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PM condemns ‘Unite the Kingdom’ rally that ‘sent shiver’ through communities

15 Sep 2025 3 minute read
People taking part in a Tommy Robinson-led ‘Unite the Kingdom’ march. Photo credit: Lucy North/PA Wire

Sir Keir Starmer has condemned Saturday’s “Unite the Kingdom” demonstration in central London, saying it has left people feeling “more scared than they were before”.

Between 110,000 and 150,000 people turned out for Saturday’s protest organised by far-right activist Tommy Robinson, real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon.

Some 26 police officers were injured, including four who were seriously hurt, and 24 people were arrested for a range of offences including affray, violent disorder, assault and criminal damage.

In an interview with Channel 4 News, the Prime Minister described the demonstration as “plastic patriotism”, adding that it had been more than “just very bad behaviour”.

He said: “It sent a shiver through so many of our communities who now feel more scared than they did before. I understand that.”

‘Dangerous’

Downing Street had earlier condemned as “dangerous and inflammatory” comments by billionaire Elon Musk, in which he urged demonstrators at the rally in London to “fight back” or “die”.

The American owner of Tesla and X also called for an urgent change in government in the UK and told the crowd that “violence is coming”, in his guest appearance at the protest on Saturday.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said Mr Musk’s words threatened “violence and intimidation on our streets”, adding: “I don’t think the British public will have any truck with that kind of language.”

Cabinet ministers described Mr Musk’s intervention as “totally inappropriate”, and Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said Britain’s democracy is “too precious to be a plaything for foreign tech barons”.

Sir Ed also said he had written to the Prime Minister, Opposition leader Kemi Badenoch and Reform UK leader Nigel Farage over the weekend, urging them to join him in condemning the “dangerous” remarks.

‘Ambiguity’

Asked about the language on Monday, Mr Farage said the “context” in which the words had been used left a “degree of ambiguity”.

“If the fight that Musk was talking about was about standing up for our rights and free speech, if it was about fighting in elections to overcome the established parties, then that absolutely is the fight that we’re in,” he said.

In his Channel 4 interview, Sir Keir sought to associate Saturday’s events with Reform UK, saying he was “absolutely determined to lead in this fight of our times between renewal, the patriotic cause of the Labour Party, and the division and toxic chaos and decline that would come under Reform”.

Earlier on Monday, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage had condemned the violence used against police on Saturday, saying it was “horrible” and he “feared something like that would happen”.

But he told a press conference in London he thought “the vast majority of people that turned up were good, ordinary decent people who are very, very concerned about what’s happening in this country”.

Asked whether he was concerned about ethnic minority Britons who had felt scared to go into central London during the demonstration, he added: “If some people were offended by it, or felt worried by it, then that is a great shame.

“I’ll tell you what’s even worse, the fact that over 50% of women don’t feel safe walking the streets alone.”


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John Glyn
John Glyn
2 months ago

‘We will never surrender our flag to those who promote division’ – Keir Starmer.

C’mon now Sir, you wave some pretty big nationalistic flags yourself do you not? People see that. It’s the same assimilationist colonial flag which they’ve been taught to love all their lives? How are people to differentiate? People like waving flags?

Yup, Let’s not forget that Keir Starmer too is part of this, enabling it, encouraging it… But he’s such a dyed in the wool British nationalist himself he doesn’t see it…

Last edited 2 months ago by John Glyn
Johnny
Johnny
2 months ago
Reply to  John Glyn

Not forgetting John his Island of Strangers comment for which he has not apologized.

John Glyn
John Glyn
2 months ago
Reply to  Johnny

No he hasn’t has he. I remember other disgraceful, opportunistic, comments too. One Tweet in particular. Classic right wing reactionary stuff, provocative xenophobic rhetoric. Some of it straight out of 1930’s textbooks. Promising to control migration so it would not ‘undercut hardworking Brits’ – was a direct appeal to the white British working class, deliberately worded to resonate with its frustrations and resentments – the very same pitch as the one which Farage makes. Clearly playing the race card – the old familiar ‘don’t let *them* steal your jobs lads’ narrative – this when there is no direct correlation between… Read more »

Last edited 2 months ago by John Glyn
Amir
Amir
2 months ago

Proscribing Palestinian Action sent the wrong message from this government.

John Glyn
John Glyn
2 months ago
Reply to  Amir

Has this British Labour government sent out an appreciated message to anyone since its inception? Netanyahu perhaps…

Fanny Hill
Fanny Hill
2 months ago

Musk must surely be charged with incitement to commit violence if he ever sets foot in the UK.

Amir
Amir
2 months ago
Reply to  Fanny Hill

They will probably roll out the red carpet.

Undecided
Undecided
2 months ago

More vacuous comments from mainstream politicians. Yes, condemn Yaxley Lennon, Musk etc; but the real question that Starmer, Davey and others continually and abysmally fail to address is why were circa 150,000 on the streets of London in the first place?

Theoriginalmark
Theoriginalmark
2 months ago
Reply to  Undecided

Because they believe the racist right wing bs that Yaxley lennon, farage and the media constantly pump out on a daily basis and some of them would have just been there to have a pop at the cops,

Amir
Amir
2 months ago
Reply to  Undecided

Bunch of racists and islamaphobes rallying together with not much else to keep busy.

Adam
Adam
2 months ago
Reply to  Undecided

Because they’re gullible, and believe any old tosh that the screen in front of them tells them to.
Drop the words “man of the people” in there and they literally tremble with gullible excitement.

John Glyn
John Glyn
2 months ago

Lots of uber British nationalist groups posting confidently on social media today. Tommy’s Sturmtruppen are clearly feeling emboldened. But be under no illusion, though most of what is being said is mythological nonsense, the underlying neo fascism, racism, which runs through them is nasty and dangerous. It always is. This poison got successfully taken out one time, almost a century ago now – it took immense sacrifices on all our parts to achieve this, we don’t want it back again in the 21st century…

Jeff
Jeff
2 months ago

March under Yaxley Lennons banner with far right speakers and enablers makes you one thing. No grey area here.

Mosley tried the same. His supporters were the same.

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