United Kingdom
Related: About this forumCOO of Turning Point UK wants the German Iron Cross as the symbol of UK Independence Party
A proposed new Ukip logo likened to the black military cross associated with the German empire and later the Nazis is being considered by electoral authorities.
A previous application by Ukip, which was once led by Nigel Farage, was rejected last November after the Electoral Commission deemed it as offensive.
That application featured a black cross with a sword and a spear running through it. Ukip, which has increasingly shifted to the far right in recent years, has now submitted a new application, which appears similar but is without the sword. It includes the word Ukip, with The New Right underneath.
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Nick Tenconi, a personal trainer who became Ukips leader last year, has been at the forefront of efforts to steer the party in an explicitly Christian nationalist direction.
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He is also the chief operating officer of Turning Point UK, the British offshoot of the conservative pressure group founded by the US activist Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated last year. Turning Point UK has continued to have contact with the Conservative party, with Kemi Badenoch meeting some of its young activists after Kirks death.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/jan/13/new-proposed-ukip-logo-compared-to-iron-cross-used-by-nazi-regime

Link to tweet
UKIP is trying to call it the "cross pattée" - sounds more innocent than 'Tatzenkreuz'. They claim "Our new logo features the holy lance, the Eucharist and the Cross Pattée, to show UKIPs commitment to reinstate Christianity into the heart of government." "The holy lance" is not exactly a standard Christian symbol; they seem to be saying a circle is "the Eucharist", and yeah, my immediate thought was the Iron Cross. This is "Christianity" as a cover for violence.
I thought the Turning Point connection may be interesting to US DUers.
Ocelot II
(129,302 posts)Botany
(76,464 posts)Suggest that is a bad idea.
T_i_B
(14,882 posts)... becoming less and less Christian and more and more overtly Nazi, so the remnants of UKIP follow suit.
Thing is, Christian Nationalism is completely at odds with English history since 1660. We tried that particular experiment with Oliver Cromwell in the 1650's and it did not turn out terribly well.
muriel_volestrangler
(105,625 posts)We have a monarch crowned in an abbey by the top priest of the national church, and Anglican bishops with automatic places in the upper chamber of parliament, but the lunatics think their king is a traitor:
" target="_blank">Kings Speech having been traitorous (specifically for referring to diversity as a strength, but his supposed treachery is a recurring far-right claim), and about Londons New Year firework display showing the stars of the EU flag at one stage.
https://chrisgreybrexitblog.blogspot.com/2026/01/enemies-within-and-without.html
The first link goes to a Twitter thread, in which the participants aren't even bothering to explain why they're calling their king a traitor - they've been doing it so much that they think everyone has accepted it as a truth (the 2nd is someone from GB News ranting about the European flag - which was displayed because of the Ryder Cup win). Seeing that thread I can understand why people say Twitter is now a cesspit of RW fanaticism - it makes the old Free Britannia site look like a vicar's tea party. I expect half of them are also outraged that the next Archbishop of Canterbury will be a woman, and not Bear Grylls. Or Tommy Robinson, now that's he's declared himself the True Christian.
T_i_B
(14,882 posts)It's a cause that's deeply misogynistic, especially towards female clergy.
It may not surprise you to learn that John Knox is a major influence on Christian Nationalism.
And yes, Twitter has become an absolute cesspit. But recent scandals about CSAM are causing more people to leave in disgust at present.