Free from fear or favour
Tracking and cookies. WHY?

‘It Is in Much of the Media’s Interest to Drive a Farage Victory’: How Asylum Became the Issue Obsessing Britain

When the press produces a daily stream of ‘invasion’ stories, or seizes on individual incidents involving asylum seekers as emblematic, it sells something people will always buy – fear and scapegoats, writes Jonathan Lis

Anti-migrant demonstrators outside the Bell Hotel in Epping. Byline Times is not identifying them as members of the far-right
Photo: Ian Davidson/PA/Alamy

In August, the High Court ruled that the Government must move the asylum seekers living at the Bell Hotel in Epping. The judgment followed a period of protests outside the hotel after the arrest of a resident for sexual assault.

Epping Forest District Council secured a temporary injunction which would have forced the migrants to leave, but this was overturned by the Court of Appeal. The council then lost a legal attempt to appeal its decision to the Supreme Court.

The issue has dominated the news agenda. At this point, it is difficult to conclude whether the coverage is driving or is simply reflecting public concerns – most likely they are now locked in a mutually reinforcing (and radicalising) symbiosis.

Where Is the Political and Media Challenge to Britain’s New Far-Right Movement?

The Government endorses flags, while mainstream politicians join asylum hotel protests, and the media refuses to confront why migration has again become the dominant narrative in British politics. It is a dangerous path, writes Adam Bienkov
Adam Bienkov

The Martyrdom of Lucy Connolly

Otto English dissects how the right united behind a symbol of the ‘free speech authoritarianism’ it claims is terrorising Britain – so real violence and its causes can go ignored
Otto English