[3] The League held its first meeting in Hyde Park on 4 November 1944 at which it promoted itself as a fascist organisation that endorsed racial purity and "Britain for the British", which inspired a hostile reaction from the crowd.
[5] In June 1945 the League was represented at a meeting of the National Front After Victory, an initiative led by A. K. Chesterton aimed at forming a united postwar party although the group quickly floundered.
[2] Nonetheless, the League, along with other more minor fascist groups in Britain at the time, worked closely with German prisoners-of-war held in camps in and around London.
[9] However, the League also won support due to antisemitism in the United Kingdom becoming widespread around 1947 in response to the Jewish insurgency in Mandatory Palestine against British rule.
[10] On 15 November 1947 a meeting was held at the Memorial Hall, in London's Farringdon Road, where Mosley announced his intention to return to politics.