
London saw tens of thousands of people gather on Saturday for rival demonstrations, prompting a major police operation aimed at keeping the groups apart. More than 4,000 officers were deployed, along with drones, police horses, dog units and live facial recognition, as authorities tried to prevent clashes in the capital.
The main march, "Unite the Kingdom," was led by Tommy Robinson and drew supporters who say they are protesting immigration, national identity and what they see as failures in public order. At the same time, a pro-Palestinian rally took place elsewhere in London, adding another layer of tension to an already volatile day.
The guardian reported "110k" at our London rally today.
— Tommy Robinson 🇬🇧 (@TRobinsonNewEra) September 13, 2025
Yet, literally had their own helicopter showing the millions of patriots 🤡
Legacy media proving again they'll just lie to your face for their own agenda.
This is why nobody trusts them.
We are the media now. pic.twitter.com/s0yOh2NEfe
The protests also reflect anger over crime cases that have become politically charged in the UK. One example is the Brighton beach rape case, in which three asylum seekers were convicted in April of raping a woman after she was separated from her friends on a night out. Cases like that have been cited by some anti-immigration activists as evidence that the asylum system is failing, while critics argue such incidents are being used to inflame wider hostility toward migrants.


The Metropolitan Police said the operation would cost about £4.5 million, underscoring the scale of the public order response. The government also barred 11 foreign figures described as "far-right agitators" from entering the UK ahead of the marches.
The day's events highlight how protests over immigration, crime and the Middle East conflict are increasingly overlapping in Britain. For police, the immediate goal was simple: keep rival groups separated and prevent the demonstrations from turning violent.
