Anti-Muslim Hate Exposed: Tommy Robinson March Sparks Outrage Across UK
May 20, 2026
Right-wing agitator, Tommy Robinson led a massive “Unite the Kingdom” march through the streets of London, transforming the capital into a breeding ground for rampant Islamophobia and open calls for the deportation of British Muslims. Yet, while fascist rhetoric echoed through the streets, mainstream UK politicians stayed dead silentm the exact same politicians who spend every weekend smearing peaceful, anti-genocide Gaza solidarity rallies as “hate marches”.
The selective outrage is sickening. When a mob targets an entire religious community, it’s called “free speech,” but when millions march for peace and a ceasefire, it’s treated as a threat to national security.
Despite the highly volatile and hateful atmosphere, the march received virtually zero condemnation from leading Conservative politicians. Instead of calling out actual extremism on British soil, political figures have spent months trying to ban and criminalize peaceful Palestine Solidarity campaigns.You cannot claim to be protecting British values while giving white supremacists a free pass to terrorize minority communities. The hypocrisy of the state has been fully exposed: they care more about protecting corporate and foreign military interests than protecting their own citizens from actual hate on the streets.
EXPOSE THE HYPOCRISY!
Source: @trtworld
#TommyRobinson #LondonProtests #UKPolitics #DoubleStandards #fyp
English Script:
VO: Tommy Robinson says if he became prime minister, he would stop Islam. And at his recent Unite the Kingdom rally. Speakers and supporters made that message even clearer.
Tommy Robinson: I would stop Islam. I would have remigration. It’s time for many Muslims to leave this country.
VO: Yet despite rhetoric like this, much of the British media avoided describing the march as hateful, Islamophobic. Even while pro-Palestine marches are routinely branded hate marches and accused of anti-Semitism with calls to ban them. The same media and political voices that quickly label phrases like from the river to the sea or globalize the intifada as anti-Semitic have often been far more reluctant to apply the same standards, the explicit anti-Muslim hostility. And there were multiple examples of these divergent standards on display.
Far right women’s activist group: Take it off, take it off.
VO: The chant was led by a far right women’s activist group targeting Muslim women that wear the niqab. Online, many pointed out if activists mocked Orthodox Jewish men and women’s clothing or nun’s religious attire, it would likely be immediately condemned for religious hate. There were also openly anti-Islam signs carried by young attendees. On stage, far right activist Kelly Jay Keene told cheering crowds this.
Kelly Jay Keene: It’s not too late to get Islam out of our classrooms. If we want to save this country, we have to remove Islam from every single place of authority.
VO: Another performer wore strips of bacon across his shirt while performing on stage to mock Muslims. Critics say the issue goes beyond one rally. They point to a wider double standard. Anti-Muslim rhetoric is often normalized or downplayed, while pro-Palestine activism is more quickly framed as anti-Semitism. And amid growing concerns over anti-Muslim hostility, including the recent mosque shooting in San Diego. Many fear that tolerating this kind of rhetoric in Western countries risks contributing to an atmosphere that can fuel harassment, hate crimes, and even violence.