Thursday, August 08, 2024

Riots: Most Labour voters praise PM’s handling as far-right mobilise across UK


Unrest in Sunderland in August 2024. Photo: TheBearded_Skot / Shutterstock.com
Unrest in Sunderland in August 2024. Photo: TheBearded_Skot / Shutterstock.com

Some 60% of voters who backed Labour at the general election say the Prime Minister is handling the riots well, new polling shows.

The YouGov poll came as far-right activists were expected to gather in dozens of places across the UK on Wednesday, with police forces making thousands of extra officers available for “rapid deployment” if further riots break out.

There are fears immigration centres and law firms which support migrants could be targeted today, and mosques have been promised greater protection.

A YouGov poll this week found 31 per cent of voters said Keir Starmer was handling the “unrest at recent protests in England” either very or fairly well.

But this rose to 60 per cent among Labour voters in the recent election, with 47 per cent saying he was handling it fairly well and 13 per cent very well. Some 24 per cent said he was handling it badly, while 16 per cent said they did not know.

Among voters overall in the poll of 2,114 adults across the UK, 49 per cent said Starmer was handling the disorder badly, while 20 per cent said they did not know.

Starmer outpolled politicians as a whole though, with only 17% of UK voters saying they had handled the crisis well.

Luke Tryl, UK director of  another research group, More in Common, said it was a “a pretty bad sign for Starmer given you might expect a ‘back the Government’ moment in times like this and suggests a much more visibly muscular response will be needed”.

He added: “What is clear from the rest of the polling is people have no sympathy with the rioters and want a robust response to tackle them and so indicates the disapproval driven by Govt not being seen to be tough enough to stop them rather than other way round.”

Most Labour voters also said police should be able to use water cannons, tear gas, tasers, horses, curfews or the army in the course of dealing with rioters, though supporters were almost evenly split over the use of plastic bullets, and said the use of firearms should be ruled out.

Most Labour supporters also said those who carried some responsiblity for the the unrest included far -right groups, the last government, news and social media, Nigel Farage, Tommy Robinson, and immigration policy in recent years.

Some 62% of Labour voters highlighted immigration policy, only slightly below the 67% of voters overall highlighting it – but below the 95% figure for Reform UK voters.

Some 29% of Labour voters said those protesting peacefully represented the views of most Britons, but 51% said they did not. Some 87% said those causing unrest did not represent most people.

Local government minister Jim McMahom told Times Radio recent events are “ridiculous”, and “whatever the concern” people may have about immigration, violence is “not a legitimate response”:

“People who are engaging in violent protests who are damaging property, who are intimidating people who are making people fearful about going out in their own communities do not speak for the majority. The majority of us want to get on together in peace and to live a good life.”


Diane Abbott: Mother of the House calls for recall of parliament amid UK riots


5th August, 2024, 
© UK Parliament/Roger Harris


A veteran left wing Labour MP has urged the recalling of parliament from summer recess amid the ongoing violent far-right riots gripping the country.

Diane Abbott, who has been Mother of the House – the longest continuously serving female MP – since the general election, posted the call for parliament’s return on X (formerly Twitter).

She posted: “Anti-immigrant rioters on the rampage and attacking police. We need to recall Parliament.”

Abbott is the not the only high profile parliamentarian to issue such a call, with Zarah Sultana – who lost the Labour whip last month – also posting the same plea.

Reform UK leader and Clacton MP Nigel Farage has also issued a statement calling for the recall of parliament for a “proper debate.”

The Cabinet Office did not immediately respond to request for comment.

It comes after far-right riots have rocked several towns and cities across the country following a knife attack in Southport last week.

The Prime Minister Keir Starmer has condemned the violence, which has hit places including Middlesborough, Rotherham and Sunderland, as “far-right thuggery”.

He said: “The community of Southport had to suffer twice. A gang of thugs got on trains and buses, went to a community which is not their own – a community grieving the most horrific tragedy, and proceeded to throw bricks at police officers who had just 24 hours earlier had been having to deal with an attack on children in their community.

“Make no mistake – whether it is in Southport, London or Hartlepool, these people are showing our country exactly who they are.

“I will not permit a breakdown of law and order on our streets. It’s not protest, it’s not legitimate, it’s crime – violent disorder.”

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