London turned into a stage for anger this weekend, and the slogan ringing the loudest was blunt: “Send Them Home.” More than 100,000 people poured into the streets under the banner of Tommy Robinson’s so-called “Unite the Kingdom” march, waving flags like they were weapons, chanting like the city belonged only to them. Across from them stood counter-protesters under the “Stand Up to Racism” banner, a smaller crowd but one that carried a different kind of power, the reminder that not everyone is ready to hand London over to the politics of hate.
Robinson, still thriving on his outsider image despite criminal convictions and rejection by mainstream parties, knows how to tap into anger. He calls it free speech. Some people call it hate in disguise. And when you look at 110,000 people chanting about immigrants, it feels less like a debate and more like a battle cry.
Free Speech or Free Pass for Hate?
Supporters claim the march is about free speech, but the chants of “Send Them Home” say otherwise. Free speech is supposed to allow expression, not give cover for blaming migrants every time the economy cracks or services collapse. The same voices demanding freedom of speech are quick to silence opponents, to mock anyone who disagrees, and to threaten those who dare to call their movement what it really is: anti-immigrant rage.
The Police on the Frontline
For the police, it was a nightmare to manage. Over 1,600 officers deployed, horses in the streets, cordons stretching across central London, and still, violence broke through. Officers were assaulted, groups tried to break into “sterile areas,” and the city felt like a militarized zone. That alone tells you something: if you need that much force to protect a march, maybe it’s not just a march.
The Bigger Picture
In the end, the “Unite the Kingdom” march showed how divided the kingdom really is. Some people wrapped themselves in flags to feel strong, others raised their voices to resist hate, and the police held the line in between. But the slogan “Send Them Home” will haunt Britain beyond this march, it’s not just a chant, it’s a symbol of a nation turning its frustrations on those least responsible.