
‘Women were grabbed and dragged away like sacks' – a history of British protest in pictures
From the suffragettes at the start of the last century to Reclaim the Night in the 1970s; from the battle of Cable Street against the British Union of Fascists in 1936 to the Anti-Nazi League marches four decades later; from the million marchers against the Iraq war in 2003 in London to the massive turnouts across the country two decades later against the war in Gaza, protest has been a vital and constant part of the fabric of British society.
Most protests pass unnoticed, whether they are the picket lines during strikes in almost every corner of the UK or small demonstrations outside parliament. But behind almost all of them is a desire to alert the public to what is perceived as an injustice. Some – including those involved in combating racism, sexism and homophobia – have achieved many of their aims, either swiftly or after many years, and in doing so have changed the lives of millions. Others have been fruitless. Key to the success of many of them has been the coverage in the media, much of it dependent on the sort of images taken by David Hoffman, often at some risk to the photographer himself …
The sort of coverage protests receive depended, and still depends to a great extent, on the political inclinations of the relevant newspaper or broadcaster. When David and I first met, at Time Out magazine in the late 1970s, it was still a radical publication; marches and demonstrations were listed weekly in its Agitprop section and covered by its reporters and photographers – a tradition carried on by City Limits magazine in the 1980s. But by the turn of the century, information about most protests had moved predominantly online. While the Mirror carried news of the suffragettes in their early days, its owner, Alfred Harmsworth, soon felt enough was enough. 'Sorry to see the outburst of suffragette pictures again,' he complained to Alexander Kenealy, editor of the Mirror, in 1912. 'I thought you had finished with them. Except in an extreme case, print no more.'
The policing of protest has varied spectacularly. Demonstrators have frequently been thwarted, arrested, beaten up, kettled and, increasingly, jailed. Some have suffered worse fates: Kevin Gately, a 20-year-old student from the University of Warwick, died in 1974 in Red Lion Square, central London, in a protest against the National Front; the death of Blair Peach in 1979, in an anti-racist protest in Southall, west London, led to many more marches in his memory.
But whatever laws may change, whatever responses the authorities and media take to marches and pickets and rallies and camps and road closures and hunger strikes and paint-spraying and occupations, protest – as demonstrated so graphically here – will survive.
Former Guardian reporter Duncan Campbell died in May this year.
Kicking off with this image from the last night of the 1979 Notting Hill carnival, David Hoffman recalls the start of his career
In 1963, at the end of my last term at Kingston College of Further Education, I organised a rag week stunt with some female fellow students, who chained themselves to the railings outside the Houses of Parliament to protest that their vote was meaningless. They were all quickly arrested, as was I when I went to ask about them – but I did have a photo of one of the arrests. A journalist from (I think) the Daily Mail borrowed the film. The photo was published the next day and, more surprisingly, the paper returned my film and even paid me. Just 17 and I already had an arrest, a criminal record and a protest photo in a national paper: a perfect launch pad for my career. But I didn't spot the path that life was laying down for me. I had been given a chemistry set at age 10 and had science A-levels, so when parental pressure forced university on me, I chose chemistry out of inertia and ignorance.
A decade of loose living and truck driving followed, until 1973, when I ended up in a squat in Whitechapel, east London, with a Nikon F. I didn't set out to photograph protests. My aim was to record the constrained world of poverty and slum housing I found myself in. I was young and perhaps believed documenting these issues might help change them. My photos of poor housing, unemployment and racism were published by Time Out, New Society, Housing Today and the Voice. But when demonstrations led to arrests, it was the national press and TV that took notice. These images were the ones most widely seen, the ones I became known for.
Protesting has never been easy, but over my career I have watched laws steadily tighten, step by boiled frog step. Now, every detail seems to fall under police control. The pace of a march, slogans on placards, what can be chanted, what's printed on a T-shirt . New laws govern how loud a protest can be, how big it grows and whether it includes music, puppets, effigies or anything else that makes a strong photograph. Bit by bit, regulations have chipped away at our freedom to protest.
Yet protest is like a balloon: squeeze it here and it pops up there. The more it's squeezed, the louder the bang when it bursts. Technology may be a tool of oppression, but it can also be a weapon of resistance. Activists are already using encrypted communications, decentralised organising and creative direct action to stay ahead. People have always risen to meet new challenges. Even under surveillance and repression, we have seen moments of extraordinary courage – in the streets, on social media or in quiet, everyday acts of defiance that keep movements alive. The future of protest may look different, but the spirit driving it will remain.
This is an edited extract from Protest! by David Hoffman, published by Image & Reality at £28.
The Greater London Council bought the popular farm on the Isle of Dogs intending to build a motorway. After locals marching with their animals campaigned to save it, the plan was quietly dropped.
In the 1970s, when I first began to document social change, I saw tensions ramped up by racist and oppressive policing dominating the communities it pretended to serve. Combined with discrimination in jobs and housing, policing tactics turned lively, optimistic youth into angry subcultures. Black youth in particular were targeted, with clubbing and street culture used as an excuse for busts and surveillance. On bank holiday Monday night, as the carnival drew to a close, police would change from friendly bobbies into pumped-up riot police as they tried to clear the streets. Moving along Ladbroke Grove, they attacked isolated groups of late-night revellers, which sparked counter-attacks and, predictably, led to the sort of retaliation pictured here.
When the crowds in the street grew too large and hostile for shield police to disperse, vans were driven at them at high speed.
It was the singing that always got me. Hundreds of women, peaceful and determined, would be roughly grabbed and dragged away like sacks, still calling for peace, undeterred by insults, arrests and violence. It always seemed to be dark, overcast and rainy. The camps were dotted along the perimeter fences and much of my time was spent running in mud-heavy wellies from one gate to another, chasing tales of fence cuttings or missile movements that rarely materialised.
Suspicions of foul play over the death of 21-year-old Colin Roach – who was shot inside Stoke Newington police station, in what officers claimed was suicide – came against a background of racist and oppressive policing in Hackney which led to many protesters feeling the need to cover their faces when marching. The police's version of events quickly unravelled: Roach's fingerprints weren't found on the gun and the forensic evidence didn't match the scene officers described. While the local MP spoke out about a 'breakdown of faith and credibility' in the police, the Commission for Racial Equality called for an investigation.
The poll tax had been a festering sore for what felt like an age, David Hoffman writes, and while earlier demos had been crushed by police action, this one had really kicked off, with 100,000 people marching. After repeated charges by mounted police, riots erupted, shops were looted, police vehicles and government offices attacked, and buildings burned. The eventual cost: hundreds of millions of pounds, and the end of Margaret Thatcher's government.
Jamaican-born mature student Joy Gardner died after a brutal immigration raid on her home in which police handcuffed her, bound her with leather straps and gagged her with a 13-foot length of adhesive tape wrapped tightly around her head. Unable to breathe, she collapsed, suffering catastrophic brain damage from asphyxia. She was placed on life support but died four days later. In 1995, three of the officers involved were tried for manslaughter but were acquitted.
As Reclaim the Streets marchers made their way into Trafalgar Square for speeches in support of sacked Liverpool dockers, thousands danced to sound systems – but the carnival atmosphere didn't last long. Confrontations began in Whitehall and an orange smoke bomb thrown into Downing Street triggered charges by riot police on foot and on horseback, their shields sprayed with paint from protesters' squeezy bottles. A police helicopter hovered noisily above and more than a thousand officers in black boiler suits, steel toe-capped boots and face masks blocked the exits. Once the square had been sealed, mounted police charged.
Gay rights activists from Outrage!, led by Peter Tatchell (in blue shirt), stormed the pulpit of the cathedral on Easter Sunday, using archbishop George Carey's mic to denounce the church's homophobia and hypocrisy. Tatchell was injured and arrested. The protester in glasses to his right turned out to be an undercover police officer (or Spycop).
On the fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, the Stop the War Coalition, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the British Muslim Initiative joined in a national demonstration as part of the worldwide day of protest against George W Bush's wars.
While an estimated 50,000 turned out to vent their anger at government plans, a bus shelter on Whitehall – a few hundred sensible yards away from the turmoil – made a more enjoyable platform to protest against tuition fee increases and maintenance grant cuts.
Around 5,000 women and men marched to Trafalgar Square in protest against rape and sexual violence. They were part of a global movement that was triggered by a Toronto policeman's comment that women should 'avoid dressing like sluts in order not to be victimised'.
Having spent half my life photographing others being arrested, I decided it was only fair to document my own arrests ….
At a Tower Hamlets town hall occupation on 27 April 1987, Daniele Lamarche took this picture of my arrest for refusing to stop taking photographs, then gave me her film as she was working for the council and was worried that it might affect her job.
Amid violent scenes following anti-Satanic Verses protests in London on 27 May 1989, missiles were thrown at poorly prepared police by angry youths. A cop I'd photographed dragged me off to Southwark nick. I took this selfie to illustrate the concept of justice turned upside down.
At a Greenpeace anti-whaling demonstration at Norway's tourist office in London on 26 July 1993, I was the only one whose arms weren't chained, so the inspector, looking for someone he could actually arrest, chose me – essentially for being portable.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
16 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
UK investor confidence slumps over weak growth fears
Investor confidence in the UK has slumped due to concerns over weak growth and 'mixed messaging' from Labour on tax and spending plans. Research by Hargreaves Lansdown showed optimism fell globally – but the UK was among the worst hit countries. Confidence in Britain's economic growth tumbled 16 per cent to a four-month low in the first week of August amid 'ongoing concerns over the country's economic trajectory', the broker said. It follows a slew of gloomy data that showed the UK economy shrank for the second month in a row in May and inflation hit a 17-month high of 3.6 per cent in June. The investor confidence score of 74 in August was the lowest since April in the aftermath of Donald Trump's 'liberation day' tariff threats. Investors were also cautious about London's stock market which has suffered an exodus of firms to overseas listing venues. Uncertainty over whether Rachel Reeves will hike tax in the upcoming Budget contributed to the decline in confidence, Hargreaves Lansdown said. The Chancellor faces a potential £50billion fiscal black hole, experts say, which looks likely to force her to stage a tax raid this autumn. Kate Marshall at Hargreaves Lansdown said: 'Weak GDP growth, mixed messaging on fiscal plans and wavering political clarity post-election have all added to investor caution.' Investor confidence in Europe also fell by more than 16 per cent amid fears over economic stagnation.


Daily Mail
16 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Administration looks preferable to leaving Thames Water's debt sharks in charge, says ALEX BRUMMER
The timing couldn't be better. In the middle of an August heatwave, with drought warnings the order of the day, the message from the Government to Thames Water and its creditors is: sort yourself out or we put the whole caboodle into a special administration regime (SAR). Environment Secretary Steve Reed has lined up City insolvency consultancy FTI as administrators should Thames chairman Adrian Montague and a posse of debt investors fail to reach a solution. As much as one might abhor direct government involvement in business, SAR looks a far more attractive option than leaving the debt sharks in charge. SAR would enable an administrator to scythe the debt, suspend interest payments and bring in new equity investors. Thames claims to be seeking a solution which targets 'investment-grade ratings'. That is no more than a chimera in that the company would not qualify for a licence without. How much room does Reed have to manoeuvre? Keir Starmer is already taking the railways and chunks of the steel industry onto the Government books. He may soon also face calls from union paymasters to bail-out the UK's troubled Ineos-owned chemical plant at Grangemouth. Administration would allow Thames to free itself of much of its £16.8billion debt. But there would be a risk of a lingering state liability. That is the stuff of nightmares for Rachel Reeves and Treasury mandarins. Jobs tears Chancellor's budget for working people has already fallen as flat as a pancake. The latest data on the jobs market is a shade better than projected. But the trend is unmistakable with unemployment up 120,000 since last July's election Surveys show that the Government failed to truly grasp the impact of increasing employers' National Insurance Contributions and the minimum wage on jobs, particularly in the hospitality sector. Yet there is a pile of evidence, particularly from the US, showing that payroll taxes harm employment growth. Cutting job taxes, particularly after a calamity, helps nurse people back to work. The big economic theme of this summer, despite the Chancellor's promises not to come back for more, is speculation as to which taxes will go up in the autumn. Labour apparatchiks have sought to dismiss the forecast by economic think-tank NIESR of a £42billion shortfall in the public finances as an outlier. However, almost every other think-tank and City economist believes that new taxes will be necessary if the Chancellor's 'iron-clad' fiscal rules are to be met. That casts a pall over economic confidence. It doesn't help that the UK's biggest export market, the EU, is deep in gloom despite aggressive interest rate cuts by the European Central Bank. A plus for the Government at present is that wage settlements are outpacing inflation so real living standards, for those in work, should be rising. That's great, but job vacancies are vanishing before our eyes and somehow private sector employers need to fund the 4.8 per cent rise in pay, which means a potential wage price spiral. That's before one even considers the Government's difficulty in seeing off the ambitions of doctors and other public sector workers for inflation-busting deals. A split Bank of England interest rate setting committee is torn between its core job of returning inflation to target and making life easier for borrowers. The latest jobs data will give succour to Bank insiders cautioning against cuts until consumer price inflation is squeezed back to the 2 per cent target. Third rate deal On the eve of tomorrow's extraordinary general meeting of London listed fund Third Point Investors Limited (TPIL), voting advisory outfit PIRC joined the growing opposition to financier Dan Loeb's raid on UK-based investors. The New York sharpshooter is seeking to seize control of TPIL, swallow £500million of capital and merge it with Cayman Island based re-insurance outfit Malibu. The transaction would run roughshod over minority investors and enrich directors. It represents a low point for a City in danger of sacrificing integrity.


The Guardian
16 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Trump administration accuses UK of failing to uphold human rights
The Trump administration has accused the UK of backsliding on human rights over the past year, citing antisemitic violence and 'serious restrictions' on free speech. The annual US state department assessment, which analyses human rights conditions worldwide, highlighted laws limiting speech around abortion clinics, as well as the way government officials 'repeatedly intervened to chill speech' online after the 2024 Southport attack. The report stated: 'The government sometimes took credible steps to identify and punish officials who committed human rights abuses, but prosecution and punishment for such abuses was inconsistent.' The report cited the 'safe access zones' around abortion clinics, which it said 'could include prohibitions on efforts to influence … even through prayer or silent protests'. Criticism over the handling of free speech – in particular relating to regulations on online hate speech – was also directed at the governments of Germany and France. A UK government spokesperson told the BBC: 'Free speech is vital for democracy around the world, including here in the UK, and we are proud to uphold freedoms whilst keeping our citizens safe.' The document, previously seen as the most comprehensive study of its kind, has been significantly rewritten and downscaled by the Trump administration, including in areas such as government corruption and LGBTQ+ rights. It spares criticism for US allies such as Israel and El Salvador while escalating disapproval of perceived foes such as Brazil and South Africa. The document was published after months of delay amid reports of internal dissent at the state department over its contents. It echoed claims previously voiced by the US vice-president, JD Vance. In February, he criticised the UK over a legal case in which a former serviceman, Adam Smith-Connor, who silently prayed outside an abortion clinic in Bournemouth in 2022, was convicted of breaching the safe zone around the centre. In a wider attack on what he suggested was a shift away from democratic values across Europe, Vance claimed the 'basic liberties of religious Britons, in particular' were under threat. Speaking at the Munich security conference, Vance said that the US's 'very dear friends the United Kingdom' appeared to have seen a 'backslide in conscience rights'. Vance is taking a holiday in the Cotswolds in south-west England, an area that is becoming increasingly popular with the rich and famous. During the trip, he has been hosted by David Lammy for talks about Gaza and other international affairs at the foreign secretary's official residence, Chevening, in Kent. Vance also invited the Conservative shadow justice secretary, Robert Jenrick, and the shadow home secretary, Chris Philp, to a meeting at the house where he is staying. The report also said the government 'effectively' enforced laws around freedom of association and the rights of workers. The UK government has been contacted for comment.