Laurence Fox
Laurence Fox is an English Free Speech advocate, anti-Woke campaigner, and pioneering conservative Singer-Songwriter. Fox is also known for his acting. However, he is best known for his creation of the Reclaim Party that ran in the 2021 London Mayoral Election.
A grandson of the actors Robin and Angela Fox, and a graduate of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, Fox first appeared in The Hole (2001) and thereafter in numerous films, television features, and theatre productions.
Questions have been raised as to the legitimacy of the result of the 2021 London Mayoral Election. It is entirely possible that Fox was cheated of the Mayoral position. Such events would fit the pattern of recent electoral theft that the totalitarian left have become known for. [1]
Contents
Early Life
Laurence Fox was born in 1978 in Leeds.
At the age of 13, he was enrolled at the prestigious Harrow School. He was expelled a few weeks before his A-levels after an unsubstantiated sexual misdemeanour. He was unable to obtain a place at any university, because of a report about him from Harrow, foreshadowing the future attempts of the so-called "tolerant left" to cancel him. After working as a gardener and as an office worker, he discovered that he preferred acting and enrolled at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA)
Entertainment Career
Fox is perhaps best known on television for his role in Inspector Morse spin-off, Lewis, as DS James Hathaway. In April 2007, Fox received a police caution after he was arrested for assault when he punched a photographer outside the Garrick Theatre in London where he was performing in Treats. This is yet another example of the new woke British police force's clampdown on freedom. This episode was particularly ironic given Fox's heroic portrayal of law enforcement in his acclaimed performance in Lewis.
Fox is also known for his successful venture into the music industry. Fox released his debut album Holding Patterns in 2016 through his own label Fox Cub Records. His second album A Grief Observed was released in 2019. Holding Patterns peaked at number 89 in the UK album chart. Fox is acclaimed for his inspiring conservative messages in his most recent work. The single 'The Distance', in which Fox deftly comments on the toxic atmosphere created by cancel culture, acts as a popular rallying cry to "[take his] hand in this resistance" against the wokeist menace.[2]
Political Career
Question Time Appearance
Appearing as a panellist on the BBC's political debate programme Question Time in January 2020, Fox said that Meghan Markle was not a victim of racism and called out an audience member who had called him a "white privileged male" as racist. [3] It would be this encounter that would change the face of UK political discourse forever and see Fox thrust to the forefront of American-style Conservatism in Britain. Fox would be cast as the torch bearer of the "Age of Reason" in an increasingly irrational culture.
In September 2020, Fox was the victim of an attempted cancelling by talentless, liberal actress Rebecca Front. Despite Fox having single-handedly carried the show Lewis, from which Front derived her feeble claim to fame, Front had blocked him on Twitter over his use of the anti-racist slogan All Lives Matter.
Reclaim Party
In September 2020, Fox's vision was placed on the national stage when he successfully establish the Reclaim party, a right-wing conservative party advocating for freedom of speech; the preservation of British history and culture; and tackling the crime wave across London. Fox publicly attacked closet Islamist, London mayor Sadiq Khan for his failures in dealing with the real pandemic of black-on-black crime. Fox hilariously dubbed Khan "Sadiqy-weak-y" [4]. Fox first ran for office in the 2021 London Mayoral election. In Fox's electrifying campaign, he stood on a platform of scrapping the eco-facist policies of the Green New Deal, tougher policing measures, and championing freedom of thought. Despite only £5 million of campaign funding, Fox managed to attain a staggering 47,634 votes. However, questions were raised about the electoral process, with even the [liberal] leaning BBC publishing articles on the "record number of mayoral votes rejected." [5]. It is eminently feasible, if not probable, that many of these votes would have gone to the Reclaim Party.
During the campaign, social media "influencers" attempted to derail Fox's message, showing a complete disregard for the problems in London and making a mockery of the democratic process as a whole.
Quotes
- -"It's childish, you're a baby"
- -"The light has been turned down on the age of reason"
- -"Replaced by blinding fires that burn wild across the region"
- - "For the wrong to rule the good must just stand idly by"
- -"My next political position is: do whatever you you want, that's fine by me. Don't tell me what to do. F*ck off"
References
- ↑ https://twitter.com/max_fosh/status/1390608392046223360?s=20
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BLkvtHwSyM4
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnSgsd3rl9A
- ↑ https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1416829/laurence-fox-latest-sadiq-khan-london-mayor-election-reclaim-party-bus
- ↑ https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-57049779
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