Behind the large far-right mobilisation in London: Tommy Robinson, English nationalism and Brexit

June 15, 2018
Issue 
The far right marches in London on June 9. Photo by Steve Eason/Socialist Resistance.

Three things strike you when looking at videos and photos of the neo-fascist demonstration on June 9 in London calling for the release from prison of the Islamophobic criminal and English Defence League (EDL) co-founder Tommy Robinson.

The first is the numbers who turned out. About 10,000 is the most frequently shared estimate. This was a huge display of racists supporting Robinson. The actual details of why he is in prison has nothing to do with "freedom of speech", but contempt of court.

The second is the international dimension to the event. The most prominent speaker was infamous Islamophobic Dutch politician Geert Wilders, who told the crowd: “Tommy Robinson is the greatest freedom fighter of Britain today. Tommy Robinson is a freedom fighter. He says what no one dares to say. ”

A message of support was also received from leading United States white nationalist Steve Bannon and there were reportedly protests outside a number of British embassies and consulates.

The third is the huge number of English flags and union jacks. It was more than just a demonstration to have a racist criminal released. It was a display of neo-fascist English nationalism that seems to mark the emergence of a new coalition. This  includes UK Independence Party (UKIP) MEP Gerard Batten, who appears to have been inside the neo-fascist speakers’ areas; a loose organisation of football hooligans called the Football Lads’ Alliance and former members of the EDL. This new coalition is willing to use violence on the streets and some of them were seen attacking the police.

Stand Up To Racism (SUTR) and Unite Against Fascism (UAF) mobilised about 300 people against them. Both these groups are front organisations of the Socialist Workers' Party (SWP) and receive their political direction from its leadership. They are sometimes able to get Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn or left-wing Labour MP Diane Abbott to speak at their events, but they have no relationship with Labour Party members.

Many on the left are also unwilling to work with them because of their leaderships’ role in dealing with an allegation of sexual assault. Whatever one’s political judgement on that view, it is a fact that won’t go away.

Immediately after the Brexit referendum, Socialist Resistance concluded: “The referendum has legitimised racism and xenophobia as never before.” The collapse of UKIP following that result provided a huge number of new votes for the Tories and cleared the path for the re-emergence of street-fighting neo-fascists in England. It is part of the global rise of far-right nationalists in which we can include, in a list which is by no means exhaustive, Trump, Erdogan in Turkey, Duterte in the Philippines, Salvini in Italy, Hofer in Austria and Orbán in Hungary.

Brexit has re-energised British neo-fascism. Thousands of men  — and people who were there say it was almost exclusively male  — now have the political confidence to occupy central London for the day. People who saw them say the neo-fascists appeared to come from the belt of predominantly white towns and counties that ring London.

For the racists, London is not just the political centre of England. They are very aware that its multi-ethnic communities, who understood what it would mean, voted overwhelmingly against their Brexit project.   

An ugly truth that the British left often refuses to acknowledge is that a lot of the country’s working class and lower middle class is racist. In 2018, anti-Muslim bigotry is the main form it takes, a world view which is reinforced by Brexit supporting papers such as the Daily Mail and the Sun, the house journals of mainstream British racism.

These elements are now being mixed up with Bannon’s project of creating an intellectually coherent new neo-fascist international current, hence his appearance at the French National Front’s recent conference and his message to the mob in London on June 9.

British society is starkly divided over Brexit. Most Labour supporters are against it and most Tories back it. The further right in the political spectrum you go, the more violently pro-Brexit people are. And the further right you go, the more violently anti-immigrant people are, literally and metaphorically.

What we saw on the streets of London was the violent face of English nationalist racism. While 10,000 is 10,000 too many, they are hugely outnumbered by 500,0000 Labour Party members and 6.5 million trade unionists. We can sweep them from the streets and defeat them politically.

If the neo-fascists continue to organise large demonstrations, the labour movement cannot continue to sub-contract dealing with them to a small Marxist propaganda party like the SWP. We need to use our roots in our communities and our organisations to confront them with overwhelming numbers.

Labour must start to take its voters’ enemies seriously and reclaim our streets from them. With his visit to London on July 13, Trump provides a great opportunity to do just that.

[Reposted from Socialist Resistance.]

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