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A far-right activist who once shared a dinner table with Tory Jacob Rees-Mogg has been recorded in a hate-filled, racist rant.

Gregory Lauder-Frost spouted bile about justice campaigner Baroness Lawrence , who he called a 'big black woman', and broadcaster Vanessa Feltz, who he dismissed as a “fat Jewish s**g”.

He also talked of deporting non-whites to their “natural homelands” as he was covertly taped by anti-racism group HOPE not hate who are making a film about the rise of the alt-right.

Mr Rees-Mogg, a Tory favourite for Prime Minister, was snapped sitting next to Lauder-Frost five years ago at a dinner of the Traditional Britain Group, of which Lauder-Frost is vice-president.

Facebook photos showed the controversial backbencher at the black-tie event, surrounded by dozens of mainly young and entirely white dinner guests.

The Tory later said he regretted his decision to deliver the keynote speech to a group that wants “voluntary repatriation” of black Britons such as Doreen Lawrence, mother of tragic Stephen, who was murdered by a racist gang in 1993.

Lauder-Frost told of his opposition to Baroness Lawrence’s 2013 appointment to the House of Lords when he spoke on Feltz’s BBC London radio show at the time.

He said: “It’s ridiculous. She’s made countless anti-English comments over the last 10 years. She’s no friend of the English people.”

But the views he shared with an undercover HOPE not hate researcher at a London pub last year are even more despicable. He called the Baroness a “big black woman'" and, showering his listener with spittle, said of Feltz: “She’s a fat Jewish s**g, she’s revolting, revolting. She lives with a negro. She’s horrible.”

On repatriation, he said: “We’re saying, ‘You’ve got three years, then go home. Go to your natural homelands…We give you time to go.’ Then we’ll swing into action.

“I think that’s the only way forward, if we want to save our cultures and our nations. Because these people are having children like rabbits.”

Lauder-Frost is the former political secretary of the Monday Club, which called for the repatriation of 50,000 immigrants a year and the repeal of all race relations legislation.

The club was once linked to the Conservative Party, but the Tories severed ties with it in 2001. Another club member, Lord Sudeley, is now president of ­Traditional Britain, which describes itself as “a broad alliance of conservatives, traditionalists and radicals” opposed to “political correctness and enforced multiculturalism”.

Rees-Mogg said after being snapped at the Traditional Britain event: “I can entirely disassociate myself…I have never been a member or supporter. I clearly made a mistake…Mrs Lawrence is a wonderful and courageous woman who has contributed to British public life.”

(Image: Getty Images Europe)

(Image: Getty Images Europe)

HOPE not hate investigator Patrik Hermansson, 25, made contact with the extremists after setting up a fake online profile and posting on far-right sites.

Within weeks he was embraced by some of Britain’s most odious extremists.

He drank from a Viking hunting horn with Stead Steadman, leader of far-right think-tank London Forum.

And he met Holocaust denier David Irving, who told him: “I’m pretty sure that in Auschwitz not much happened.”

Steadman introduced Patrik to ­American Greg Johnson, the editor of far-right Counter Currents, who told Patrik that European countries should become all-white “homelands”. Asked about the “Jewish problem”, he said: “The ultimate solution ultimately is to expel them.”

Patrik was trusted to vet new recruits at London Forum meetings and said many of them had felt encouraged to attend by the rise of US President Donald Trump.

Patrik, who was undercover for a year, said: “They were mostly young men who had never been to a real-world far-right group before.

“We’d ask them why are they here now. The explanation many of them gave was that their ideas have become more acceptable after Trump.

“Trump was a pivot. They may have been active for years behind a laptop but now they’re going to meetings.”

(Image: Getty)

HOPE not hate aim to raise £35,000 to produce a film, A Year Undercover in the Alt-right, based on hours of footage Patrik obtained.

He said: “The far right and alt right are becoming more international in their focus and networks.

“I think people underestimate the importance of anti-Semitism in today’s far right. These people talk about Jewish world conspiracies every day. They believe Jews are behind everything – Muslim immigration, gay rights, women’s rights. The other issue is gender. Many are motivated to join by hatred towards women.”

A spokesman for Traditional Britain said Lauder-Frost “does not recall being interviewed by an anonymous coward seeking to engage in defamation” and that “any interviews taking place with him are personal unless it is agreed he is speaking on behalf of the Traditional Britain Group”.

Group administrator Richard Curry, said: “Gregory Lauder-Frost denies he was filmed anywhere at all. Everyone is entitled to their own very personal opinions. He has a list of all interviews given on behalf of the Traditional Britain Group and yours does not figure. Your comments on repatriation are simply not the TBG’s policies.”

Nick Lowles, chief executive of HOPE not hate, said: "Patrik Hermansson has been tremendously brave in penetrating this vile network and helping expose the hatred which lies beneath it.

“His revelations and our film heralds our arrival in the USA, following our successful exposé of the largest Ku Klux Klan group in America in November 2016.

“But these British networks play a pivotal role in the alt-right, too, acting as a nexus for others to come together and share and disseminate their extreme views."

An online fundraising campaign to back the film can be found on Kickstarter

A previous version of this article stated that the undercover Hope Not Hate investigation showed Gregory Lauder-Frost calling Doreen Lawrence a n*****. Although Mr Lauder-Frost called Ms Lawrence a 'big black woman' with 'no credibility whatsoever for a life peerage, none, just because she is black' we have since been advised that Mr Lauder-Frost did not use the term 'n*****'.