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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

Lucy Connolly’s husband, Conservative Councillor Raymond Connolly (centre); Telegraph columnist Allison Pearson (left); and former GB News host Dan Wootton attend Lucy Connolly’s appeal hearing
Photo: Vuk Valcic/Alamy

At 11.45am on 29 July 2024, 17-year-old Axel Rudakubana walked into a community studio in Southport and killed three children, and wounded 10 others, with a kitchen knife at a Taylor Swift-themed workshop.

Rudakubana had a long history of troubling behaviour.

From the age of 13, he had become increasingly obsessed with violent online videos and repeatedly made worrying comments about mass shootings. Teachers reported him to the Government’s counter-terrorism strategy, Prevent, but his case was turned down on account of him not displaying any extremist tendencies.

‘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
Jonathan Lis

Mandrake – Divided Loyalties

As close as Lord Rothermere was to Geordie Greig, his overarching loyalty to the Conservative Party meant that he had no choice but to sack him as Editor of the Daily Mail when he became too strident in his front-page attacks on Boris Johnson during his period as Prime Minister and Tory Leader.
Tim Walker