
Changing the narrative about Palestine Action
Describing those radical and sometimes violent movements as 'peaceful protest' domesticates them and ignores the role that street fighting and property damage (for example) have played in successful protest in the past. From attempted armed uprisings, through bombings of cricket pavilions and churches, to Cable Street and elsewhere, those examples he gives of 'peaceful protest' saw activists exercise violent resistance.
Furthermore, the repression of Palestine Action and those protesting against its repression is very much not contrary to approaches to past protest movements. Excessive action through police and courts, and violent repression from the British state, have been common. From transportation (and sometimes execution) of early reformers, through the force-feeding of imprisoned suffrage activists, to the beating to death of Blair Peach by police officers, the state has often responded to serious challenges to its authority in ways that defy reason, and used the criminal justice system to do so.
Mr Hain is repeating a longstanding liberal story that seeks to domesticate radicalism. It's the story of a reasonable people interacting with reasonable governments to ensure slow and steady progress. Unfortunately, it is a story that runs contrary to historical (and present) reality.Mark NixonBlackford, Perth and Kinross
As a 57-year-old participant in the 9 August Palestine Action protest, I find the tone of slightly surprised celebration of older participants to be rather patronising. There's nothing exceptional about older people's participation in political refusal, and I'm not up for the kind of argument that things must really be bad if old white women are coming out to protest in force.
Older people – black, brown and white – have been central to civil disobedience as long as there has been protest. So while of course there will have been many people at the 9 August protest who were facing arrest for the first time, there were also many seasoned activists who were there in solidarity, in leadership and in persistent refusal to accept state curtailment of rights.
These solidarity politics, which were beautifully in evidence among those waiting for arrest with their placards, come from feminist, queer and anti-racist histories of organising, solidarity and ethics that older people inaugurated.
Today's protests are possible because of the refusal of people to keep quiet about poverty and inequality, racism, sexism, homophobia and transphobia over many years. They are possible because of the risks that organisers have taken that have challenged police brutality and the hierarchies of social justice that prevent a full life – including freedom of expression – for all. People over 50 will continue to show up as long as there is public space to occupy. Clare HemmingsLondon
What would happen if people wishing to demonstrate against the outlawing of Palestine Action carried banners emblazoned with the words 'inept escalation' – a description of the government's legislation that happens to be an anagram of the banned organisation's name (Protester arrested over 'Plasticine Action' T-shirt: 'How ridiculous is this?', 18 August)?Philip HoyChurch Enstone, Oxfordshire
Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
27 minutes ago
- The Independent
Rachel Reeves considers ‘mansion tax' to fill Treasury black hole
Rachel Reeves is considering hitting the owners of high-value properties with capital gains tax when they sell their homes as part of an attempt to fill a £40bn hole in the public purse. The chancellor is said to be looking at ending the current exemption from capital gains tax for primary residences as she seeks ways to raise cash in the face of dire warnings about the state of the public finances – a move that would be seen as a 'mansion tax'. Such a move would see higher-rate taxpayers pay 24 per cent of any gain in the value of their home, while basic rate taxpayers would be hit with an 18 per cent levy. Sources told The Times that under proposals being considered for the autumn budget, the private residence relief would end for properties above a certain threshold. The threshold is said to still be under consideration, but a £1.5 million starting point would hit around 120,000 homeowners who are higher-rate taxpayers with capital gains tax bills of £199,973. Asked about the plans, Treasury minister Torsten Bell declined to rule it out, insisting any potential changes were matters for the chancellor and would be set out at a budget. Asked to rule out hitting the owners of high-value properties with capital gains tax, the pensions minister told Sky News: 'Working people and people's living standards is what this government is all about. 'We've seen wages rise more in the first 10 months of this government than the first 10 years of the last Conservative government. 'But of course, as you know, questions for tax are for the budget and they're for chancellors.' It comes amid concerns that ending primary residence relief could deter people from selling their homes, slow the housing market and could have a particular impact for older people looking to downsize. Aneisha Beveridge, head of research at the estate agent Hamptons, said: 'It's a big change that would hit long-term owners hardest and create a cliff-edge at £1.5m, distorting behaviour around that point. 'While the headline gains look substantial, they're often the result of decades of ownership and, in some cases, house prices haven't even kept pace with inflation. 'For households who don't need to move, this could act as a strong disincentive to sell, dampening transactions and potentially weighing on house price growth and Treasury revenues alike.' But there are growing questions over how the government will raise the money to fill the gap in the public finances, given Labour's manifesto pledge not to raise taxes on 'working people' leaves the chancellor with a limited number of workable options. The scale of the challenge facing her in the autumn budget was illustrated by the NIESR economic think tank warning this month that Ms Reeves is set for a £41 billion shortfall on her self-imposed rule of balancing day-to-day spending with tax receipts in 2029-30.


The Independent
27 minutes ago
- The Independent
Security minister refuses multiple times to outline alternative to asylum hotels
Labour is in turmoil after more councils consider launching legal challenges over the government's use of asylum hotels. Security minister Dan Jarvis repeatedly failed to outline an alternative to asylum hotels, when he appeared on BBC Radio 4 on Wednesday (20 August). 'It won't be hotels because of the commitment that we've made, and therefore it will have to be a range of other, more appropriate accommodation,' said Mr Jarvis. Epping Forest District Council won a temporary High Court injunction on Tuesday, preventing asylum seekers from being housed at an Essex hotel, citing it had become a "feeding ground for unrest" after violent protests. Labour had promised it would end the use of hotels for asylum seekers by 2029, replacing them with government housing and tackling small boat crossings.


Reuters
27 minutes ago
- Reuters
Member of Irish rap group Kneecap appears at UK court on terrorism charge
LONDON, Aug 20 (Reuters) - A member of Irish rap group Kneecap was welcomed by hundreds of supporters as he arrived at a London court on Wednesday, charged with a terrorism offence for allegedly displaying a flag in support of Iran-backed Lebanese militia Hezbollah. Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, who was initially charged under the Anglicised name Liam O'Hanna and whose stage name is Mo Chara, is alleged to have waved the flag of the banned militant group Hezbollah during a Kneecap gig in London in November 2024. The 27-year-old was charged in May under the Terrorism Act, under which it is a criminal offence to display an article in a way which arouses reasonable suspicion that someone is a supporter of a proscribed organisation. Wednesday's hearing at Westminster Magistrates' Court is expected to deal with Óg Ó hAnnaidh's argument that the charge was brought too late and should be thrown out, failing which he is likely to formally enter a plea. Belfast-based Kneecap, who rap in Irish and English and regularly display pro-Palestinian messages during their gigs, previously said the flag had been thrown on stage and described the charge as an attempt to silence them. The group – who rap about Irish identity and support the republican cause of uniting Northern Ireland with the Republic of Ireland – have been increasingly vocal about the war in Gaza since Óg Ó hAnnaidh was charged. Kneecap led a 30,000-strong crowd at Glastonbury Festival in June in chants against Prime Minister Keir Starmer and accused Israel of committing war crimes in Gaza, which Israel denies.