Editorial 08 August 2024.
Almost all of Thursday’s front pages report on the anti-racism protestors taking to England’s streets yesterday – in peaceful demonstrations. There is also coverage of the first far-right thugs that have been sentenced for their roles in the rioting and disorder we have seen over the past week – following the stabbing deaths of three young girls and misinformation about the attacker spreading rapidly online.
Many front pages feature images of Matt Hudson-Smith – who narrowly missed out on Gold at the Olympics. His Olympics 2024 silver dominates the back pages and the UK sports pages.
‘Tens of thousands of anti-racism protesters protect UK’
The Daily Mail carries a picture of thousands of anti-racism protestors who took to the streets on Wednesday night in what the paper calls the “night anti-hate marchers faced down the thugs”.
The Guardian says some of the protestors formed human shields to protect asylum centres in towns, cities and areas across England. The paper says thousands of people took to the streets in parts of the capital, Blackpool, Brighton and Sheffield in what it describes as the biggest mobilisation of police officers and staff since the 2011 riots in London.
The i newspaper also reports on the tens of thousands of anti-racism protesters gathering on streets in England. It says those involved in rioting may face a football ban as the government looks to curb the unrest.
The Times says thousands took “to the street to confront the far right.” The paper notes that the anti-racism protesters turned out amid fears that more than 100 riots were expected to take place by the far right – it failed to materialise on the night. The paper says thousands of anti-racists outnumbered and “scared off far-right extremists” on Wednesday night.
Metro looks at a different angle regarding the disorder the country has seen over the past week. The paper leads on a report that says Russian users of the messaging app Telegram have been infiltrating far-right channels, where the violence has been discussed.
The Daily Express front page features a large image of the anti-racism protesters. The paper says “United Britain stands firm against thugs.” In the paper, there is a report on allegations of “two-tier policing” when it comes to disorder. The Met Police Sir Mark Rowley has dismissed allegations of bias as “complete nonsense.”