MP3 PartyMr Fedorovsky, a businessman who has lived in the UK for 15 years since arriving from Russia, compares the MP3 generation to a movement like the hippies of the 60s - they had eastern philosophy, he says, and the younger generation of 2002 has MP3.' This political class already exists - it is our customers,' he said. 'There are 80 million MP3 users around the world. They are not there to steal anything, they are there to express themselves in a safe environment.' And he is says it is a mistake to assume that young people are apathetic. 'They are very proactive but they need ideology. Present day politicians repeat the mantra that ideology is dead - it is not.'
'Radical'Mr Fedorovsky and three colleagues have so far spent £30,000 on setting up the party.They say they will fight for 'significant, radical and even revolutionary simplification of all aspects of life in the UK, from taxation to the law, foreign policy, immigration and the monarchy'.The party claims that 'MP3' is already the second most popular search on the internet.' MP3 Party has the intellectual potential to attract a significant bulk of the younger generation who at present seem apathetic to old-fashioned political processes and systems,' the party said in a statement.'
MP3 Party is not destructive or anarchistic in any conventional way. It is looking forward to having a good time and putting some fun back into politics.'