
One Day in Southport review – a sombre portrait of how a tragedy was hijacked
One Day in Southport focuses largely on what happened afterwards interspersed with the memories of the injured older girl and her family, because what happened next was the result of so many social, cultural and political issues that you could spend a lifetime unpacking them. This documentary does the best it can in an hour. It interviews people from different sides of the various debates, and shows social media posts and footage from the riots that sprang up around the country and caught the police and the establishment unawares. The prime minister was left floundering and unable to address the mixture of feelings and motivations behind them quickly or directly enough.
The attacker – his name then kept from the public – was quickly arrested. The police held a press conference and described him as a 17-year-old from Lancashire and originally from Cardiff. The latter detail was included to attempt to tamp down the speculation already rife online and in the local area (arising because the one thing witnesses to the attack did know about the stranger was that he was Black) that he was an immigrant, which quickly became an illegal immigrant, which quickly became a Muslim illegal immigrant and ignited all sorts of rage. The usual suspects from the manosphere and others with their own agendas to push then stoked the fires, including Nigel Farage ('It shows how unhappy people are with the state of law and order in this country … Your children don't matter to them, they don't care') and Tommy Robinson, the leader of the far-right anti-Islam English Defence League.
The hour tracks the evolution of local grief and anger directed at a specific event into widespread violence and unrest. One of the many YouTubers and other people outside the mainstream media who recorded events is Wesley Winter. He began feeling at one with the righteous fury felt by others. By the time he was filming a few days later in Middlesbrough, he realised that the people walking along a residential street in a Muslim area of the town and smashing windows 'was a very different crowd' and he became frightened that they might turn on him next. A call from his wife trapped in her car as people smashed the windows of vehicles around her led them to leave the area as quickly as possible. His naivete is astonishing, but more admirable than the craven avoidance of those supposedly charged with leading the nation in times of strife to address the difficult, sensitive issues with which the tinderbox had been – and remains – stuffed.
Because what have we here? We have a section of the population, that's suffering greatly under the cost of living crisis. This fact has receded from the headlines, but not from life – the housing crisis, the proliferating brutal effects of austerity that the current government seems to be doing nothing to alleviate, and much more. We have people who see the advent of more people to these isles as competition for increasingly scarce resources. Even the co-convener of Stand Up to Racism, Weyman Bennett, makes the point that 'people are protesting against something that is really happening to them … they are rightfully angry' before explaining how this is leveraged and exploited by far-rightwingers (and whatever Reform are pretending to be) so that 'they're blaming the wrong people'.
The absence of anyone in authority addressing this, instead of lauding the arrests and sentencing of rioters, was and remains conspicuous. Why not publicly delineate the difference between legitimate concerns and far-right agitation – bring the worried into your fold and denounce those burning mosques and terrifying the asylum seekers in besieged hotels? Because there is a difference and it matters hugely.
The documentary gives no facts or figures about immigration, costs or anything else apart from the number of arrests and the 1,000 years-plus total to which rioters were sentenced. It is essentially a mood piece, tracking the development of the hijacking of grief to violent ends and leaving us to draw our own conclusions about where, why and if we would have stepped back to say: 'This has gone too far.'
One Day in Southport is on Channel 4 now.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Major football supporters' group condemn plans by police to use invisible DNA tagging spray to mark hooligans in bid to trace offenders
Plans by police to use an invisible 'tagging spray' on football fans have been slated by the country's major supporters group. Cheshire Police have announced that, from this season, officers will be equipped with SelectaDNA sprays at League One matches in the county. The spray cannot be seen, but those targeted will have their clothing or skin marked with a uniquely-coded DNA solution that would show up under UV light months later. The force says that, from Saturdays Crewe Alexandra versus Accrington Stanley match, officers will be able to use the spray on troublemakers, in an attempt to identify them. They hope the new addition will deter hooligans from engaging in anti-social behaviour around matches in pubs and city centres, given the prospect that they could subsequently be linked to the scene. Shops and businesses will also receive the spray, which it is hoped will deter burglars and shoplifters. However, the Football Supporters' Association (FSA) have been quick to condemn the move, which was announced on Wednesday. 'We have serious concerns about police forces deploying largely unproven technologies against matchgoing fans,' a spokesperson said. 'Misuse or inconsiderate deployment of DNA spray by officers could see innocent bystanders caught up in criminal justice procedures in which they have no reason to be entangled. 'The arrest stats continue to show that football is an overwhelmingly safe activity – with just 5.5 arrests per 100,000 spectators last year. So we have to ask: is this necessary and is this proportionate? 'What is particularly disappointing to us – at a time when Government has legislated to ensure fans have a voice in the game – is the total absence of consultation by the police.' Mark Roberts, Cheshire's chief constable football policing lead in England, has hailed the spray's introduction. 'We know that the vast majority of football fans are law abiding, but unfortunately on occasions there are some who are intent on causing disorder, which is why a strong policing operation is essential,' he said. 'I'm confident that this new tool will make a real difference, by helping to identify and deter the criminals who attend football matches here in Cheshire.'


BBC News
7 hours ago
- BBC News
Old Trafford flat shut down over parcel theft and drug dealing
A flat that became a magnet for disorder has been shut down after neighbours were subjected to anti-social behaviour including drug dealing, knife crime, people throwing dog faeces and stealing close to the flat at King Water Apartments in Old Trafford, Greater Manchester, described living in a climate of fear with people also seen urinating and defecating in communal nobody can access the one-bed property for three months while the landlord seeks re-possession, after Manchester Magistrates' Court granted a full closure order was requested following reports of violence involving knives and hammers related to the collection of drug debts and claims of drugs being sold there, Trafford Council said. The authority said the court was satisfied the third floor flat had been "the source of disorderly, offensive or criminal behaviour and serious nuisance to members of the public". Persistent problems Residents also reported people using their balconies to climb up to the to engage with the tenant and persuade them to moderate their behaviour and that of their guests were ignored.A partial closure was also granted for a flat nearby on Lucy Street, frequented by the same visitors, with entry barred to anyone other than the Thompson, the council's executive member for communities and safety, said the closure order reflected the "continued commitment to protecting communities from persistent anti-social behaviour". Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.


BBC News
8 hours ago
- BBC News
Anti-social behaviour clampdown in Peterborough could be extended
A public spaces protection order (PSPO) could be extended at a city's crime hotspot in a bid to curb anti-social behaviour.A PSPO that led to a gate being installed on the Kings Walk alleyway off Dogsthorpe Road, Peterborough, was introduced in November 2022 following a rise in problems such as street drinking and drug the success of that, Peterborough City Council said it was working with Cambridgeshire Police to extend the order for three years to help crack down on other bad behaviour were 386 crime and anti-social behaviour incidents recorded in the area between May 2024 and April 2025. A council report said: "The sergeant of the Peterborough Eastern Neighbourhood Policing Team has advised that the PSPO for gating the alleyway has provided an excellent tool in tackling the crime and anti-social behaviour that had previously occurred within the alleyway."But it said that two nearby households had continued to see problems, and had experienced issues at their have until 28 August to share their views on the PSPO extension proposal, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service. Follow Peterborough news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.