the mouthbreathers of the trade union movement and student unions – who see doing some research themselves cutting into their valuable drinking and pot smoking time – no one takes Hope Not Hate seriously anymore.
Too many awkward questions about why they seem so keen on employing old National Front and British National Party thugs, or why indeed they seem just a little too obsessed with thugs in general (it’s almost as if they secretly like them, but that couldn’t be right – could it?)
In our current age where no one feels ashamed anymore to not bother showing their working when launching ad hominem attacks, perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised that it has got to the stage Nick Lowles and his scum will tag anyone far right if they feel like it, even when anyone with the slightest knowledge of the British Isles’ political fringe will know of this lot …

In their so-called ‘The Unelectables: Meet the far-right candidates in the May 2026 elections’ written by their ‘Right Response Team’ on 21st April 2026 (in other words Nick Lowles and whatever other fellow low life he’s hired for a bottle of cheap plonk and chips), the Vectis Party were described as ‘obscure’.
They would only be obscure to London wankers like Lowles pig ignorant of anywhere west of Woking – which is of course one of the reasons that the Vectis Party was set up in the first place, back in 1967 by Councillor R. W. J. Cawdell at a time the population of the Isle of Wight was growing but paradoxically its services were declining – it’s entire rail network was closed down by 1966.

It has swung between being soft left wing and soft right wing, but the central theme was resentment towards the island being treated as Britain’s dump for maximum security psychopaths, superannuated retirees and upper class twits to have holiday homes and sail their yachts from. Worst of all the increasing ferry costs to and from the island resulted in most youngsters or young families being forced to leave in order to secure work (a problem that remains to this day).
Cawdell was part and parcel of the ‘regionalist’ movement that once had some interest in England with the likes of the Wessex Regionalists and in more recent times the Yorkshire Party, but the Vectis Party and its offshoots’ ultimate aim remains for the Isle of Wight to gain Crown Dependency status similar to the Isle of Man and the Channel Isles as the only means of any sort of long term future.

Taken from the party’s registration at the Electoral Commission – do these exactly look like ‘far right’ ideas to you?
The only reason it seems Lowles has tagged the Vectis Party as being ‘far right’ is because candidate Daryll Pitcher once stood for UKIP in in the 2017 General Election whilst a member of Vectis.

As always, stupid Lowles missed the real dirt: Pitcher was forced to resign as a councillor when jailed for a rape carried out thirty years previously in 2023 (the matter still divides opinion on the island, as it was ‘statutory rape’ for sex with a fourteen year old – the point being he was also fourteen years old at the time – and there were accusations the case was politically motivated).
That’s what real research looks like, Hope Not Hate, learn from an expert.
AA42
AA6x7
The Mare's Nest
6s & 7s
Skeletal Screams Blogspot