
Angry Brits Won’t Be Stopped by Latest Migration Defeat
Councils across the country are still considering action similar to Epping’s despite the latest setback.

Councils across the country are still considering action similar to Epping’s despite the latest setback.

French officials clearly aren’t serious about stopping illegal migrants from reaching the UK—but then again, neither are their British counterparts.

HOPE not hate documents contain proposals where a network of vigilant children could report on “signs of hatred” in their schools.

The announcement comes in the wake of protests spreading across England against migrant hotels.

The move has been bashed as “incomprehensible,” but is unlikely to shift the establishment view of the Strasbourg-based court.

The government has admitted it cannot “estimate” how many in the country on certain visas are still here.

The government is refusing to publish details of security checks on Afghan migrants, despite concerns raised in the House of Lords over unvetted arrivals.

Inaction becomes even harder to justify as horrific reports emerge of crimes committed by those in the country illegally.

In 2024, Axel Rudakubana’s brutal murder of three young girls sparked a summer of unrest. One year on, has anything really changed?

The British Prime Minister is making strong statements on the situation in the Middle East, as pressure mounts on him from abroad and at home.