In 2018, anyone at pro-Brexit or 'Free Tommy' protests would have seen placards, hats and signs with the logo 'Make Britain Great Again'
The group, organised through a Facebook page, was run by Ukip members. I interviewed its founder, who left and sought deradicalisation support
In the same year, Ukip leader Gerard Batten took on Tommy Robinson as an adviser and welcomed Paul Joseph Watson, Mark Meechan (Count Dankula) and Carl Benjamin (Sargon of Akkad) as members
The aim was to use their online reach to bypass the 'MSM' and get new members
But Batten was also increasingly focusing on Islam and taking extremist positions, with an “interim manifesto” presented at Ukip’s 2018 conference including proposals to create Muslim-only prisons and repeal hate crime laws
Ukip's youth wing went further, inviting ...
...Martin Sellner, of the Generation Identity white nationalist group, to its conference in 2017 and 2018
On his way to the second conference, he was prevented from entering the UK. He was later investigated over donations from the Christchurch terrorist independent.co.uk/news/world/aus…
If the plan was to recruit new members and improve Ukip's electoral success, it backfired spectacularly
Waves of senior defections started and eventually Nigel Farage quit and launched the Brexit Party
In subsequent European, local and general elections, Ukip was obliterated
I phoned Batten to put the allegations to him but he refused to speak to me or share an email address, then sent out a series of tweets and Parler posts accusing me of lying (he had no idea what I would write) and calling me a 'sewer rat' and other insults
I also put the questions to Ukip. The press email was answered by a man who had been involved in inviting Sellner to the Young Independence conference and been the subject of complaints to Ukip's leadership in 2018
He asked for evidence and then failed to respond to my reply
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The takedown of Parler is the latest blow to the British far right, which was unsuccessfully attempting to rebuild its online audience following waves of deplatforming by mainstream social networks
Extremists' reach has been "extraordinarily reduced"
Parler was among a cluster of niche social networks that extremists have been forced to rely on after bans by Facebook, Twitter and YouTube
The other popular fall-backs are Telegram (Twitter replacement), VK (Facebook replacement) and Bitchute (YouTube) replacement
But far-right figures have struggled to attract anywhere near the same audience as they had on mainstream networks
From a high of 1 million Facebook followers and 413,000 on Twitter, Tommy Robinson has now been left with under 100,000 followers on Telegram and Bitchute combined
Three terrorist prisoners, including the Parsons Green bomber and Manchester attacker’s brother, have been charged with attacking a prison officer inside HMP Belmarsh
His lawyers applied for a ban on identifying him a day before his birthday on Christmas Eve
The Recorder of Manchester, Judge Nicholas Dean QC, granted extension to the restrictions but dismissed application following a challenge by PA and admitted the extension was also wrong
Reed, of Durham, had detailed plans to firebomb synagogues and other buildings in the Durham area as part of what he believed was an upcoming “race war”
Before being arrested, he wrote a terrorist manifesto and said his upcoming 12 weeks of study leave would be “showtime”
The situation in courts is absolutely ridiculous, they are not 'Covid-secure' in any way
Some courts, particularly the Old Bailey, have got good with facilitating remote attendance but others dismiss requests because the court 'is open' or demand bespoke applications to judges
Horrific accounts of the targeting of journalists in the Capitol are emerging
The "who do you work for" demand will be chillingly familiar to journalists who have covered far-right protests in the UK, where attacks on photographers and camera crews have recieved little coverage
... female camera operator from Press Association was surrounded and intimidated by far-right “yellow vests” who called her a “Nazi” and “scumbag” outside the court
Signs targeting the "scum media" and "MSM" are common at far-right and conspiracy theorist protests in Britain
Campaigners have called for more action against hateful material, but concerns have sparked an inquiry on freedom of expression
The government is recommendations to create a legal definition of extremism, which could criminalise material that currently falls short of the law
Mr Basu told me online radicalisation was his biggest concern, especially during Covid, but added: “When you look at the volume of material which is horrific, shouldn’t be allowed online and is really distressing for a lot of people, the volume is so high it cannot be policed."