The Tory leader made the pledge at an event in Peckham, south-east
London, where he was attempting to reach out to black voters. He said
being a member of the BNP and a teacher was "completely incompatible"
and headteachers should be given more rights when it came to hiring
and firing staff. Ministers last week ruled out banning members of the
BNP from the teaching profession.
Cameron, who spent more than an hour taking questions, received the
loudest applause of the evening when he said: "Any good headteacher
would not have a member of the BNP within a hundred miles of a school.
They should be able to fire someone for that reason."
The Tory leader also pledged to stop police using terrorism laws to
search people not suspected of terror-related offences.
He told those gathered at the Harris Academy that he did not believe
people voted on issues that only affected their own race.
"I generally believe in a one-nation Conservative party, a one-nation
Britain," he said.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/mar/18/david-cameron-headteachers-bnp-teachers