Share and Follow
The marches, organised by the anti-immigration, anti-Islam activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon — known as Tommy Robinson — brought highly charged scenes and police officers described being physically assaulted and hit by flying projectiles.

Saturday’s rally in London was organised by far-right activist Tommy Robinson and attended by over 100,000 people. Source: AAP / Krisztian Elek
X owner Elon Musk spoke via video link to the crowd calling for a dissolution of the UK government and warning protesters that “violence is coming” and saying they need to “fight back” or die.
Australia has also seen a number of anti-immigration marches in recent weeks.
So, what is driving these movements?
‘Scapegoat’ groups
Jones said far-right politics focus on grievances and perceptions around “entitlements or privileges or access to resources that are being taken away” and “certain groups are scapegoated as being the people who have taken away those previously accessible resources or privileges”.
The role of social media
“It pushes people — the algorithms push people to extremes, whether they be extreme left or extreme right,” he said.
“Something like immigration — it’s a very broadstroke concept but it can be localised into a national context very easily.”
“It’s just those sorts of connections are accelerated now.”
Normalisation in politics
‘Not particularly exceptional’
For example, Tommy Robinson was the former leader of the far-right and Islamophobic English Defence League, which was active in the UK from 2009 to around 2016 and organised frequent demonstrations.