... and never mind the Suffragettes!

Original to:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jul/09/palestine-action-britain-support-protest-law


This column does not express support for Palestine Action – here’s why

Owen Jones
The Guardian, 9 Jul 2025

In Britain’s increasingly authoritarian society, any sort of protest can find 
itself at odds with the law. You might even go to jail


This piece must be carefully written to avoid my being imprisoned for up to 14 
years. That’s a curious sentence to say as a newspaper columnist in Britain in 
2025. But since the government voted to proscribe the direct action protest 
group Palestine Action under the Terrorism Act, any statement seen as 
expressing support could lead to arrest and prosecution.

You may justifiably respond that Guardian journalists are not above the law. 
For example, if I penned a column in support of al-Qaida, you might be 
sympathetic to incarceration: it did, after all, kill nearly 3,000 people on 
9/11, as well as perpetrate multiple terrorist atrocities such as the 2004 
Madrid train bombings, and the 7 July London bombings two decades ago. 
Similarly, you may conclude that a polemic in favour of Islamic State should be 
met with a hefty prison sentence.

Personally, I’m not in favour of carceral solutions for political problems: I 
didn’t support having the neo-Nazi football hooligan who attacked me six years 
ago being locked up (his sentence was two years and eight months), nor the 
racists who posted inflammatory hatred during last August’s attempted national 
pogrom. But that is a legitimate political disagreement, one that places me in 
a small minority.

Clearly, I would never write a defence of murderous hijackers, bombers, 
beheaders and indeed génocidaires. But this column concerns a movement which 
is, legally speaking, now equivalent to al-Qaida and IS, and that is Palestine 
Action. Rather than decapitating people, or filling mass graves with innocent 
victims, they were proscribed after throwing red paint at military planes in 
what they say is a protest against Britain’s complicity in Israel’s genocide of 
the Palestinian people.

Last week, our home secretary joined other female Labour MPs in a photoshoot 
celebrating the suffragettes, who planted bombs, burned down private homes and 
smashed up art galleries. They then voted to classify a movement which 
positions itself as opposing violence against people as a terrorist 
organisation.

And this weekend, an 83-year-old retired priest, Sue Parfitt, was arrested 
after holding a placard that read: “I oppose genocide. I support Palestine 
Action.” Twenty-eight others were also arrested on those grounds. Questioned 
about her detention, the Metropolitan police commissioner, Mark Rowley, 
responded: “It is not about protest. This is about an organisation committing 
serious criminality.”

Note how even Britain’s top police officer could not bring himself to claim 
Palestine Action was “an organisation committing terrorism”, which is what the 
law proclaims. I suspect he knows that, in doing so, he would have exposed the 
grotesque absurdity of this legislation. Yes, those who have helped drown Gaza 
in blood have turned the world upside down – treating the opponents of this 
mass extermination as dangerous, hateful extremists – but words have still not 
been entirely emptied of their meaning.

Do not expect that to last. An injury to democracy, once inflicted, cannot be 
contained. It becomes immediately infected, and the sickness spreads.

One of the hallmarks of an authoritarian society is that the state sanctifies 
what everybody knows is not true, even if they are legally compelled to act 
otherwise. Britain remains far from totalitarianism, but a society that arrests 
an 83-year-old retired vicar for holding a placard supporting non-violent 
direct action, and opposed to genocide, is firmly on an authoritarian pathway.

This has been a long time in the making. When New Labour introduced 
anti-terrorism laws, opponents warned the legislation would be abused to 
persecute peaceful protesters. Indeed, then 83-year-old Holocaust survivor 
Walter Wolfgang was held under the Prevention of Terrorism Act after he heckled 
the then foreign secretary, Jack Straw, over the Iraq war at the 2005 Labour 
party conference.

While many commentators portrayed Boris Johnson as a hands-off libertarian, his 
government introduced legislation that allows police to ban virtually any 
protest, with the Policing Act permitting action against demonstrations deemed 
too noisy. You may well ask what sort of protest is not noisy.

Alas, it should always have been obvious that authoritarianism pulses through 
the veins of the Labour faction underpinning Keir Starmer’s leadership. As 
former Labour MP – and indeed adviser to Tony Blair – Jon Cruddas once put it, 
this is “the most rightwing, illiberal faction in the party”. As anyone who has 
ever encountered these factionalists in person can testify, they are defined by 
a raw hatred of the left. Lobby groups committed to Israel, or with links to 
the defence industry, pushed for this sort of legislation, and the Labour top 
brass lapped it up.

Once a movement committed to non-violence has been designated as terrorists, 
then a Rubicon has been crossed. “Terrorism” has been emptied of any real 
meaning, and can be applied far more widely. Indeed, earlier this year, more 
than 70 peaceful protesters were arrested at a demonstration organised by the 
Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC). None of this was direct action: they were 
deemed to have breached arbitrary restrictions by marching down Whitehall 
clutching flowers commemorating Palestine’s dead. The PSC leader, Ben Jamal, is 
among those being put on trial.

Yes, the authoritarian descent predates the slaughter of Gaza. But we have 
certainly learned that the consequences of a state facilitating genocide will 
have profound consequences on society at home. Millions of people are aware 
that their government has facilitated a grave crime, and to protect themselves 
from scrutiny and accountability, the powers that be must silence those 
challenging the crime. Democracy becomes ever more imperilled.

Remember: it is an offence to show support for Palestine Action, which is 
deemed legally equivalent to al-Qaida and IS. If that law is broken, prison 
awaits. The proscribed organisation promotes civil disobedience and non-violent 
direct action in protest at genocide. This column has been checked over with 
that in mind. Ask yourself if this is normal in a self-described democracy. 
Then ask yourself searching questions about where this is all headed.

Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist


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