Another summer of far-right discontent – Time to take stock


Another summer of far-right discontent – Time to take stock

Fortnightly Bulletin

Written by: IRR News Team


22nd July – 5th August 2025

We tend to think of all the great social movements in history as driven by progressive values – anti-racist and for civil rights, for instance. But what do we do when a vociferous, regressive, racist social movement emerges, one that threatens to destroy every gain that we have fought for over decades? On 2 August, up to 600 people attended a Britain First ‘march for remigration’ in Manchester. In addition, over the last fortnight, as recorded in our regular Calendar of Racism & Resistance, anti-refugee protests have taken place in Essex, Surrey, Staffordshire, Nottinghamshire, Portsmouth, Leeds, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Newcastle. A racist social movement calling for the deportation of every single asylum seeker in the country is emerging as one of the dominant collective political action movements of our times.

In the face of such a storm, we need to be strategic, deploying tactics that start with counter-protests opposing physical manifestations of anti-refugee sentiment, but also go further, chipping away at the far-right online ecosystem that acts as a mobilising platform. A decentralised, racist social movement is spreading disinformation and racist messages online, chasing audiences and engagement.

Our efforts to counter a racist social movement will be most effective if we identify the complete ecosystem of the far Right. From IRR’s monitoring, a picture is emerging of a range of actors, each playing a different role in stoking up tension. There are extreme-right MPs and local councillors who see nothing wrong in broadcasting Home Office dispersal plans even before they are publicly known or made subject to consultation, in parliament or on their social media accounts. Fittingly, the logistics of getting troops in place is provided by an ex-soldier who runs the Great British National Protest, an online presence that encourages demonstrations outside every migrant hotel until all asylum seekers are deported. And then there are the neo-nazi, neo-fascist parties like Britain First, Patriotic Alternative, the Homeland Party and White Vanguard, who get their recruiters to the scene of anti-refugee protests hoping to mop up new members.

On 10 September, the IRR is supporting an event hosted by Leeds Beckett University. Reflecting the Riots: Racism, Islamophobia and Community Resistance is an important space for people from across the north of England to come together to develop anti-racist practice to better defend communities from the multiple harms caused by the far Right. You can sign up here.

This article was amended on 14 August, correcting the figures in relation to the Britain First demonstration in Manchester.


The Institute of Race Relations is precluded from expressing a corporate view: any opinions expressed are therefore those of the authors.

2 thoughts on “Another summer of far-right discontent – Time to take stock

  1. The estimate of 1500 at the Britain First march is an outlier, published by the BBC.

    Estimates from Searchlight, SUTR, the Manchester Evening News and even Greater Manchester Police all fell within the range of 4-600.

    BF instruct marchers to “spread out for the cameras” then masks the gaps with hundreds of impressive looking flags.

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