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London braces for biggest far-right rally in years

Police warn of zero-tolerance approach as £4.5m operation mobilises horses, drones and facial recognition technology

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Prime minister Keir Starmer and mayor of London Sadiq Khan meet with police officers to discuss operational planning ahead of this weekend's protests on May 15, 2026 in the Lambeth area of London, England.

(Photo by Peter Nicholls/Getty Images)

Highlights

  • 50,000 Robinson supporters expected; 30,000 at the rival counter-demonstration
  • Robinson drew up to 150,000 people to a similar rally last September, addressed remotely by Elon Musk
  • Organisers are now legally responsible for ensuring invited speakers do not breach hate speech laws, a first
  • UK terrorism threat level raised to "severe" two weeks ago, citing Islamist and extreme right-wing threats

LONDON police braced for their busiest day in years on Saturday (16), when tens of thousands of protesters were expected to attend the latest rally staged by far-right activist Tommy Robinson.


The British capital's Metropolitan Police said it would deploy 4,000 officers -- alongside horses, dogs, drones and helicopters -- to manage the march and a counter-demonstration merged with a pro-Palestinian protest, as well as the FA Cup final.

The Met has imposed various conditions on the two rallies, over their routes and timings, in a bid to keep rival attendees apart.
The force, which estimates the operation will cost £4.5 million ($6m), warned in a statement that it would adopt "a zero-tolerance approach".

That includes for the first time making organisers legally responsible for ensuring invited speakers do not break hate speech laws.
On the eve of the demonstrations, Prime Minister Keir Starmer warned: "Anyone who sets out to wreak havoc on our streets, to intimidate or threaten anyone... can expect to face the full force of the law."

Starmer -- facing intense pressure within his ruling Labour party to quit after hard-right Reform UK and nationalist parties scored wins in local elections last week -- accused the organisers of Saturday's far-right rally of "peddling hatred and division".

"Their goal is to convince people that Britain's problems are caused by those living alongside them," he said in a video posted online after visiting the Met's operational control room.

"But that is not the Britain that I know."

Robinson effect

Robinson, real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, is a former football hooligan turned anti-Islam activist whose profile has soared in recent years, in particular online.

Last September, he drew up to 150,000 people into central London for a similarly themed rally proclaiming "national unity, free speech and Christian values".

X owner Elon Musk addressed that event, which shocked mainstream Britain for its scale and raw messaging, as well as clashes between some participants and police which injured dozens of officers.

london-far-right-protest FILE PHOTO: Activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, known as Tommy Robinson, wears a "United The Kingdom" (UTK) beanie at a protest in support of the Iranian people, as protests have spread across Iran since the end of December in response to soaring inflation and in demand of an end to clerical rule, outside Downing Street, in London, Britain, January 11, 2026. REUTERS/Isabel Infantes

Robinson's growing appeal comes amid public anger over tens of thousands of migrants crossing the English Channel each year in small boats, wider immigration policies, alleged free speech curbs and other issues.

The Met estimates around 50,000 of his supporters will attend on Saturday, with 30,000 people expected at the rival rally marking Nakba Day, commemorating the 1948 displacement of Palestinians during the creation of Israel.

The Stand Up to Racism group has combined its anti-fascism march with the Nakba Day event.

Robinson has urged his attendees not to wear masks or drink excessive alcohol, and to be "peaceful and courteous".

"The establishment has thrown everything in the way of us as we fight to Unite The Kingdom and the West," he said this week on X, predicting "the biggest patriotic rally to grace this planet".

Fears about football hooligan groups

Starmer's office said the centre-left leader recognised that the majority were set to protest peacefully as "law-abiding citizens" but cautioned a minority were "violent thugs".

Police also voiced fears about football hooligan groups which have previously supported Robinson showing up.

Matthew Feldman, a leading academic expert on far-right extremism at Liverpool Hope University, told AFP it was a "certainty" that some "hotheads" would attend.

"The question is how the internal stewards deal with those people, and how the police deal with the march as a whole."

The Met said live facial recognition would be used for the first time to police a protest.

Meanwhile, the government has blocked 11 "foreign far-right agitators" from entering Britain for Robinson's rally.

They include US-based "extremist" Valentina Gomez, who the government said is "known for using inflammatory and dehumanising rhetoric about Muslim communities".

Feldman noted Robinson's event and wider movement was "international" and "part of a wider network that does work together".

Saturday's rival demonstrations follow a spate of violent attacks targeting London's Jewish community, with some blaming instances of hate speech at pro-Palestinian marches for helping to fuel antisemitism.

The UK's terrorism threat level was raised two weeks ago to the second-highest level of "severe", with security officials citing the "broader Islamist and extreme right-wing terrorist threat".

(AFP)

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