SDS undercovers reported on the Hammersmith branch of the International Socialists (IS, later the Socialist Workers Party or SWP) from 1972 to 1982. Between 1976 and 1978 the branch was infiltrated by HN296 ‘Geoff Wallace’. During his time in Hammersmith IS, Wallace assumed elected roles and served as a branch delegate and his reporting includes details of children’s political activities. He was one of three organisers of the Anti-Nazi League carnival in 1978.
According to a 1972 SDS report, Hammersmith IS took part in a demonstration in support of the Stoke Newington Four, anarchists who were accused of being part of the Angry Brigade, later known as the Stoke Newington Eight.
At the beginning of Wallace’s infiltration, the Hammersmith branch was part of the IS Inner West London District. In his evidence to the Inquiry, Wallace suggested that Hammersmith and neighbouring IS districts and branches took part in confrontations with the fascist National Front (NF) in the late 1970s.
According to Wallace, members from Hammersmith and other west London branches and districts were involved in such demonstrations, notably on 28 February 1976, when the National Front (NF) organised a ‘Right to Work for whites only’ march in Coventry. In 1977, the Hammersmith branch attended similar counter-protests against the NF in Birmingham and Lewisham.
Former IS member and Inquiry core participant Lindsey German called into question the accuracy of Wallace’s reports. In particular she disputed that IS had planned confrontations with the National Front, explaining that members had just responded to provocation and violence by far-right activists as it occurred.
In February 1978, Wallace reported that a new IS district of Hammersmith and Kensington had been created. The old Fulham and Hammersmith branches had been disbanded, and new branches formed in Hammersmith and Shepherd’s Bush.
Sources
First Witness Statement of Lindsey German
Counsel to the Inquiry’s opening statement for Tranche One, Phase Two