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Racism and intolerance have worsened in Britain, Starmer says

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 10:02 AM

LONDON, July 1 (Reuters) – Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Wednesday that racism and intolerance had worsened in Britain over the past decade, warning it was damaging social ​cohesion and deterring people from public life.

He spoke a ‌day after a Reuters report found some Britons of colour fear a resurgence of racism linked to anti-migrant rhetoric and a political focus on crime, following recent unrest including protests in Southampton after the murder of Henry ‌Nowak ​and rioting in Belfast after a stabbing ⁠attack.

Facing questions in parliament, Starmer ⁠said “racism and intolerance is permeating everywhere.”

The British leader was responding to a lawmaker who said he was worried that racism and the incitement of violence linked to it were being ​normalised, including by some politicians.

“We have to deal with it, because it’s tearing our societies apart,” Starmer said, adding that “it ⁠should be called out by every ⁠single person who is a politician at any level ​in this country.”

Starmer recalled the 2016 death of Labour lawmaker Jo ​Cox, an active supporter of immigration and social cohesion, ‌who was killed by a far-right extremist days before the Brexit referendum.

He said that when reflecting recently upon her death he felt things had got worse, not better, in the intervening decade.

Tuesday’s ⁠Reuters report cited warnings from trade unions and professional bodies about rising racist abuse in workplaces and public life, alongside heightened tensions following the ⁠unrest across the ‌United Kingdom.

Nigel Farage, the leader of populist party ⁠Reform UK, has accused British institutions of ​discriminating against ‌white people, arguing they were biased by policies ​aimed at ⁠supporting ethnic minorities. Starmer has rejected those claims.

Addressing the tone of political debate, Starmer said: “That’s on us to fix – every single member of this house, whatever their party is and anybody who inflames it should be absolutely ashamed of themselves.”

(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti, Editing ​by William Maclean)