Want to understand the far-right danger in the UK today?
Read the definitive guide to hate in the UK - profiling the major developments, individuals and organisations in the far-right, neo-nazi and terror movements.
Traditional groups have been marginalised as the digital generation took centre stage with fluid online networks, ‘citizen journalism’ & social media influencers.
Fascists are moving to co-opt environmentalism - combining a ruralist, localist outlook with blaming immigration for ecologically destructive overpopulation
A year on from BLM, exclusive polling of BAME communities finds more openness but worries that systemic racism is being overlooked and a lack of real change.
With exclusive polling @MattHopeNotHate explores how the future looks to the people of Northern Ireland & investigates the latest developments amongst Loyalist paramilitaries.
WATCH: we're launching ᴛʜᴇ ꜱᴛᴀᴛᴇ ᴏꜰ ʜᴀᴛᴇ report today, with a keynote speech from @DavidLammy and a panel of experts who contributed to the report. Join the online event starting at 10am here:
You can read the full report - the definitive look at organised hate, and the conditions that are driving it - now: hopenothate.org.uk/research/state…
We're proud to launch our annual 'State of Hate' report with @DavidLammy. You can join the online event here:
Ahead of the launch of our annual State of Hate report, here’s a preview thread of some of the key elements of our definitive look at the far right and hate in the UK today. Sign up below to attend the launch event >>>
The State of Hate primarily looks at the far right but we’ve also been concerned about the spread of poison in mainstream parties. We polled the public to rest perceptions of racism in Labour and the Conservatives. Here’s what we found. inews.co.uk/news/politics/…
We're getting started with tonight's webinar, hearing from @Rob_Flaherty, @BexRink and @timothydurigan about how the Biden campaign tracked and countered disinformation during the Presidential campaign.
The challenge Democrats faced in 2016 and 2020 was not simply right wing memes and content, it was targeted content aimed at persuading people to not vote, or to believe actual untruths, and was regularly racist in its nature.
.@Rob_Flaherty: we poll tested the attacks we faced to understand which worked, and which voters those attacks were persuading, so we could decide where to spend time and money countering dis- and misinformation.
This week, a cross party committee of parliamentarians released a powerful report on the impact of the racism Black people in Britain face. Read more about it below. This thread highlights some of the Joint Committee's most damning findings. committees.parliament.uk/committee/93/h…
"The headline finding from the polling was that the majority (over 75%) of Black people in the UK do not believe their human rights are equally protected compared to white people."
More than 60% of Black people don't think their health is as protected by the NHS compared to white people.
This polling is in line with our own, as the report highlights.
We welcome the energy and determination of those who are protesting at @Twitter’s lack of action on hate on their platform. Here is a thread from @jemma_levene for those who want to learn more and take action to fight antisemitism and other forms of online hate:
Online hate is a daily reality for too many @Twitter users. Public figures and campaigners, particularly women and those from marginalised communities, regularly receive a torrent of online abuse from high-profile accounts encouraging ‘pile-ons’ by bots and anonymous accounts
Wiley used his platform of >500k followers to launch a stream of antisemitic tweets, employing multiple antisemitic tropes along the way. To learn more about how antisemitism is propagated online, read @CST_UK’s report on antisemitic content on @Twittercst.org.uk/data/file/4/2/…