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Half a million united against racism

Two reports and two photo galleries from the Together Alliance demonstration in London, 28 March 2026

and
01/04/2026

Report #1 from Dave Gilchrist

Anti-racist activists in the UK used to look to France and Italy—at the rise of the Rassemblement National and various Italian far-right parties—and argue that Britain had already defeated its own equivalents: the National Front, then the British National Party, and later the English Defence League. It was true: we had.

For readers in Germany, this trajectory may feel familiar. The period in which far-right forces appeared marginal has given way to a renewed and more complex threat, combining electoral advance with street-level mobilisation. As in Germany—with the rise of the Alternative for Germany alongside networks of extra-parliamentary activism—Britain now faces a similar dual dynamic.

In the UK, this takes the form of the growing far-right populist party Reform UK, led by Nigel Farage, alongside a street movement organised by Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, better known as Tommy Robinson. Robinson mobilised 100,000 people on the streets of London last year, and Reform UK looks set to perform strongly in the local elections in May, with some already speculating about its longer-term electoral prospects.

This year has seen hundreds of far-right mobilisations in towns across the country, most often protests outside hotels housing asylum seekers. These echo the localised protests and agitation seen in parts of eastern Germany, where refugee accommodation has become a focal point for far-right organising. In Britain, the vast majority of these actions have been countered by Stand Up To Racism and other local anti-racist groups. SUTR held over 450 counter protests from February 2025 to February this year.

It was the shock of Robinson’s large demonstration—during which the Stand Up To Racism counter-protest was physically threatened—that galvanised activists into further action. In response, the Together Alliance was formed, bringing together a broad coalition from civil society opposed to the far right. Its aim was singular: to mobilise the largest possible numbers against them.

The date was set for 28 March, timed to fall close to International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and to coincide with the “No Kings” protests in the United States.

The mobilisation proved a major success, with around 500,000 people protesting on the day—an intervention that may be of interest in Germany, where debates continue about how to translate widespread opposition to the AfD into sustained mass mobilisation. Trade unions played a central role, particularly the National Education Union and the University and College Union, with the NEU’s leadership proving especially important. Other unions also brought substantial numbers, including Unison and Unite the Union.

Another notable presence was the leftward-moving Green Party of England and Wales, and its charismatic leader Zack Polanski, which mobilised a significant contingent. This broad alignment—from trade unions to environmentalists, faith groups, and grassroots organisations—offers a contrast to the more fragmented landscape often discussed in Germany.

Many others joined, ranging from the Woodcraft Folk to activists in the fashion world and numerous public figures. The demonstration included LGBT+, environmental, and Christian blocs—significant given the far right’s attempts, in both Britain and Germany, to instrumentalise cultural and religious identities.

The Palestine solidarity movement, including many Muslim organisations, also played an important role, organising a feeder march of around 50,000 people that joined the main demonstration and was met with enthusiasm and a strong sense of unity.

At the core of all this was Stand Up To Racism, which played a vital organising role throughout.

What happens next for the Together Alliance remains open. There is a danger that it could be drawn too heavily into electoral organising. The role of socialists will therefore be crucial in maintaining a focus on mass mobilising—on the streets and in the workplace.

However, speaking to many activists, it is clear that much of the gloom and fear surrounding the rise of the right has lifted. As Weyman Bennett of Stand Up To Racism has often said: we beat them before, and we will do so again.

Report #2 by Anna (old enough) and Lyra (aged 10)

Billed by odious far right commentator Charlotte Gill as a “hate march”, and far right crank “journalist” Melanie Phillips as a “terrorist march” (in a now-deleted post on Twitter) the Together Alliance march was really a march of love. Along with many others across the country, we attended the march, travelling down to London from West Yorkshire. 

500,000 people (or thereabouts, we couldn’t count them all) marched in London this Saturday against the racism, hate and division spread by the far right. Enthusiastic delegations from every trade union were present. Greens marched with revolutionaries and Labour Party members. There were LGBTQ+ demonstrators, Muslim demonstrators and LGBTQ+ Muslim demonstrators. Refugees and school kids felt safe to attend, and were embraced by the march. Firefighters marched holding pride progress flags. Health union members proclaimed solidarity with migrant workers. A key theme of the march was solidarity with refugees. Educators marched with a sound system playing The Clash and chanted anti-Farage chants (Lyra’s favourite contingent to march with). Brass bands played as well as samba bands. Morris dancers were there morris dancing. A big Palestine Solidarity contingent joined the march and many demonstrators wore keffiyehs and chanted “free Palestine”. Disabled activists led the march. This was the diverse working class at its very best. 

In terms of opposition, there was a pitiful far right gathering that we didn’t see, and  at one point we encountered a solitary woman running back and forth through the demo shouting “long live Israel!” and being ignored by the marchers. We assume she was trying to provoke a reaction. 

Lyra says: “the march was so massive, I was stressed by how many people were there until we started moving. There were lots of dogs on the march, and people from lots of different groups. It was so big that we couldn’t find our union branch. It’s good that there are lots of anti racists, even if it was stressful and my mum made me carry a flag”. 

The march gave us hope and confidence, it was a relief to outnumber the far right. It has sometimes felt that their rise is unstoppable. In September last year, fascist Tommy Robinson’s ‘Unite the Kingdom’ event drew 100,000 people onto the streets. We outnumbered them this weekend and we need to keep outnumbering them. It helps to see that there are a lot of good people who care enough to stand up and be counted. We now need to build on that sense of renewed confidence and organise in our workplaces and communities. Big marches are uplifting (perhaps not if you’re Lyra), but we’ll need to do more to defeat the far right and drive them out of public life. Next socialists in Britain need to drive the far right dregs of UKIP out of Leeds on 25th April, oppose Tommy Robinson’s next planned hate march in London on 16th May, and also work to stop the rise of the racist, anti-worker Reform party in the May elections and beyond. There’s work to be done. We’re ready.

Photo Gallery 1: Guy Smallman www.guysmallman.com

Photo Gallery 2: Dave Gilchrist

6 April 2008 – Textile workers strike in Mahalla, Egypt

This week in working class history

On Sunday, 6th April 2008, textile workers in Mahalla el-Kubra in the Nile Delta struck against rising inflation, food prices and low wages. This led to a heated battle with riot police and security forces. President Hosni Mubarak responded by sending in thousands of troops to crush the so-called “Mahalla Intifada”. The inhabitants of Mahalla responded by two days of rioting. After police attacked a demonstration with rubber bullets, 40,000 demonstrated in a city with 500,000 inhabitants.

The Mahalla uprising had its roots in the Egyptian solidarity movement with the Palestinian Intifada in 2000, which saw the biggest demonstrations in Egypt in a generation. One of the slogans of those demonstrations was: “The road to Jerusalem passes through Cairo”. Demonstrators, many of whom were too frightened of repression to fight for themselves, asked why the Mubarak government was doing nothing to help the Palestinians. At the time, Egypt was Israel’s main supplier of gas.

In 2006, the mainly female workers in Mahalla went on strike for three days after the Egyptian government failed to deliver promised pay rises for public sector workers. One year later, there was another garment workers’ strike across the Nile Delta. Workplace action both, hit Egyptian capitalism in the pocket and was able to protect people protesting against Mubarak’s dictatorship. Before 1990 strikes were unthinkable. They were now a central part of the resistance’s armoury.

Mahalla was a catalyst. Interviewed by The Left Berlin about Mahalla, Egyptian journalist Hossam el-Hamalawy said: “The news and images of the riots got out to everyone, who saw people from Mahalla stamping their feet on Mubarak posters. And this signaled the beginning of the end of the Mubarak dictatorship. Strikes were now happening everywhere, to the extent that newspapers were full of business experts who complained about the “plague of strikes” that had engulfed Egypt.”

The 2008 Mahalla strike was not fully successful, but it was an inspiration. The police were able to suppress the strike, but were powerless against the uprising which followed. A “facebook strike” in solidarity with the Mahalla textile workers helped unite the strikers with radical students. Less than three years later, a mass wave of action overthrew Mubarak. We know that the Egyptian revolution is unfinished, but Mahalla helps to show how it could be completed.

“From the River to the Sea” defendant acquitted

Repression in Berlin – report #6

This week, a higher court acquitted a comrade previously convicted of condoning Hamas’ October 7th attacks for shouting “From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will be Free.”

On October 11, 2023, dozens of people demonstrated outside the Ernst-Abbe secondary school in response to news of a teacher hitting a student for carrying a Palestinian flag. During the rally, activist Ava M. was arrested for saying “From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will be Free,” a phrase globally used by the Palestinian liberation movement since the 1960s.

In August 2024, in a seminal ruling, the Berlin court declared that the phrase condones Hamas’ October 7th attacks and denies the Zionist state’s right to exist, fining Ava €600 for incitement and disturbing the public peace. Although the phrase has been de facto banned in Germany by the Ministry of Interior as a “Hamas slogan,” this was the first time that a Berlin court ruled on the legal grounds, setting a shocking precedent for the repression of the Palestine solidarity movement. Similar cases across the country had resulted in positive rulings, protecting the phrase as free speech under German law.

Upon further review, an appellate court has now ruled that the slogan’s multifaceted nature and use by various groups casts too big of a question mark on its true meaning, and that when in doubt, the court is obliged to prioritize freedom of speech. Although the judge made it clear just how offensive he finds the phrase, he conceded that it may have meanings other than the destruction of Israel or the Jewish people.

The Epstein files psyop

A class analysis of the Epstein files and their release


28/03/2026

Protestors at the Good Trouble Protest in DC in 2025 celebrating the spirit of John Lewis, civil rights activist dating back to the 60s. One person holds up a huge banner with the words "Release the Jeffrey Epstein files NOW. Republicans support pedophiles." Another, in the foreground holds a small sign saying "This is not a left or right moment. It's a right or wrong moment."

CW: This piece includes passing references to the concept of child rape along with other disturbing topics found in the Epstein files.

I enjoy a good conspiracy theory as much as anyone, and have written about the ontology of conspiracies before. At their core, they reflect an utter disillusionment with society’s institutions, and what better example than this? Q-anon and Pizza Gate walked so the actual Epstein files could run. 

So as my algorithm led me down increasingly conspiratorial rabbit holes, all of this had me wondering: What are we as leftists to make of the way the files have been released? What about their sudden virality and the inundation of commentary on platforms known for their censorship in line with the ruling class?

The release of the Epstein files

In case you missed it, on 30 January, the US Dept of Justice released 3.5 million files related to the investigation of convicted pedophile and child sex trafficker, Jeffrey Epstein. Many are heavily redacted and reports abound of them suspiciously disappearing from the database. They contain details of heinous acts of the rich and powerful—from princes to politicians to academics and all sorts of other public figures. The acts, which legal experts say constitute crimes against humanity, are ineffably horrifying, including rape, torture, and child slavery. Yet, with each new suspected scandal and act of depravity revealed in the files, we start to become desensitized to the point that pedophilia and sex trafficking are no longer enough to shock or inspire outrage.

Notably, my feed has also been flooded with online pontificators basically just free-associating that every unsolved mystery and crisis of the 21st century—from 9/11 to the 2008 recession—was singlehandedly caused by Epstein himself. We each get caught in our own siloed rabbit holes dissecting the files, while nothing is being done and no one is being punished. It can even leave you with a sense that those featured in the files don’t care—or are even proud of their heinous crimes. In emails riddled with typos they glibly quip about pizza and grape soda (many speculate to be code for child rape), and videos have been circulating of Bill Clinton laughing during a deposition hearing as he looks through incriminating photos of him and his buddies in the Epstein files as if he’s flipping through a scrapbook. 

The anatomy of a psyop

The combined proliferation of horrifying content in the files and lack of public action are worth noting. This is particularly so when we examine some of the hallmarks of psychological influence operations, as disseminated on the internet and social media. (Read more about recent examples like the propagation of online culture wars in the US and Pentagon-backed influence operations).

There is no single definition of such operations, but they are generally implemented with the objective of shaping the attitudes, emotions, beliefs, and behaviors of a target population. You can find some of their core characteristics as follows:

  • Emotional flooding: Content that elicits disgust, rage, or fear instantly when you see it.
  • Narrative compression: Simplifying the narrative so that it fits neatly into an easily-digestible story format.
  • Authority fog: Lack of informational transparency and a proliferation of theories that are difficult to trace.
  • Time pressure: A sense that one must act now, as access to information might be revoked.
  • Isolation language: Cultivating a sense that those engaging in the conspiracy theory are ‘awake’ while everyone else remains ‘asleep’. 

Taking these features into account, now let’s connect them to the release of the Epstein files.

The public is flooded with millions of documents containing extremely distressing content. The fact that many keep getting removed from the database produces a sense of urgency to inundate oneself with disturbing emails, videos, and images before they are gone. We reach a point where nothing surprises us anymore, and it’s easier to become conditioned to any number of outlandish conspiracies as a way of making sense of things. (Was Michael Jackson really a noble defender of children, and the Epstein crew conspired to kill him? Is the Jim Carrey we see now actually a clone because Epstein had him killed for speaking out? Who can say for sure!) Well-meaning people who have immersed themselves in trying to analyze the files slowly become isolated and detached from reality. What’s more, all of this produces a sense that every crisis and unsolved mystery can be traced back to a handful of particularly bad guys.

Class analysis of the file release

The ruling class has pretty well-developed techniques for propagandizing and narrative control through mass media. As Gramsci puts it, 

…crisis creates situations which are dangerous in the short run, since the various strata of the population are not all capable of orienting themselves equally swiftly, or of reorganizing with the same rhythm. The traditional ruling class, which has numerous trained cadres, changes men and programmes and, with greater speed than is achieved by the subordinate classes, reabsorbs the control that was slipping from its grasp.

In other words, if the ruling classes can no longer contain scandals that might produce catastrophic levels public outcry, they can weaponize them to keep us down instead by making us feel desensitized, distracted, and powerless to change anything. On behalf of Trump and his cronies, it appears that the Department of Justice has repeatedly violated the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The DOJ has repeatedly kept victims’ names unredacted while simultaneously covering up key information that would incriminate powerful people.

Thus, we must take a critical view of how the files have been released, as conspiracies serve the function of diverting people from reaching class consciousness. They take those who are so close to the point—to being radicalized—and divert their focus to specific, moloch-worshipping cannibals, rather than a ruling class upheld through the specific material relations of capitalism. It’s easier to imagine a few wicked ghouls are behind everything than to question the system that allowed them to accumulate the power to act with impunity. In truth, reality is even scarier than conspiracy. 

In addition to being brazen forms of patriarchal violence, these crimes are acts of class warfare through the rape and torture of poor and working class children on a mass scale. In fact, participating in such acts seems to be the price of entry to the inner circles of the elites: enacting the most depraved crimes against our own—the most innocent and vulnerable among us at that. As if these horrific acts are ways of asserting they don’t abide by the most basic norms of decency practiced by us lowly plebians, and that they are powerful enough to get away with anything. Along with live-streamed genocide and ever-expanding levels of authoritarian repression, this is what they have decided will be normal.

In short, we don’t need conspiracies to explain away the horrors perpetrated by the elites because they are baked into the system that enables them. To return to Gramsci, now is the time of monsters: the barbarous excesses of capitalism itself.

Migrantifa now!

Part one of our interview with Migrantifa Berlin about the racist murders in Hanau, the group’s founding and the necessity of migrant antifascism

This article is the sixth piece in the series Neo-Nazis and Anti-Fascism in Germany since the 1990s. The rest of the series can be found here. It is also the first part in a two-part interview with Migrantifa Berlin, the second part will come out soon.

TLB: Can you tell us how and why Migrantifa Berlin was founded? 

Sam: We were founded after Hanau. After the attack, different migrant and antiracist groups in Berlin called for meetings, and Migrantifa was a working group that formed there. It emerged out of a very strong need to simply talk about what had happened and to break out of this sense of isolation. I think many of us felt that in Germany, after racist attacks, it’s often not a topic of interest  for the majority of society. For example, Carnival celebrations went on right afterwards. 

Mala: We more or less developed as a group over the course of that first year. There were also, I think, two other specific  frustrations that brought people into this group. One was experiences within a predominantly white German Antifa scene. These were people who had been politically socialized on the left, often from Berlin or that had lived in Berlin for a few years, but who were mostly active in majority-white spaces. And there, they very often experienced that racism as a category of analysis was almost absent, or at least not sufficiently taken into account.

On the other hand, there was frustration with a more liberal, anti-racist environment. We noticed it especially during the summer of 2020, when the majority of society was engaging with Black Lives Matter for the first time. In the group it became clear that many people that were part of those liberal anti-racist spaces brought similar frustrations, just in a different direction. I think people from both of these experiences wanted to move beyond isolation and were looking for a new form of organizing,a new kind of analysis.

Sam: And I’d say we started with a bit of a bang – with the “Day of Rage” on May 8th. We organized a demonstration on the day in 1945 when Nazi Germany lost the war, with the idea to highlight those continuities. Then, we organised demonstrations in Hanau for the six-months and the one-year anniversaries of the attack, and we took part in May Day. And through that, we kind of became the group we are today: an anti-racist group with a revolutionary standpoint and a class analysis. At the time, this filled a big gap in Berlin.

TLB: Could you also tell us in a bit more detail what happened in Hanau?

Mala: A racist went into a shisha bar and a Kiosk on the evening of February 19, 2020, and shot 9 of our siblings. The shisha bar as a place in Germany is often a place where police raids happen. In Hanau, during one of those raids – or afterward – the emergency exit was locked by the police. Because of that, people there couldn’t escape.

People called the police emergency line and no one answered. To this day it’s unclear why. Immediately after the attack, instead of receiving emergency medical care, injured people were asked for their ID. Politicians later made statements like, “Next time we’ll do better.” This shows that there is a system behind these cases, not just a crazy person picking up a weapon in a vacuum. Basically, every generation of migrants has its own Hanau. For some it’s Rostock, Mölln or Solingen. For others, it’s the NSU or Hanau.

Sam: Every time new information about the incident came out, it was because the research was initiated or demanded by the relatives and survivors themselves. There was essentially no real investigation by the authorities.

For many, that was a key turning point in understanding that the way we interpret Hanau can’t be based on saying, for example, that the police or authorities failed to prevent the attack. Because they did exactly what they have always done. I think naming and framing this structural dimension differently became very clear through Hanau.

TLB: I remember that at the first rally in Hanau after the racist murders, one speech called for “Migrantifa Jetzt!” and then groups like yours formed in different cities. How are these groups connected?

Sam: We always say that Migrantifa is a movement, and we are one group that emerged from this movement. The term itself existed long before Hanau, but I think the concrete impulse after Hanau – across the whole country – was Migrantifa as self-defense. Many different groups, forms, and local initiatives started gathering under that label in response to that call.

Over the years it became clear that in some cities, such as ours, it developed into a more concrete group. In other places, it remained more of an umbrella term. We’re not part of a single unified structure. Instead, we’re independent, decentralized groups who cooperate,  and new groups keep appearing in different cities across Germany and the German-speaking parts of Europe – even six years after Hanau.

TLB: How do you connect your work and organizing to migrant antifascist organizing in the 1990s? What do you see as your lineage of organizing?

Mala: That’s actually very important to us. Often, people become politicized and feel like they need to do something, and think they’re the first ones doing this – like the first antiracist group with a revolutionary perspective. That’s obviously nonsense. But those of us who aren’t part of the official historical narrative have to preserve and dig up this history ourselves and talk about it.

One of the first things we did was organize a reading group on Antifa Gençlik. That’s one of the groups we refer to – a group active in Kreuzberg in the 1990s. KÖXÜZ was another group that published a magazine in the 90s. Café Morgenland was also an antifascist group that did a lot of organizing. Of course, we might have ideological disagreements, but these are migrant-shaped antifascist groups in Germany that we refer to and learn from.

TLB: Could you give an example of something they did that’s important for you today – or something important for you not to repeat?

Sam: A big point was migrant self-defense. That was actually one of the reasons that one of the older groups eventually dissolved – because of a Nazi who didn’t get back up, let’s say. But another key point is analysis: asking why all of this is happening and what exactly is happening.

For example, Café Morgenland observed in the 1990s that things got drastically worse after German reunification – during what people call the Baseballschlägerjahre [this period was also covered in this series]. One comrade said something like: “We moved from trying to prevent racist attacks to a point where it’s already considered a success just to name them after they happen.”  It’s important to consider this shift.

Mala: In terms of concrete struggles: the refugee movement, not just Oranienplatz but also earlier self-organized movements in the 1990s, or migrant labour strikes at Ford and Pierburg. In Kreuzberg in the 1980s, migrant women occupied buildings and said: “We need childcare here.” Many of us were born, raised and socialised in Germany, and there was this realisation that here – whenever there has been right-wing or racist violence – there have always been forms of resistance. All of these things are struggles we refer to. They’re important for building a combative sense of self; to see that the people before us weren’t passive. There was always struggle.

TLB: Why, in your perspective, are specifically migrant antifascist groups necessary? 

Sam: For me, a lot of it is about being able not just to make connections between issues but also to develop practice out of those connections. In the German antifascist tradition there’s often a very strong understanding of things like research, dealing with repression, and the practical “craft” of Antifa work. But connections between struggles often weren’t built.

For example, the huge lack of solidarity from many Antifa structures with Palestine solidarity in recent years is something that simply couldn’t happen in our group – because those connections are our starting point. The question isn’t whether we label ourselves “internationalist,” but whether we develop an internationalist position because of the experiences and political traditions we come from. 

Mala: I’ll answer on a more basic level. It’s a bit tricky to talk about this, because it can quickly sound like we’re organizing purely along identity lines, something which we see as reactionary. We organize along political analysis. But we also say, “come if you are affected by racism.”

We also don’t sit in a circle sharing experiences of racism, but we start from a relatively high level of shared understanding [of racism]. In groups that don’t focus on racism and where people aren’t directly affected, you often have to start from the very basics. That work is also important though, and we do it with such groups every day. 

TLB: What is your relationship with majority-white German left groups?

Mala: A lot of cooperation, actually. We simply see whether we can come together along political lines. For example, we’re based in a space called the Rote Lilly in Neukölln, organized by the Stadtteilkomittee Neukölln. We’re also part of alliances with mixed groups. Our main criterion is whether there’s a left revolutionary perspective.

Sam: Exactly. And that applies equally when we work with non-white groups. Political analysis is central – not identity alone. Sometimes that actually creates more friction than working with white groups. 

TLB: Some of our readership might find this surprising, that it’s possible to work with majority white German left groups. 

Sam: In that case it’s maybe worth emphasizing that despite all criticisms and contradictions with white left structures, we also have to insist on where we are organizing. The threat of fascisation in this country doesn’t come from white leftists. Historically, Germany has been an important site of leftist thought and struggle. And we shouldn’t forget the massive destruction of left and communist organisations in the 20th century – that rupture still shapes things today. There isn’t a huge tradition of experienced older comrades. That rupture matters. 

Mala: We have a slogan: “Migrantifa means class struggle. With that, we mean the entire working class. We also explicitly claim the history of German communists as part of our own history. We are in this country and we relate to that history. The Rote Lilly is named after a revolutionary woman from Neukölln. Maybe that’s something that distinguishes us from traditional Antifa groups. They do very important work: fighting Nazis by all means necessary is correct and important. But because of the work they do and often their analysis, Antifa groups have tended to isolate themselves from society. We explicitly try not to do that, because we want to be a movement.