Anyone showing support for Palestine Action ‘will feel full force of the law’, justice minister says – UK politics live | Politics

Published: 2025-08-11 12:24:49 | Views: 6


Anyone showing support for Palestine Action 'will feel the full force of the law', justice minister says

Good morning and welcome to our live coverage of UK politics.

The government has defended its controversial proscription of protest group Palestine Action, with the justice minister, Alex Davies-Jones, saying supporters of a “terrorist organisation will feel the full force of the law”.

The comments come after a huge demonstration against the proscription took place in London over the weekend in which 532 people were arrested. The majority of those arrested, 348, were aged 50 or over, according to official figures.

Responding to questions about the protest this morning on BBC Breakfast, Davies-Jones said:

I want to thank the police for their bravery and their courage in carrying out their diligent duties in the line of public protection, and I want to state that the right to peacefully protest in this country is a cornerstone of our democracy, and of course, we respect that.

But with regards to Palestine Action, they are a proscribed terrorist organisation and their actions have not been peaceful.

They have violently carried out criminal damage to RAF aircraft. We have credible reports of them targeting Jewish-owned businesses here in the United Kingdom, and there are other reasons which we can’t disclose because of national security.

But they are a proscribed terrorist organisation and anyone showing support for that terrorist organisation will feel the full force of the law.

People in Parliament Square hold placards on 9 August 2025.
People in Parliament Square hold placards on 9 August 2025. Photograph: Vuk Valcic/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

The home secretary, Yvette Cooper, proscribed Palestine Action last month under the Terrorism Act after activists caused an estimated £7m of damage to jets at the RAF Brize Norton military base in Oxfordshire.

It made membership of or support for it a criminal offence, punishable by up to 14 years in prison.

The government justifies the ban by saying it narrowly targets a group that has been organising serious criminality.

But critics say the ban is a draconian clampdown on freedom of expression and is the latest erosion of civil liberties that have been brought in under successive governments.

Palestine Action is appealing against the ban after a High Court ruling on 30 July gave it permission to do so. We will have more on Palestine Action shortly.

Here is what else is on the agenda for the rest of the day:

11am: Reform UK press conference.

11.30am: Lobby briefing with the prime minister’s spokesperson, who will likely be asked about the extent of the UK’s involvement in the Trump-Putin Ukraine summit in Alaska on Friday.

Late morning: Kemi Badenoch, the leader of the opposition, visits East Anglia to highlight local concerns about the use of asylum hotels.

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Education secretary ready to 'redouble efforts' to cut down on school absences

The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, has reaffirmed her commitment to try to reduce the number of children missing classes at schools.

Writing in the Daily Telegraph, she said progress was being made, albeit slowly, despite government figures showing the number of children in England who missed at least half of their classes rose to nearly 150,000 last autumn.

There have been calls for greater investment in mental health support for children who are suffering from anxiety and depression and it is widely thought that high unattendance levels are partly a product of the pandemic and its lockdowns.

The government has been accused of not properly investing in targeted support and being too focused on slogans rather than concrete action.

Bridget Phillipson said that tackling classroom absences was a “top priority”. Photograph: Lucy North/PA

After taking over as education secretary last July, Phillipson confirmed plans for unauthorised holiday fines to rise from £60 to £80. This increase came into effect in August 2024.

New “attendance hubs” were launched to help reduce persistent school absences, along with free breakfast clubs that are meant to improve pupil absence and attainment over the long term. But since Covid both authorised absences for illness and unauthorised absences have remained stubbornly high.

“Reversing the harmful attitudes towards school attendance will not happen overnight. But we are beginning to make progress,” Phillipson wrote in the Telegraph on Monday.

“Now is the time to redouble our efforts to get more children back through the school gates.”

“It’s where they learn the habits that will shape them throughout life. It’s where the building blocks of a healthy society are laid,” she wrote.

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