Gregory Lauder-Frost

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Gregory MacLennan Lauder-Frost (born 1951) is a British political activist and writer. He was a leading member of the Conservative Monday Club, the Western Goals Institute, and the International Monarchist League, is known for his monarchism, his opposition to non-white immigration, his anti-Communism, and his opposition to the European Union. Professionally, he is an accountant and a genealogist.

Lauder-Frost describes himself as a High Tory and a traditionalist. The Independent has described him as "a leading right-wing political extremist" (28 November 1992).

Contents

Background

The son of Wallace Frost (1924-2005), General Manager for Gilbeys (Vintners) Ltd., and Cecily Lauder (1925-1977), Lauder-Frost is a descendant of the Plantagenets through his ancestor Sir Robert Drury (d. 1536) of Thurston & Hawstead, Privy Councillor and Speaker of the House of Commons, [refer: 'Order of the Crown of Charlemagne']. He is also the great-nephew of Sir Harry Lauder.

Political activities

Lauder-Frost was a Conservative Party activist from 1975 until 1995, and stated in a letter to the Daily Telegraph, "I have been a conservative all of my adult life" (15 June 2001). On 4 January 1995 a letter from him printed in the London Evening Standard called for "witch-hunts" of traditionalists within the Conservative Party to cease, and for "the party to return to its original philosophies". He has also held senior positions in the Conservative Monday Club and the Western Goals Institute (see below).

He was an early member of Norris McWhirter's Freedom Association (then called the National Association for Freedom). Their newspaper The Free Nation regularly printed letters from him, including one on 5 August 1977 on living standards in the Soviet Union, following his visit there, and attended the NAFF meeting at Chelsea Town Hall on 6 April 1978. He remained in touch with McWhirter, and was an invited guest at his Memorial Service on 7 October, 2004, at St. Martin-in-the-Fields. In 1977, Lauder-Frost also became an active member of the Primrose League pressure-group.

In January 1978 he became a Ward Secretary and served on the Executive Council of the Chelsea Conservative Association, at the same time as member of Parliament (MP) James Arbuthnot. In May 1981 he was proposed as a councillor candidate for North Stanley Ward in the Kensington & Chelsea Borough Council, but was turned down by the executive because of his opposition in principle to council housing, and his view that occupants of council houses should be rigorously means-tested annually. He left the Chelsea Association in protest at the overnight demolition of the Italianate Kensington Town Hall by the Conservative-controlled council.

Alec Douglas-Home suggested to Lauder-Frost over dinner at Duns Castle that he join his association, and in 1986 he joined and became a patron until 1993 of the Roxburgh and Berwickshire Conservative Association in southern Scotland, where he again joined the Executive Council. They remained on good terms, and Lauder-Frost received invitations to both Lady Home and Alec's Memorial Services held at Westminster Abbey on November 22, 1990, and January 22, 1996, respectively. Because Lauder-Frost had a flat in Belgravia he was also a member, until 1995, of the Westminster Conservative Association.

Lauder-Frost was a delegate to virtually every Conservative Party Annual Conference until 1992. From 1987, he also appears as a delegate to Conservative Party Scottish Conferences and was one of those who took part in the Rally for Margaret Thatcher in Perth City Hall on Friday May 13, 1988. The following year he was a guest at the Provost of Perth's Civic Reception at the City Hall.

Monday Club

Lauder-Frost was a member (1976-1992), and on May 22,1989 was elected Political Secretary, of the Conservative Monday Club. He frequently represented the Club at a variety of events, an earlier example being the London Europe Society's Annual Luncheon at St. Ermin's Hotel, Westminster, on 23 June 1983, when the Guest of Honour was the Archduke Otto von Habsburg, MEP.

Lauder-Frost served as secretary (1986-1988), and then chairman (1988-1992), of the Club's influential Foreign Affairs Committee. With Andrew V R Smith and co-founder of the Freedom Association, John Gouriet, he was present at the Club's Foreign Affairs Committee's Spring Dinner at the Washington Hotel, Curzon Street, Mayfair, on Monday 9 June 1986, the guest-of-honour being the Hon. Ian Douglas Smith, Prime Minister of Rhodesia, 1964-79.

On February 24, 1988, the Estonian National Day, he represented the Club at a Reception at the Estonian Embassy, which despite the Soviet occupation of that country, had been maintained by exiles. He chaired a Club dinner on June 5, 1989, at the Charing Cross Hotel in London for Dr. Andries Treurnicht, the leader of the South African Conservative Party, the pro-apartheid party formed in opposition to the governing National Party. Lauder-Frost later claimed that he supported Treurnicht "on principle" (The Observer, 24 February 1991). On Thursday July 20 that year, he represented the Club at the annual dinner of the European Atlantic Group.

On August 23, 1989, The Guardian reported that Conservative Central Office had refused to list a Monday Club fringe meeting on Immigration in the October Conference Handbook. Lauder-Frost criticised Central Office, saying they were attempting to "stifle debate" on the subject. He later suggested (The Observer, 24 February 1991) that the Monday Club's policy on race and immigration was due for a "more radical outlook" and reiterated the Club's long-standing commitment for voluntary repatriation for first and second-generation immigrants, with compensation.

On September 7, speaking for the Monday Club, he was quoted in The Sun denouncing "the disgraceful Anglo-Irish Agreement". With the question of German reunification to the fore, an article in The Independent on Sunday on March 4, 1990, quoted a document circulated to all Tory MPs by Lauder-Frost on behalf of the Monday Club, calling for the restoration of the German borders as they were on 1 January 1938 ((that is, calling for the transfer of a large portion of what is now Poland to Germany amongst other adjustments). He argued that this would comply with the Potsdam Agreement, and added "there must be no gains for communism".

He was the Monday Club's principal representative, accompanied by Eleanor Dodd, at the Sable Society's Dinner at Lympne Castle, Kent, for Ian Smith the former Prime Minister of Rhodesia, on July 23, 1990.

Lauder-Frost was said to have been a prominent figure in what The Observer described as a takeover of the Monday Club by "extremists" associated with the Western Goals Institute (The Observer, 24 February 1991 and The Guardian, 7 May 1997). Lauder-Frost denied this charge, in a letter from the Club published in The Observer on 3 March 1991.

Following the damaging publicity, a few senior Club members announced their resignations, including Viscount Masserene and Ferrard, Sir George Gardiner and Julian Amery. They were reported as saying that the Club was "was becoming more extreme and no longer enjoyed their full support" (The Guardian, 29 January 1991). Amery later withdrew his resignation, and remained within the Club. Lauder-Frost and Sam Swerling both described the resignations as part of a "wrecking campaign" by the ousted Chairman, David Storey.

Lauder-Frost was a frequent critic of the Monday Club's portrayal in the mainstream media. On 31 January 1991 he criticised The Guardian newspaper (Letters), on behalf of the Monday Club for what he termed the paper's earlier "inaccurate and damaging" report. He claimed that, "it is almost laughable to talk of an extreme Monday Club today if one compares it with the Club's activities in the 1960s and 1970s. There is clearly a disinformation campaign going on." He finished by arguing that the Club was looking forward to promoting "traditional conservatism into the 1990s."

Private Eye magazine, long a critic of the Right and pressure groups such as the Monday Club, carried a letter from Lauder-Frost in August 1991, in which he said: "It is a sad reflection on the British 'intelligentsia' that any pressure-group on the Left is more or less acceptable, but on the Right is not. Yet the broad Left are responsible for the deaths of many more millions than the Right, and the destruction of civilized values throughout the world." -->

In October 1991, Lauder-Frost headed a Monday Club delegation to observe the war between Serbia and Croatia, the first British political delegation to observe that conflict. Tory MPs Andrew Hunter and Roger Knapman (now leader of the United Kingdom Independence Party), and Count Nikolai Tolstoy, were part of the delegation which was entertained by President Franjo Tudjman and the Croatian government in Zagreb. Subsequently on November 20, in London, he was a guest at a dinner in aid of "War Victims and Historic Monuments in Croatia", at the Savoy Hotel, where the guest speaker was Professor Norman Stone.

Lauder-Frost left the Monday Club at the end of May 1992 due to problems in his personal life.

Western Goals Institute

Lauder-Frost was invited to become an Honorary Vice-President of the ultra-conservative Western Goals Institute in 1989, a post he held until 2000. On 12/13 August, 1989, he was part of a WGI delegation attending anti-communist demonstrations at Moln, Germany [refer: "Hamburger Abendblatt", 14 August 1989]. He wrote a controversial article that appeared in the group's newspaper, European Dawn in September 1989, condemning the bicentennial anniversary celebrations of the French Revolution, and another attacking the West's appeasement and betrayal of European nations to communism. On September 25, 1989], he was present at the WGI dinner held at Simpson's-in-the-Strand for Alfredo Cristiani, President of El Salvador, whom Lauder-Frost said, was "in the front line against communism". In July 1990, Lauder-Frost was a member of the WGI delegation to the World Anti-Communist League Congress in Brussels, one of the largest ever held. He also attended, with UK Conservative Party Observer status, the 28th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, held 2-13 July, 1990. Following that attendance he travelled to Taipei at the invitation of Dr. Tze-Chi Chao, President of the WACL, and attended a function at the Palace Hotel, on July 22.

Lauder-Frost was a guest speaker on the subject of foreign ownership of the British media, at a September 1992 meeting of the Clarendon Club, organised by controversial author David Irving, at which, according to The Observer, Irving suggested the Holocaust was a myth, (22 November 1992)'.

Western Goals was a controversial group in Britain. The Independent alleged that the WGI had ties to foreign neo-fascist parties (28 November 1992), while The Guardian later accused it of attempting "to infiltrate fascists into the Conservative Party" (8 August 1993). This was disputed by the group.

In 1997], Lauder-Frost sent a letter of fraternal greeting, on behalf of the Western Goals Institute to the annual congress of Jean-Marie Le Pen's far-right Front National (FN) at Strassburg, France (Independent, 31 March 1997), which was read to the delegates from the podium.

Views on immigration

Lauder-Frost has for many years been an opponent of non-white immigration to Europe and Britain, reflecting the policies expressed by the Monday Club and Enoch Powell. Like Powell, Lauder-Frost supported the "voluntary repatriation" of immigrants (which had been a pledge in the 1970 Conservative Party manifesto).

He addressed a Monday Club Young Members' Group fringe meeting at the Young Conservatives Conference at Torquay on 1 February 1990, opposing immigration into the UK from Hong Kong. Between 24 - 29 April Lauder-Frost was in Hong Kong, Canton and adjoining provinces, and Macau, and in a letter signed by him on behalf of the Western Goals Institute published in the Daily Telegraph on 9 October, he stated that "Most of the refugees [to Britain] are economic migrants, and the government should deport them as soon as possible, just as they are deporting Vietnamese economic migrants from Hong Kong."

In early 1991, Lauder-Frost was quoted as saying, "'There are a great many people who are economic immigrants who certainly didn't come here because they liked King Arthur. They're not interested in being British, they're interested in wearing saris and so on." (The Observer, 24 February 1991)

Following the 1991 Los Angeles riots, he was interviewed on behalf of the Monday Club and said, "We look across the Atlantic and see an example of negroes who have gone to that country. The point is, they don't behave the way we behave. We should be nipping this thing in the bud. We should make them (Asian and African immigrants) an offer they could hardly refuse." Of the British-born children of immigrants, he said, "I don't see how they can be British. They don't share anything that we have in common. They are aliens" (The Guardian, 6 December 1991), repeating Powell's comment that immigrants were "an alien wedge in our cities and connurbations".

Lauder-Frost later wrote, "The time has come for radical, but civilised, action before our country is no longer recognisably British, or goes bankrupt, or both" (The Times, 25 February 2004).

Other views

Resulting from his anti-communism, Lauder-Frost was frequently in Eastern Europe. A British Visitors Privilege Authorisation Card was issued to him by the British Army in Berlin in March 1990, so that he could more easily access East Germany.

Lauder-Frost is a vocal opponent of the European Union (EU), which he terms the "New Soviet Bloc". In October 1990, he shared an anti-EU platform with Enoch Powell at a packed Monday Club meeting at the Empire Hotel, Blackpool, during the Conservative Party Conference. The event was featured on BBC TV's Newsnight programme. On November 3, 1990, The Sun, reporting on an anti-EU demonstration, quoted Lauder-Frost as saying "in ten years the Palace of Westminster could be a museum".

He led the winning team in a debate on 19 March 1990 at Birkbeck College, London University, opposing the motion "This House believes the State should be abolished", which was chaired by Harold Wilson's biographer, Ben Pimlott.

On April 4, 1991, the London Evening Standard carried a front-page piece by Lauder-Frost, on behalf of the Monday Club, attacking the proposed appointment of Janet Street-Porter as the BBC's Head of Arts and Culture. The media enthusiastically reported this debate and a large piece appeared the following day in the Daily Mail where Tory MP John Carlisle also said she should not be appointed. Street-Porter subsequently did not get the job.

On 6 May 1992, Lauder-Frost seconded David Trimble, MP, of the Ulster Unionist Party, in an English Speaking Union Debate against a journalist from TV's Channel 4, Geoff Bell, seconded by Richard Stanton, Chairman on the 'Troops Out Movement', the latter two proposing the motion: 'This House believes that there is no British solution to Northern Ireland'.

Monarchist and other activities

Lauder-Frost attended and supported The Children of Poland charity gala held at The Hurlingham Club on October 28, 1988.

Lauder-Frost is a Life Member (1979) of the International Monarchist League, and he and John Biggs-Davison attended the League's Banquet at the Savoy Hotel on 21 February 1979, which was attended by several members of exiled Royal Houses, including ex-King Simeon II of Bulgaria. Lauder-Frost organised a dinner at the House of Lords on 9 February 1984, in honour of Prince Tomislav of Yugoslavia, (see Daily Telegraph, Court & Social page, 10 February 1984), and later served as the League's Publications Officer (1987-1992) and Secretary-General (1990-1991). He represented the League at the major European Monarchists Congress held at Warsaw, Poland, in December 1990.

Lauder-Frost's Monarchist League activities were profiled by the New Statesman in their 7 June 1991 edition, and he was described on the cover as "Britain's Staunchest Monarchist". He endorsed King Simeon II's bid to again lead Bulgaria, and was quoted as saying "the west and the Soviet Union should have forced the Bulgarian government a long time ago to invite the monarch back". He also proposed returning some Arab countries to Ottoman Turkish rule, and was quoted as describing some recent League editorials as "terrifically reactionary". Lauder-Frost indicated that he was somewhat disappointed with Elizabeth II's willingness to undermine her own authority, and argued that she should have blocked the recent British War Crimes Bill. ["Born to rule", New Statesman, 7 June 1991, p. 20]

He was very active also in the London-based Russian Monarchist League, and encouraged John Biggs-Davison to be the Guest-of-Honour at their Annual Dinner on March 6, 1986. Lauder-Frost was himself the guest speaker at their Summer Dinner on 4th June 1987, at the United Oxford & Cambridge Club in Pall Mall, with Count Nikolai Tolstoy in the chair. With Tolstoy, he was a founding committee member (January 1989), and treasurer, of the now established War and Peace Ball held annually in London, which raised funds for White Russian charities. On 11 January 1990 he organised and chaired a major dinner of the Monday Club at the Grosvenor Hotel in central London, at which the guest-of-honour was the Grand Duke Vladimir of Russia (See the Daily Telegraph, 12 January 1990, and The Independent, 13 January 1990). Lauder-Frost later received a personal commendation from the Grand Duke Vladimir for his efforts towards a restoration of the Russian Imperial House.

Personal life

In April 1985, Lauder-Frost's wife left for the United States to live with her lover whom she subsequently married. Lauder-Frost was awarded full custody of his daughter, then one year old. However she was subsequently abducted twice, and, on both occasions, taken abroad. Although ultimately successful in securing her return to Britain following actions he raised under the Hague Convention on Child Abduction, the extensive costs involved over such a long period were a severe financial burden on him.

Following demonstrations outside of his office organised by left-wingers opposed to Lauder-Frost's political activities, and a call by the organising trades-union committees for his dismissal, unsuccessful attempts were made to dismiss him from his civil service post. However, he subseqently gave notice of his resignation on 31 December 1991, which was accepted.

In January 1992, allegations of financial irregularities were made against him, and he faced criminal charges which were dismissed on appeal. A civil lawsuit against him was also unsuccessful.

Return to public life

Lauder-Frost subsequently withdrew from public debate and most political activities. On February 2, 1995, he was gravely injured in a road accident in Berwickshire returning from his daughter's school. He nevertheless managed to take the Chair at the Western Goals Institute's Annual Dinner at the Grosvenor Hotel, London, on March 1, addressed by Ulster Democratic Unionist Party MP Peter Robinson, (The Times, Court and Social page, March 2, 1995).

He has resumed some minor activity on the political fringe. He continued to contribute articles to the Western Goals Newsletter until 2000, and on April 30, 1996, one of his letters was published in the London Evening Standard calling for the vacant plinth in Trafalgar Square to have the equestrian statue of General Charles George Gordon of Khartoum placed upon it. In May 1997, he lambasted the left of the Conservative Party in the Daily Telegraph, accusing them of being responsible for losing the 1997 general election for the party. Several of his letters were published in The Times in 2003 and 2004, and on October 4, 2005, he returned to the letters page of the Telegraph, criticising the proposed admission of Turkey to the European Union.

He chaired the Traditional Britain Dinners, at Simpsons-in-the-Strand in November 2003, and on 8 February 2006. He is Chairman of the Traditional Britain Group,and a committee member of the Conservative Democratic Alliance (CDA). Lauder-Frost is a follower of the late G.K. Chesterton, and frequently criticises the United States. His opposition to "New Right" economic policies and to the US-led war in Iraq and to American influence generally in the United Kingdom has seen him branded a "neo-socialist" by some younger right-wingers and neoconservative sympathisers, who are heavily influenced by the economic views of Milton Friedman and by Thatcherism.

Other activities

Lauder-Frost is well-known as a long-standing authority in the world of genealogy. He was a guest at the Domesday 1086 - 1986 National Committee Dinner on 16 December 1986, edits two authoritative genealogical journals, and was featured (with photo) in a 'Roots' magazine supplement to Glasgow's Sunday Herald on November 14, 2004. A contributor to the famous Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, his name appeared in the 'Acknowledgements' for the 107th edition (2004). He was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries (Scotland) in 1989. He has appeared on a variety of television programmes, including BBC's Newsnight (21/2/90 - ), RTV, Central TV 'Live', (Birmingham, 9/11/90), BBC's Kilroy, and, more recently, Channel 4's White Tribe debate (where he spoke), BBC's Weakest Link, and BBC Scotland's programme on 30 November 2005, Something About Harry.

Publications

Articles by Gregory Lauder-Frost:

  • "The Monarchy in Russia" - a transcript of the lecture given by Mr. Lauder-Frost in Kensington, London on 12 November 1987, and reported in The Daily Telegraph. Hakahye, [Journal of the Russian Monarchist League, London.] No.2, Winter 1987 edition.
  • "The Betrayal of Bulgaria" - an assessment of the Bulgarian kingdom this century, The Monarchist League - Policy Discussion Paper, Summer 1989. (This essay was translated and reprinted in the Sofia, Bulgaria, newspaper "Democracy").
  • "Legacy of Betrayal" - an analysis alleging western appeasement towards communism in the 20th century, and "1789 - Something to Celebrate?" - comment on the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution. European Dawn, [newspaper of the Western Goals Institute, London.] September 1989. (1789 was reprinted in the Monarchist League Newsletter, Autumn 1989. "Legacy of Betrayal" was translated & republished in the Bulgarian politics & history journal "Avi-Tohol", No.6, Sofia, 1996)
  • "Church and Emperor" - an article-length letter on authorities and claimants to the Russian throne. The Spectator, weekly magazine, London, 3rd February, 1990 edition.
  • "The Imperial Navy" and also "Monarchy and Russia". Both appeared in Hakahyne, [Journal of the Russian Monarchist League, London.] Summer 1990 edition.
  • "The Essence of Monarchy" - transcript of the lecture delivered by Lauder-Frost at the European Monarchist Congress at Warsaw, 8 - 9 December,1990. Pro Fide Rege et Lege magazine, Warsaw, Poland. edition number 10, 1991.
  • "Romanian Essays and Notes" [Editor only] - a booklet published by the Monarchist League, London, February 1991.
  • "Britain’s Staunchest Monarchist" an extensive interview with Lauder-Frost, New Statesman and Society, London, 7 June 1991.
  • "The Right Way Forward" - an analysis of the state of the nation and conservatism in Great Britain. An opinion paper published by the Western Goals Institute], London, 1994. (Translated, edited and republished in the Bulgarian Politics & History journal "Avi-Tohol", Number 6, Sofia, 1996).

The following essays all appeared in The Monarchist League Newsletter [London]:

  • "Romania" - an assessment of the modern monarchy in Romania. Spring 1989.
  • "Italy" - an assessment of the modern monarchy in Italy. Autumn 1989.
  • "Zita - Empress of Austria, Queen of Hungary" - an obituary. Autumn 1989.
  • "Albania" - an assessment of Albania under King Zog & subsequently. Autumn 1990.
  • "China" - an assessment of the ancient Chinese monarchy to the late 19th century. January 1992.
  • "China - The Last Years of Empire" (Monarchist League Review Paper published separately, June 1992.

The following essays appeared in The Borders Family History Society Magazine [ISSN 0268-5701] (Galashiels, Scotland):

  • "Victim of the ‘45" - factual biography of a 16-year-old cadet, later prisoner. Issue 28, June 1995. pps 21 - 21. (Reprinted in The Scottish Genealogist, Sept. 1995).
  • "Robert Lauder of that Ilk" [died 1598] - a biographical outline of the man and his times. Issue 29, October 1995. pps: 10-13.
  • "Whitslade Tower, Berwickshire", and its owners - a history of this now ruined Pele Tower. Issue 31, June 1996. pps: 8-9.
  • "The Gladstones - a study" - A look at ancient Gladstones and an overview of some families of that name in Roxburghshire et al. pps: 11-14. Issue 35, October 1997.
  • "Edrington Castle, Berwickshire, & early references" - a study of this ancient Berwickshire estate, its pre-18th century owners and the castle. pps: 7 - 13. Issue 41, October 1999.
  • "Lowland Scots in Prussia" - Article on Scots who travelled or emigrated to East & West Prussia, with notes on destinations such as Danzig & Konigsberg. pps:21 - 26. Issue 45, February 2001. [Reprinted in "Mitteilungsblatt" issue 60, June 2002, the journal of the Anglo-German Family History Society.]

The following essays appeared in The Scottish Genealogist [ISSN 0330-337X] (Edinburgh):

  • "Victim of the ‘45" - factual biography of a 16-year-old cadet, later prisoner. Volume XLII Number 3, September 1995. pps: 110-113.
  • "The Lauder Arms - The Griffin, Salient or Segreant?" - An examination of the arms of the ancient Scottish houses of Lauder. Volume XLIV Number 1, March 1996. pps 12 - 15.
  • "A No-nonsense man - Lord St. Germains, Lord Advocate of Scotland" (died 1561) a biographical outline of the man and his time. Volume XLIII Number 2, June 1996, pps.56-57.
  • "The Lauder Surname" - an examination of the origins and early documentary mentions of family. Volume XLV Number 2, June 1998, pps 54-57.
  • "Indirect English Descendants of Malcolm III ‘Canmore’ King of the Scots". Some well-sourced descents. Volume XLIX Number 2, June 2002, pps 37 - 41.
  • "Agatha - The Ancestry Dispute" - a summary and opinion, with sources, of the ancestry of Princess Agatha, mother of the Queen Saint Margaret of Scotland (1045-1093). Volume XLIX Number 3, September 2002. [Quoted as source material in "Foundations" the journal of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, January 2003.]
  • "English Descents from Malcolm Canmore (II)". Volume L, Number 4, December 2003.
  • Family Seats Series - "Scott of Harden". Volume LI, Number 3, September 2004.
  • Family Seats Series - "Monkrigg, East Lothian". Volume LI, Number 4, December 2004.
  • "East Anglian Stewards [Stewarts]". Volume LI, Number 4, December 2004.
  • Family Seats Series - "Bemersyde", Berwickshire. Vol. LII, Number 2, June 2005.
  • Family Seats Series - "Neidpath Castle", Peeblesshire. Vol. LII, Number 3, September 2005.

Other articles:

  • "The Lauders of The Bass", (Bass Rock) - a summary history of the family in East Lothian Life [ISSN 1361-7818] Issue 22, Dunbar, Scotland, Autumn 1996.
  • "Summaries", English language commentaries of articles in edition number 5, of Avi-Tohol, (magazine) Sofia, Bulgaria,1996.
  • "Time to get out of NATO", a brief analysis. Western Goals Institute, General Election Briefing Paper, London, April 1997.
  • "Christianity and the Millennium", a critical analysis. Western Goals Institute, Political Briefing Paper, London, January 1998.
  • "Clementine of Orleans - Kingmaker" (by author the late Pashanko Dimitroff, Sofia,1997). A transcript of the review by Mr. Lauder-Frost and presented by him at the book launch reception in Knightsbridge, London, in 1997. "Avi-Tohol" magazine, Number 9, Sofia, Bulgaria, 1998.
  • "Nationalism", a treatise, Western Goals Institute, Political Briefing Paper, London, February 1999.
  • "Withdraw from the EU Now!" compares the limitations on "States’ Rights" before the American civil war with what could happen to the UK in a Federal Europe. Both in Western Goals Institute, Political Briefing Paper, London, Winter 1999.
  • "National Identity" Traditional Britain, Political Briefing Paper, London, June 2001.
  • "The Tragedy of Conservatism Today" Traditional Britain newsletter, London, September 2002.
  • "Lest We Forget" - gives examples of alleged appeasement of communism and terrorists. Traditional Britain newsletter, London, Winter 2005-06.

[Copies of all the publications are lodged with the British Library under the Legal Deposit system. Copies are also deposited with the principal universities’ library agent under the same requirements.]

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