1 March 1986)[2] which consists mainly of reminiscences and obituaries of figures active in the pre-Second World War days of the BUF.
The Daily Telegraph, in its obituary of John Warburton (1919–2004), described Comrade as "the newsletter for veteran Blackshirts which soon developed into a journal that provided much primary material on the movement's history.
"[4] The Friends also organise dinners, reunions, social events and film-shows of speeches by Oswald Mosley and BUF rallies, which are attended by veteran former members of Mosley's post-war Union Movement and younger sympathisers.
Diana Mitford, Mosley's second wife was associated with FOM and spoke at a number of their functions in London.
[citation needed] In a 2016 article on the British far right published by The Guardian, a spokesperson described the group's views as "...pro-Islam, pro-EU, against US global supremacy, anti-capitalist, anti-state socialism, [and] pro-syndicalism".