logo
Trump team ‘greatly concerned' after Labour spies on migrant hotel critics

Trump team ‘greatly concerned' after Labour spies on migrant hotel critics

Telegraph4 days ago
Donald Trump's administration has said it is 'greatly concerned' after The Telegraph exposed a secretive Whitehall unit that has 'spied ' on migrant hotel critics.
The unit has been used by the Government to target social media posts criticising taxpayer-funded asylum hotels and 'two-tier policing'.
On Thursday, The Telegraph revealed that officials working for Peter Kyle, the Technology Secretary, have flagged videos with 'concerning narratives' to social media giants including TikTok, warning that they were 'exacerbating tensions' on the streets.
Emails recovered by a US congressional committee show thatcivil servants have complained to tech firms about content mentioning asylum seekers, immigration and two-tier policing.
The dossier emerged as ministers battle claims that the UK is censoring social media with the Online Safety Act, including from allies of Mr Trump, the US president.
Responding to The Telegraph's revelations, a US State Department spokesman said: 'President Trump and Secretary [Marco] Rubio have taken a strong and unequivocal stand defending free speech, and have taken decisive action against foreign nationals who engage in censorship of Americans.
'One of the reasons free speech is so important is that it enables citizens to have accurate information and honest conversations about policy failures of the ruling class – immigration is a prime example of this. We are monitoring free speech developments in the UK closely and with great concern.'
Members of the Government's National Security and Online Information Team (NSOIT) complained about a series of posts that were critical of mass migration and asylum hotels in August last year during the Southport riots.
The team, based in the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, was previously known as the Counter Disinformation Unit and was used during the Covid pandemic to monitor anti-lockdown campaigners.
The exchanges are likely to fuel claims that Labour is seeking to silence criticism over its continued use of asylum hotels.
Sir Keir Starmer has pledged to end their use by 2029 amid concerns that they are costing taxpayers £4m a day and causing tensions in communities.
The row over the hotels exploded again earlier this month when demonstrations broke out at a hotel in Epping after a migrant tried to kiss a teenager, with further protests held there on Thursday night.
Angela Rayner, the Deputy Prime Minister, has told the Cabinet the Government must take concerns about immigration seriously and do more to alleviate them.
However, one post flagged by the Government unit with 'urgency' included a photograph of a rejected freedom of information request about the location of asylum hotels, and a reference to asylum seekers as 'undocumented fighting-age males'.
An unnamed civil servant warned there were 'significant risks' of protests at migrant hotels becoming violent because of the posts and there was a 'definite sense of urgency' about them in Whitehall.
The emails were sent on Aug 3 and 4 last year, the worst weekend of the riots, when protesters attacked asylum hotels across the UK. The violence spiralled after false claims circulated that the perpetrator of the Southport attack, in which three little girls were killed, was a Muslim asylum seeker.
The Government's private exchange with TikTok came days before Elon Musk, the tech billionaire owner of X and a former ally of Mr Trump, criticised 'two-tier Keir'. The phrase was echoed by Nigel Farage, who warned that police had created a 'sense of injustice'.
In another email the same weekend, officials warned TikTok that users were posting about 'two-tier' policing at Southport demonstrations, amid accusations that white protesters had been treated more harshly by the police than ethnic minorities.
It said: 'I am sure you will not be surprised at the significant volumes of anti-immigrant content directed at Muslim and Jewish communities as well as concerning narratives about the police and a 'two-tier' system we are seeing across the online environment.'
Officials requested that TikTok explain 'any measures you have taken in response ... as soon as you are able to'.
A third example of 'concerning content' flagged by the team was a video of Pakistani men celebrating on a street, posted on Aug 5 and captioned: 'Looks like Islamabad but it's Manchester'. The team claimed it had been shared 'in order to incite fear of the Muslim community'.
The emails did not ask for the content to be removed, but requested that TikTok explained how it was dealing with it.
However, critics have said they amount to Government censorship of free speech online. The emails were revealed by Jim Jordan, the chairman of the US House of Representatives' judiciary committee, which issued a subpoena to TikTok to hand over messages 'regarding the company's compliance with foreign censorship laws'.
Mr Jordan said Labour ministers had censored posts that were critical of the Government's policy on asylum, warning critics of Sir Keir to 'watch out'.
He said: 'In recent years, UK citizens have become increasingly fed up with the double standard in the UK. Mean tweets get you a longer prison sentence than many violent offences.'
Government sources denied that officials had censored the posts, insisting the unit's role was to monitor online 'trends' and point out where platforms' own rules had been broken.
However, the emails have prompted fresh scrutiny of the secretive disinformation team, which was criticised during the pandemic for using the government's 'trusted flagger' status to report critics of lockdown and child vaccinations.
A spokesman for the Big Brother Watch campaign group called for an immediate investigation into the team, warning that an 'unaccountable and secretive Government unit is spying on speech that is critical of the police and Government policies'.
The spokesman added: 'Legitimate concerns about racism and violence must not become a blank cheque for the monitoring and censorship of controversial speech, absent of any oversight or scrutiny.'
Labour was recently criticised over the 'cover-up' of a secret resettlement programme for Afghans affected by a data leak in 2022. Officials were worried that the announcement would create a 'risk of disorder'.
Free speech campaigners have already raised concerns about the imprisonment of Lucy Connolly, who was jailed for 31 months for a post about asylum hotels on the day of the Southport attacks.
Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, said: 'When I called out 'two-tier Keir', little did I realise Starmer's officials were pressurising tech companies to suppress debate about a 'two-tier' justice system.
'This Government's cynical attack on free speech will only further erode public confidence in the criminal justice system. The solution is to apply the law evenly to all groups, not to attempt to stifle criticism.'
It is understood that Mr Jordan, a Trump ally, raised the TikTok emails directly with Mr Kyle on Wednesday. It is understood TikTok is one of several companies contacted by officials during the riots.
Their meeting came a day after Mr Kyle said Nigel Farage was 'on the side' of Jimmy Savile for opposing the new online safety rules.
Government sources said Mr Jordan's committee had misunderstood the role of NSOIT, which they said was to find out whether tech companies were taking action on harmful content, not to order them to remove it.
A Government spokesman said: 'Free speech is a cornerstone of our democracy. The Online Safety Act protects it. Platforms have a duty to uphold freedom of expression, and the Act places no curbs whatsoever on what adults can say and see on the internet – unless it is something that would already be illegal, offline.
'The Government has no role in deciding what actions platforms take on legal content for adults – that is a matter for them, according to their own rules.
'However we make no apologies for flagging to platforms content which is contrary to their own terms of service and which can result in violent disorder on our streets, as we saw in the wake of the horrific Southport attack.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump declines to say if he supports or opposes potential Gaza takeover by Israel
Trump declines to say if he supports or opposes potential Gaza takeover by Israel

Reuters

time19 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Trump declines to say if he supports or opposes potential Gaza takeover by Israel

WASHINGTON, Aug 5 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump declined to say whether he supported or opposed a potential military takeover of Gaza by Israel and said his administration's focus was on increasing food access to the Palestinian enclave under assault from Washington's ally. "As far as the rest of it, I really can't say. That's going to be pretty much up to Israel," Trump told reporters on Tuesday. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met senior security officials on Tuesday, with media reporting he favored a complete military takeover of Gaza.

Marjorie Taylor Greene begs Trump to pardon disgraced fabulist George Santos after dramatic letter from prison
Marjorie Taylor Greene begs Trump to pardon disgraced fabulist George Santos after dramatic letter from prison

Daily Mail​

time19 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Marjorie Taylor Greene begs Trump to pardon disgraced fabulist George Santos after dramatic letter from prison

Marjorie Taylor Greene penned a letter urging Donald Trump to pardon disgraced former Congressman George Santos following the release of his emotional letter from behind bars demanding clemency. Santos was sentenced to seven years in prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud and identity theft and reported to jail less than two weeks ago. He was found guilty of fabricating thousands of dollars in campaign finance records during his successful 2022 congressional campaign. Prior to his conviction, a 2023 House Ethics Committee report found that he spent donors' money on Botox treatments, trips to casinos and at high-end luxury retailers. In an emotional letter penned from prison on Monday, Santos said he's facing harsh bathroom conditions in the medium security prison in New Jersey. Santos, 37, claimed that he started to cry after putting on a 'fluorescent yellow jumpsuit that made me feel like a caution sign in human form.' 'The tears came faster than I could stop them,' Santos wrote. 'I didn't care who saw. That reflection, in that moment, made the weight of my decisions, my mistakes, and the road that led me there all too real.' 'The bathroom, though, deserves its own horror novel,' he continued. 'The closest thing I can compare it to is an abandoned gym locker room from a forgotten high school - grim, damp, smelling of mildew and regret.' In a letter to the Justice Department on Monday, Greene urged the administration to ask the president for clemency consideration for Santos. The conservative firebrand claimed in her letter that Santos' sentence 'extends far beyond what is warranted.' She called his seven-year sentence 'excessive' and noted that other lawmakers who have 'done far worse still walk free.' 'George Santos has taken responsibility. He's shown remorse. It's time to correct this injustice. We must demand equal justice under the law!' But it's curious timing as Greene has fallen out of Trump's tight inner circle and GOP leadership. Earlier this week, the Georgia lawmaker told the Daily Mail that she believes the GOP is abandoning the 'America first' principles of the MAGA base. 'I think the Republican Party has turned its back on America First and the workers and just regular Americans,' she said. Although Greene did reiterate her loyalty to Trump, she has split with the administration's stance on Gaza by calling Israel's actions a 'genocide.' MTG also recently demanded the DOJ release all files relating to Jeffrey Epstein. Greene's letter also comes after Trump declined to rule out pardoning Santos during an interview with Newsmax last week. However, the president noted that Santos did 'lie like hell' during his Congressional tenure. Trump went on to praise Santos because his 'vote was solid' for Republicans, while adding, 'And I didn't know him, but he was 100 percent for Trump.' The president concluded that no one has approached him about pardoning the former GOP lawmaker. Santos has previously stated that he asked the White House for clemency consideration. In the past, Trump has provided sweeping pardons and clemency to individuals who have proven to be loyal supporters of his administration. Upon assuming office for his second term, Trump issued pardons for all individuals imprisoned for the Capitol riot on January 6th, 2021. Santos became embroiled in numerous scandals for lying about his education, employment history and personal wealth. After a scathing Ethics Committee report on his campaign's financial abuses, Santos was expelled from Congress in December 2023. He became the sixth lawmaker ever to be expelled from Congress and the only member thrown out without having been convicted of a crime. During this time, Greene was one of the few lawmakers who publicly supported Santos in Congress. Meanwhile, Santos dismissed his indictments - and eventual conviction - for money laundering and fraud as a 'witch hunt.'

Trump calls RFK Jr ‘three or four times a week' with the same question
Trump calls RFK Jr ‘three or four times a week' with the same question

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump calls RFK Jr ‘three or four times a week' with the same question

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr said that President Donald Trump calls him up 'three or four times a week' to hound him with the same question. Kennedy was speaking at an event Monday with Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins to push a policy banning sugary drinks, candy and junk food from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, as part of his 'Make America Healthy Again' agenda. Six months into his second term, Trump wants to know 'why aren't people healthier yet,' Kennedy told reporters at the press conference. 'We have full support from the president,' Kennedy said. 'He wants this done. He promised to make America healthy again, and he's gonna do that.' 'He called me last night,' Kennedy added, referring to the president. 'He calls me three or four times a week and says, 'Where are you? Why aren't people healthier yet?' So he's keeping me under pressure.' Monday's event was promoting a policy adopted by West Virginia, Texas, Colorado, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Florida, barring SNAP participants from using food stamps to buy junk food. They join Arkansas, Idaho, Utah, Iowa, Indiana and Nebraska in the SNAP waiver initiative. SNAP is a lifeline that keeps more than 41 million Americans, or 12 percent of the population, from going hungry. More than 13 million recipients are children. Over the past 20 years, lawmakers in several states have proposed stopping SNAP from paying for everything from bottled water and soda to chips, ice cream and 'luxury meats' such as steak. Critics said that the SNAP waiver 'ignores decades of evidence showing that incentive-based approaches — not punitive restrictions — are the most effective, dignified path to improving nutrition and reducing hunger,' said Gina Plata-Nino, a deputy director at the Food Research & Action Center, a nonprofit advocacy group. Trump passed the largest-ever cuts to the program in his signature 'One Big, Beautiful Bill' by restricting eligibility for SNAP enrollment and diverting a significant chunk of the program's costs to states.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store