Britain First
Britain First is a far-right British political party that advocates for national sovereignty, the prioritisation of native citizens in welfare and housing, and the defence of Christian heritage against mass immigration and Islamist expansionism.[1][2][3] Founded in May 2011 by Jim Dowson, a Scottish activist previously involved in fundraising for the British National Party, the organisation was established as a street protest movement drawing from disaffected nationalists, with Paul Golding assuming leadership shortly thereafter.[4][1][5] Britain First gained prominence through direct-action campaigns, including "mosque invasions" to expose alleged extremist preaching, "Christian patrols" in areas of high immigrant density to deter grooming gangs and sharia enforcement, and public demonstrations against halal slaughter and burqa usage.[3][6] After voluntary deregistration in 2017 amid financial scrutiny, the group re-registered as a political party with the UK's Electoral Commission in September 2021, enabling formal electoral contests despite consistently low vote shares in local and mayoral races.[7][8][9] Its leaders, including Golding and former deputy Jayda Fransen, have endured multiple imprisonments for religiously aggravated offences stemming from confrontational activism, while the party positions itself beyond traditional left-right dichotomies as a defender of traditional British values against globalist and multicultural policies.[10][3]Origins and Early Development
Founding by Ex-BNP Members
Britain First was founded in 2011 by Jim Dowson, a Scottish activist who had previously served as a fundraiser for the British National Party (BNP), and Paul Golding, a former BNP organizer closely associated with the party's then-leader Nick Griffin.[5][11] The group emerged amid dissatisfaction with the BNP's internal declines and leadership under Griffin, positioning itself initially as a "patriotic campaign" to rally ex-BNP supporters against perceived failures in defending British identity.[4] Dowson, leveraging his access to BNP donor lists, sent an unsolicited email in May 2011 to approximately 40,000 current and former BNP members, supporters, and donors, announcing Britain First's formation and soliciting funds for street-level activism.[4] Golding, who had risen as a BNP "high flyer" in the South East region, assumed leadership of the nascent group, with Dowson handling early operational and fundraising aspects from bases in Northern Ireland.[12][5] Other early figures included ex-BNP members such as Andy McBride, the South East regional organizer who served as nominating officer, and Kevin Edwards, a former Welsh BNP councillor appointed as treasurer.[5] The organization was launched via the far-right platform British Resistance, emphasizing protection of British and Christian values, though Dowson departed shortly after amid disputes over direction and finances.[5] This exodus from BNP ranks reflected broader fragmentation in UK nationalist circles, with Britain First differentiating itself through direct-action tactics rather than electoral politics.[11]Initial Campaigns and Expansion
Britain First's initial campaigns focused on direct action against perceived Islamist threats in the United Kingdom, beginning with street patrols in areas with significant Muslim populations. In early 2013, the group launched its "Christian Patrols," starting in Luton, Bedfordshire—a town associated with prior Islamist activities such as those linked to al-Muhajiroun—where activists in high-visibility jackets marched through neighborhoods, chanting slogans like "British and proud" and distributing leaflets warning against "no-go zones" created by Muslim communities.[13] These patrols were framed by the group as defensive measures to reclaim public spaces and protect Christian values, echoing responses to earlier "Muslim Patrols" in London that had prompted arrests for harassment in January 2013.[14] The patrols expanded to other locations, including Eltham in southeast London by 2014, where Britain First claimed to enforce "no sharia" zones and confront individuals distributing Islamist literature.[15] This period marked the group's shift toward militaristic branding, with participants wearing quasi-uniforms and emphasizing a "direct action wing" to mobilize volunteers for rapid-response operations.[16] Concurrently, Britain First conducted leaflet distributions in urban areas, targeting multicultural neighborhoods with materials decrying immigration, halal practices in schools, and the influence of mosques, which they portrayed as centers of radicalization. These efforts, while drawing local counter-protests from Muslim and anti-fascist groups, generated media coverage that amplified the organization's profile beyond its initial base of former British National Party supporters.[17] Expansion accelerated in 2014 through a series of high-profile "mosque invasions," beginning on May 10 when activists entered multiple mosques in Bradford, West Yorkshire, and Cumbernauld near Glasgow, filming confrontations with worshippers and imams while handing out pamphlets labeling Islam a "death cult" and demanding the removal of signage segregating prayer areas by sex.[18] [19] By July, similar actions occurred at a mosque in Crayford, southeast London, involving groups of 20-30 members who disrupted prayers to challenge what they viewed as discriminatory practices.[20] These operations, documented in videos uploaded to social media, provoked police investigations for potential harassment and trespass but also boosted recruitment, with Britain First reporting formations of local "battalions" and a surge in online engagement as footage went viral, attracting sympathizers disillusioned with mainstream parties' immigration policies.[18] The tactic effectively transitioned the group from fringe protests to a nationwide street presence, inheriting and intensifying the anti-Islam focus previously prominent in the English Defence League's decline.[17]Leadership and Internal Dynamics
Key Figures: Paul Golding and Associates
Paul Golding, born on January 25, 1982, in Dartford, Kent, serves as the founder and leader of Britain First since its inception in 2011 as a breakaway from the British National Party (BNP), where he had been an organizer.[21][22] Relocating to Salford, Greater Manchester, Golding has directed the group's street activism, including "Christian patrols" and protests against perceived Islamist threats, while running in multiple elections, such as the 2016 London mayoral contest where he garnered 31,373 first-preference votes.[21][23] He faced imprisonment in March 2018 alongside deputy Jayda Fransen for religiously aggravated harassment stemming from leaflet distribution and videos filmed near a Kent gang-rape trial, receiving an 18-week sentence served concurrently with a prior conviction.[24] Jim Dowson, a Scottish businessman and former BNP fundraiser, co-founded Britain First with Golding in 2011, providing initial financial and organizational support through his connections in Protestant loyalist circles in Northern Ireland.[11] Dowson's tenure ended acrimoniously in July 2014 amid allegations of financial impropriety and personal misconduct, including heavy drinking and internal plotting, after which he relocated to the United States to establish a similar anti-Islam group.[12][25] Jayda Fransen, appointed deputy leader in 2014 following Dowson's exit, collaborated closely with Golding on high-profile direct actions, such as mosque invasions and viral anti-Muslim videos that drew international attention, including retweets by then-U.S. President Donald Trump in November 2017.[1][24] Convicted with Golding in 2018 for the same harassment offenses, Fransen received a 36-week sentence; their partnership fractured post-release, culminating in Golding's May 2019 secret recording admission of physically assaulting her during a dispute over group control, leading to her expulsion.[26] Ashlea Simon emerged as Britain First's chair by 2021, supporting Golding in organizing protests against asylum seeker accommodations, though the group has since operated with a reduced core team amid repeated platform deplatformings and legal setbacks.[27] Internal dynamics have featured factionalism and departures, with Golding maintaining centralized authority despite convictions, including a 2020 Terrorism Act charge for refusing device access upon returning from Russia.[28]Departures and Organizational Shifts
In July 2014, Jim Dowson, a co-founder of Britain First who had provided initial funding and organizational support, resigned from the group, citing its "provocative and counterproductive" mosque invasions and the involvement of "racists and extremists" as reasons for his departure.[29] Dowson's exit marked an early shift away from his vision of a more disciplined, Christian-focused nationalist outfit toward the direct action tactics emphasized by remaining leader Paul Golding. Jayda Fransen, who had served as deputy leader since around 2014 and was instrumental in the group's social media presence, left Britain First in January 2019 following her imprisonment for religiously aggravated harassment offenses committed in 2017.[30] [31] Her departure was confirmed via a video statement, amid reports of internal discord, including a May 2019 incident where Golding admitted to assaulting her during a confrontation.[32] Fransen's exit contributed to a perceived decline in the group's overt religious rhetoric, as subsequent activities under Golding focused more on anti-immigration patrols and protests.[16] These departures did not lead to organizational fragmentation but rather consolidated authority under Golding, who has endured multiple convictions—including for contempt of court in 2018 and under the Terrorism Act in 2020—while maintaining operational continuity through alternative online platforms after deplatforming from major social media sites.[33] The group has since reported internal challenges, such as recruitment difficulties and electoral failures, yet persists with a core cadre of activists centered on street-level activism.[4]Ideology and Policy Positions
Nationalist and Anti-Immigration Stance
Britain First espouses a nationalist ideology centered on prioritizing the interests of the British people, defined as indigenous inhabitants with a shared heritage, culture, and traditions. The party positions itself as unashamedly nationalist, viewing patriots as those who love their own nation and reject globalist erosion of sovereignty.[34] This stance emphasizes strong national borders, control over domestic resources, and preservation of cultural identity against supranational entities like the European Union or United Nations, which it accuses of promoting open borders and wealth redistribution favoring elites.[34] Nationalism, in their framework, enables individual nation-states to govern independently, contrasting with globalism's alleged suppression of indigenous traditions and promotion of multiculturalism.[34] Central to this ideology is opposition to mass immigration, which Britain First attributes to demographic pressures and cultural incompatibility on an overpopulated island. The party advocates an immediate and total halt to all further immigration, arguing that sovereign peoples must control entry to prevent dispossession of the native population.[35] [36] Policies include prioritizing British citizens for jobs, housing, and welfare, while rejecting the importation of foreign labor amid high domestic unemployment and reliance on social security.[35] They frame unchecked immigration as a globalist tool exacerbating infrastructure strains in housing and healthcare, leading to policies aimed at maintaining the British as the demographic majority.[36] [34] While criticizing multiculturalism as a failed policy fostering division, Britain First maintains it is not racially exclusive, extending membership to individuals of any ethnic background who uphold British values and reject incompatible ideologies.[36] This approach aligns with their pro-British, no-compromise principles, seeking to restore national self-determination through strict border enforcement and repatriation incentives for those not integrating.[35] Such positions have drawn accusations of xenophobia from critics, but the party defends them as pragmatic responses to empirical trends in population displacement and resource scarcity.[37]Defense of Christianity and Cultural Preservation
Britain First identifies the defense of Christianity as integral to safeguarding Britain's national identity, asserting that the faith forms the moral and cultural bedrock of the nation threatened by mass immigration and Islamic influence. The group's principles explicitly commit to "maintaining and strengthening Christianity as the foundation of our society," framing multiculturalism as a corrosive force that dilutes traditional values.[4] This stance extends to cultural preservation, with pledges to protect "British cultural heritage, traditions, customs and values" against erosion by foreign ideologies and practices.[38] In operational terms, Britain First has conducted "Christian patrols" since 2014, initially in East London's Tower Hamlets area, as a direct counter to Muslim patrol incidents reported earlier that year, which involved harassment of non-Muslims. These patrols, involving uniformed activists equipped with body armor and dogs, aimed to assert Christian presence and deter perceived encroachments on community spaces, including vigils near churches and confrontations with Islamist preachers.[39] [1] By December 2014, such actions had expanded to multiple locations, with leader Paul Golding describing them as frontline resistance to the "Islamification" of Britain.[40] Paul Golding has defended these efforts by rejecting liberal or pacifist readings of Christianity, citing Jesus' expulsion of money changers from the temple (John 2:15) as evidence of militant biblical precedent compatible with defensive activism. The party has also opposed mosque constructions, such as the 2014 Dudley project, arguing they symbolize cultural displacement, and distributed Bibles alongside anti-Islam leaflets during "Christian crusade" campaigns targeting Muslim sites.[41] [42] These initiatives underscore Britain First's causal view that unchecked demographic shifts undermine indigenous Christian traditions, prioritizing empirical observations of community changes over abstract multiculturalism ideals.Positions on Crime, Security, and Foreign Policy
Britain First advocates a victim-centered approach to criminal justice, emphasizing the reversal of policies that prioritize offenders' rights over those of victims. The party calls for the elimination of "woke, politically correct policing" in favor of traditional crime-fighting methods, including mandatory National Service for habitual offenders to instill discipline and break recidivism cycles.[3] It proposes a national referendum on restoring capital punishment specifically for paedophiles, terrorists, and murderers, framing the decision as a democratic free vote following balanced debate.[3] Prisons would be reformed into sites of hard labor, with removal of luxuries like games consoles, imposition of structured work and education regimes, and extension of parole eligibility based on demonstrated behavioral improvement rather than automatic half-sentence releases.[3] The party supports expanding citizens' self-defense rights, asserting that deadly force should be legally permissible for residents protecting their homes and families from intruders, invoking the principle that "every Englishman's home is his castle."[3] Britain First demands a severe crackdown on Islamist grooming gangs, with prosecution and imprisonment for civil servants or police involved in cover-ups.[3] It also seeks to reintroduce firearms for law enforcement and border agencies, subject to periodic reviews tied to crime levels.[3] On security and defense, Britain First pledges to ring-fence and substantially increase military spending to modernize forces capable of protecting the British Isles, former Dominions, and the Commonwealth, with heavy investment in advanced technologies and weaponry.[3] Compulsory one-year National Service for all post-education citizens is proposed, alongside restoration of historic county regiments to foster local loyalty in the British Army.[3] The party would prohibit arms sales to non-Commonwealth or non-Western nations, ensure top-tier equipment, training, and accommodations for personnel, and enact laws granting full immunity from prosecution for Armed Forces veterans, including retroactive protections against past legal pursuits related to service, such as in Northern Ireland.[3] Additional measures include free legal aid for service members on service-related matters and PTSD treatment centers at every military base.[3] In foreign policy, Britain First promotes independent pursuit of defense and diplomacy by Britain and its former Dominions—Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Crown Dependencies—through tailored new alliances.[3] It advocates shifting focus from European integration and the European Union toward strengthened ties with the 2.6 billion-strong Commonwealth, including bilateral trade deals prioritizing these nations.[3] The party calls for withdrawal from the United Nations, citing its promotion of "woke, left-wing ideological projects" undermining the West, and replacement of NATO—which it criticizes for failing Britain during the Falklands War—with a new Western alliance dedicated to shared interests.[3] These positions, adopted at the party's conference on 19 November 2022, reflect a "Britain First" prioritization of national sovereignty and traditional alliances over multilateral commitments perceived as detrimental.[3]Activities and Direct Actions
Street Protests and Christian Patrols
Britain First initiated Christian patrols in 2014 as a form of direct street-level activism intended to challenge what the group described as Islamist dominance in certain urban areas. These patrols typically involved members in high-visibility clothing walking through neighborhoods, distributing literature, and confronting individuals perceived as promoting Islamic extremism. On 31 January 2014, approximately a dozen members conducted a patrol outside the East London Mosque on Brick Lane in Tower Hamlets, London, arriving in an armoured Land Rover, consuming alcohol, harassing passersby, handing out leaflets with anti-Islam messages, and displaying a banner reading "Resistance."[43] Subsequent patrols occurred in East London during 2014 and 2015, where activists asserted claims over "Christian areas" in predominantly Muslim districts, filming encounters with locals and issuing warnings against perceived threats like sharia law enforcement or no-go zones.[15] Group leader Paul Golding stated during one such operation that the patrols aimed to combat an "Islamic extremist cancer" and predicted societal conflict if Muslim populations grew unchecked.[15] A notable incident took place on 23 January 2016 in Bury Park, Luton, during a patrol involving around 20 Britain First members who distributed newspapers headlined "World War Three has begun - Islam against the world." Deputy leader Jayda Fransen verbally accosted a Muslim woman in a hijab, questioning her attire and alleging that men force women to cover to prevent rape, resulting in Fransen's conviction that November for religiously aggravated harassment; she was fined £1,000, ordered to pay £620 in costs, and barred by a two-year restraining order from the area.[44] The following day, approximately 200 supporters gathered on Dunstable Road for a larger patrol, carrying crosses and leaflets highlighting local ISIS sympathizers' convictions, which sparked heated verbal clashes with residents but led to no arrests despite police intervention to de-escalate.[45][45] In parallel with patrols, Britain First organized street protests, often unannounced "flash demonstrations" targeting sites associated with Islamism, such as mosques or halal businesses, featuring chants, flags, and speeches decrying immigration and cultural erosion. For instance, on 24 January 2016, the group protested in Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, against hate preachers, extremism, and related issues like halal slaughter, drawing local opposition and warnings of potential civil unrest from Golding.[46] These actions frequently resulted in counter-protests, police monitoring, and online video dissemination to amplify visibility, though they yielded limited mainstream policy impact.[47]Mosque Invasions and Leaflet Distributions
Britain First conducted a series of actions known as "mosque invasions" starting in 2014, involving groups of activists entering mosques without invitation to confront imams, film interactions, and distribute leaflets raising alarms about perceived Islamist influence, Sharia practices, and segregated facilities. These operations, often led by Paul Golding and Jayda Fransen, were publicized through videos posted on social media to draw attention to claims of "no-go zones" and cultural separatism in Muslim communities.[48][49] One early incident occurred on or around May 10, 2014, when activists invaded the Apna Gurdwara in Bradford and a mosque in Wishaw, North Lanarkshire, near Glasgow, prompting complaints from mosque officials and subsequent police investigations into potential aggravated trespass and harassment.[18] In July 2014, a self-described "battalion" of around 12-15 members entered the North West Kent Muslim Association mosque in Crayford, southeast London, where they demanded the removal of signs directing men and women to separate entrances, labeling them "sexist," and handed out leaflets while filming the encounter for online dissemination.[50] Leaflet distributions frequently accompanied or preceded these invasions, with materials decrying mosque expansion, halal practices, and alleged extremism; for instance, in Luton on an unspecified date in early 2016, a large group marched through the high street handing out such leaflets, which contributed to heightened tensions and legal repercussions. The tactic extended to multiple sites across England, with videos from at least a dozen such visits posted between mid-2014 and 2017, amplifying Britain First's online reach but also attracting accusations of intimidation from mosque representatives.[48] These activities led to legal challenges, including a nationwide injunction granted to Bedfordshire Police in August 2016, prohibiting Golding, Fransen, and associates from entering any mosque in England and Wales or distributing related leaflets within 50 meters of one. Golding received a two-month prison sentence in December 2016 for breaching a separate court order tied to prior mosque-related disruptions.[51] Despite the bans, Britain First maintained that the invasions exposed legitimate security and integration concerns, though critics, including police and anti-extremism groups, viewed them as provocative harassment designed to incite division.[4]Targeted Campaigns: Rotherham, Calais, and Asylum Seekers
Britain First organized protests in Rotherham following the 2014 independent inquiry into child sexual exploitation, which documented the abuse of approximately 1,400 children primarily by men of Pakistani heritage between 1997 and 2013, amid criticisms of authorities' reluctance to act due to fears of racism accusations.[52] In October 2014, the group held a demonstration framed as addressing "Muslim grooming," linking local mosques to the scandal.[53] A larger protest in September 2015, attended by up to 300 participants, led to seven arrests for public order offenses after clashes with counter-protesters.[54] These actions extended to targeting mosques, prompting increased police patrols and, in January 2020, the formation of a Muslim volunteer guardian group with over 100 members to protect community sites.[55] [56] In mid-2015, during heightened attempts by migrants to cross from the Calais Jungle camp—where thousands resided amid the European migrant crisis—Britain First dispatched activists to the French port to directly challenge individuals seeking entry to the UK, with reports describing their conduct as confrontational toward camp residents.[57] The group positioned these visits as defending British borders against unchecked immigration. By September 2019, amid rising small boat crossings from northern France, Britain First launched "Operation White Cliffs," involving patrols along Dover's beaches and cliffs to monitor and deter landings, during which activists faced rock-throwing from some migrants. [58] Britain First has directed efforts against asylum seekers since around 2020, focusing on hotels contracted by the Home Office to house claimants awaiting processing, with actions including uninvited entries, door-banging, and demands for immediate deportations.[59] In one instance, activists raided a Birmingham hotel housing refugees, verbally abusing residents and staff.[60] A 2021 campaign relied on a fabricated list of sites, leading protests at non-asylum hotels like one in London's Park Lane, highlighting vulnerabilities to misinformation in their mobilization.[27] These operations, often amplified via social media, advocate for halting asylum claims, repatriating rejected applicants, and ending hotel usage, citing costs exceeding £8 million daily in 2023 for such accommodations.[61]Electoral Engagement
Party Registration and Early Contests (2014–2016)
Britain First was formally registered as a political party with the Electoral Commission on 10 January 2014, enabling it to field candidates in elections across Great Britain under the registration identifier PP2214.[62] This followed earlier unsuccessful attempts at registration, including a prior entry under PP1830 from November 2011 to November 2013.[63] The party's leadership, headed by Paul Golding, emphasized building an electoral presence alongside its street activism, though initial efforts remained modest compared to its growing online and protest activities.[4] During 2014 and 2015, Britain First contested few elections, focusing primarily on local issues like opposition to mosque developments in areas such as Dudley without fielding widespread candidates.[42] The group received significant donations—topping the Electoral Commission's list for smaller parties in early 2015 with over £200,000 reported—but did not stand candidates in the 2015 general election, reflecting its nascent organizational capacity for broad campaigning.[64] The party's most notable early electoral outing came in the 5 May 2016 Greater London Authority elections, where Paul Golding ran for Mayor of London, securing 31,736 first-preference votes, or 1.2% of the total.[65] Britain First also nominated candidates for the London Assembly, including Golding in the Greenwich and Lewisham constituency, but garnered negligible support, with votes typically under 2% per seat and no wins.[66] These results underscored the disconnect between the party's social media reach—boasting hundreds of thousands of followers—and its limited appeal at the ballot box, where it polled far below mainstream parties amid a field dominated by Labour's Sadiq Khan and the Conservatives' Zac Goldsmith.[65] Local council contests in 2016 similarly yielded no seats, as the party struggled against established competitors in a fragmented far-right landscape.[67]Mid-Period Efforts and Setbacks (2017–2021)
In November 2017, Britain First was deregistered as a political party by the Electoral Commission after failing to submit its annual registration renewal on time, prohibiting it from officially fielding candidates under its name in subsequent elections.[68][7] This administrative lapse marked a significant setback, as the group had previously contested local and other polls, though with negligible success, and it shifted focus from structured electoral participation to direct action and online mobilization during the period.[7] The imprisonment of leaders Paul Golding and Jayda Fransen in March 2018 for religiously aggravated harassment offenses—stemming from leaflet distribution and video recording near a Canterbury courthouse during a grooming gang trial—further disrupted organizational capacity. Golding received an 18-week sentence, while Fransen was jailed for 9 weeks; both were also subjected to restrictions limiting their activism upon release.[24] These convictions, which the courts deemed intended to stir up hatred against Muslims, coincided with broader scrutiny, including the permanent ban of Britain First's Facebook pages in early 2018 for hate speech violations, curtailing a key platform for recruitment and fundraising essential to electoral efforts.[69][24] In July 2019, the Electoral Commission imposed a £44,000 fine on Britain First for multiple breaches of electoral rules, including failing to declare approximately £42,000 in donations received between 2014 and 2017, as well as inaccuracies in financial reporting even after deregistration.[70][71] The regulator described these as "serious" failures that undermined transparency, compounding the group's inability to rebuild electoral infrastructure amid ongoing legal and financial strains. Electoral activity remained minimal, with no party-level candidacies possible due to deregistration. Fransen, standing as an independent in the May 2021 Scottish Parliament election for Glasgow Southside, secured just 46 votes (0.1% of the constituency total), highlighting persistent voter rejection despite her visibility from prior activism.[72][73] Repeated applications to re-register as a party were rejected by the Electoral Commission until September 2021, when approval was finally granted after nine prior failures, allowing renewed formal electoral engagement thereafter.[7][4]Recent Elections and Performance (2022–Present)
Britain First has maintained limited electoral participation since 2022, focusing on select local wards, parliamentary by-elections, and the 2024 London mayoral election, with no seats won and vote shares typically under 20%.[9][74] The party did not field candidates in the July 2024 general election, prioritizing direct action over broad parliamentary contests.[75] In the May 2023 local elections, Britain First stood eight candidates across seven wards in England.[9] No candidates were elected, but performances varied, with the highest vote share of 18.1% in Walkden North ward, Salford, followed by 17.3% in Bideford South, Devon.[9] Other results included 13.1% in Hockley & Ashingdon, Essex; 12.6% in Ballard, New Forest; 10.1% in Darenth, Dartford; and 5% in Swanscombe, Dartford.[9] Party leader Paul Golding described these as strong showings relative to resources, attributing lower outcomes to Labour's national surge.[9]| Ward | Location | Vote Share |
|---|---|---|
| Walkden North | Salford | 18.1% |
| Bideford South | Devon | 17.3% |
| Hockley & Ashingdon | Essex | 13.1% |
| Ballard | New Forest | 12.6% |
| Darenth | Dartford | 10.1% |
| Swanscombe | Dartford | 5.0% |