Man in a light jacket stands confidently in front of the Houses of Parliament, with flags in the background, capturing a moment of public engagement.

Man in a light jacket stands confidently in front of the Houses of Parliament, with flags in the background, capturing a moment of public engagement.
Tommy Robinson at “Unite the Kingdom” May 16

Hundreds of thousands of British patriots marched in London on Saturday at Tommy Robinson’s “Unite the Kingdom” march through historic Westminster Abbey and Parliament Square. Speakers, including host Glenn Beck and YouTuber Nick Shirley, addressed the massive rally, which was interrupted by chants of “Keir Starmer’s a Wanker” and calls for the Prime Minister to step down.

British patriot leader Tommy Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, had been touring the United States for the last two months, meeting with members of Congress and the State Department and giving interviews to the likes of Jack Posobiec, Gen. Mike Flynn, Glenn Beck, Raheem Kassam, and Lara Logan.

Early May, he returned to the UK to organize the sixth “Unite the Kingdom” rally, which began with a mere 5000 attendees on June 1, 2024, and culminated in a massive, million-man march on September 13, 2025, three days after the murder of Charlie Kirk by a far-left antifa trans furry activist in Utah.

The recent march comes on the heels of a crushing election defeat of PM Keir Starmer’s Labor Party in local elections on May 7, the resignation of Starmer’s top adviser, Morgan McSweeney, on Feb. 8 in the Peter Mandelson-Jeffrey Epstein scandal, and increased pressure for Starmer to step down from his own party.

In response, PM Keir “Starm-Trooper” Starmer decided to crack down on free speech in the Kingdom, banning 11 speakers he considers “far-right” from entering the UK ahead of the rally, including Texas Republican Islam critic Valentina Gomez, Dutch influencer Eva Vlaardingerbroek, Polish MEP Dominik Tarczynski, Canadian Journalist Ezra Levant, Australian journalist Avi Yemeni, Belgian MEP Filip de Winter, Spanish activist Ada Lluch, and American influencers Joey Mannarina and Don Keith.

Dominik Taczynski, Eva Vlaardingerbroek, Ada Lluch, and Joey Mannarino announced they will sue Starmer personally for defamation after labeling them “far-right”.

 

Rebel Media producer Ezra Levant has also announced he will sue Starmer personally.

Nonetheless, several US guests, including host Glenn Beck and YouTuber Nick Shirley, managed to enter the country to speak at the rally.

The crowd waved British, English, Welsh, Scottish, American, Israeli, and Royal Iranian flags and frequently erupted in chants of “USA! USA!”

Robinson showed the crowd images of world leaders and asked for a response. While they crowd booed the EU’s Ursula von Der Leyen, France’s Emmanuel Macron, Germany’s Friedrich Merz, Canada’s Mark Carney, Australia’s Anthony Albanese, and the UK’s Keir Starmer, they resoundingly cheered US President Donald J. Trump.

How many people were there?

At the rally, hundreds of thousands of British and international patriots assembled at King’s Cross Station (of Harry Potter fame) and marched peacefully and patriotically to Trafalgar Square and the Houses of Parliament, where the rally took place at the feet of historic Westminster Abbey. While the crowd stretched a half-mile from Parliament Square to Trafalgar Square, the Metropolitan Police claimed there were only 60,000 people in attendance. This reporter also attended the Iranian Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi’s rally in Munich, Germany, which police pegged at 250,000 attendees, and can confirm the “Unite the Kingdom” crowd was bigger – certainly hundreds of thousands.

While Tommy Robinson spoke of “millions” of patriots in attendance, the crowd was almost certainly smaller than the Sept. 13, 2025, march, which was estimated at a million attendees, fueled by the Charlie Kirk assassination and Tommy Robinson’s unjust solitary prison confinement for journalism, Oct. 2024-May 2025.

In his opening speech, Tommy Robinson urged the crowd to become politically active – “no matter which party you support: Reform, Restor, Advance UK or the Conservatives”. The British right, long dominated by the Conservative Party, is currently fractured into several parties, with Nigel Farage’s Reform Party leading nationally. Farage rejects Tommy Robinson’s grassroots movement, however, which is generally viewed in class-conscious Britain as “thugs” and “hooligans”.

The only professional politician in attendance was Advance UK’s Ben Habib, who noted that the other party leaders had been invited but declined to attend.

For the first time, however, Nigel Farage defended the Robinson rally in the run-up:

While mainstream media were quick to label the marchers as “racist”, British actor Laurence Fox invited Nigerian Bishop Jwan Zhumbe to speak about the persecution of Christians by Muslim death squads in Nigeria.

French pro-women’s activists “Nemesis Collective” Alice Cordier, Yona Faedda, and Astrid came on stage wearing full-body Burkas, riling up the booing crowd before revealing their beautiful selves to cheers and enthusiasm.

 

 

 

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