Britain’s far right is booming on Elon Musk’s Twitter
Changes on the social media platform have been described as a “dream come true” for extremist parties.
Some people are pretty pleased with Twitter right now.
After then US president Donald Trump caused a furore by retweeting its anti-Muslim content, one of the UK’s most notorious far-right groups Britain First was banned from the social media platform in 2017. Facebook followed suit months later.
Losing this huge reach crushed Britain First’s public visibility, membership and fundraising.
But that all changed when Elon Musk took over Twitter last October.
Calling himself a âfree speech absolutistâ, the tech billionaire granted an amnesty to hundreds of accounts that had been kicked off the platform.
Within hours, those belonging to Britain First leader Paul Golding, along with former deputy Jayda Fransen and the party itself, reappeared.
âWeâre absolutely pleased,â Golding told Euronews. âNow that weâre back on Twitter, our following is growing very, very rapidly.
âThe amount of people weâre reaching is huge. It’s millions all around the world.â
He claimed his Twitter following has lept from around 30,000 to more than 100,000 in little over two months since being reinstated.
âIf the rate of growth carries on this way, I’ll be in the millions within a year or two,â Golding added.
âThis is freedom of speech in action. This is democracy in action.â
âBogie manâ
According to Golding, Britain First is a party of âpatriotism, traditionalism, Christianity and national sovereignty,â with a current focus on âmass migrationâ.
However, the far-right party has been accused of promoting violence, hatred, sexism, racism and Islamophobia.
Golding was jailed in connection to a series of hate crimes against Muslims in 2018, with he and fellow supporters known to invade mosques and abuse worshippers.
“Britain First is a vile and hate-fuelled group whose sole purpose is to sow division,” London Mayor Sadiq Khan said following Goldingâs online ban back in 2018. “Their sick intentions to incite hatred within our society via social media are reprehensible.”
Shut out from Twitter and Facebook, Britain First eked out an online existence on fringe platforms, where audiences are much smaller. But now it is back in the mainstream.
âElon Musk⌠has made sure [Britain First’s] content is much more prominent on the platform,” head researcher Callum Hood at the Centre for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) told Euronews. âThatâs a real helping hand to accounts like Goldingâs.â
He explained that Britain Firstâs âextremely sharpâ follower growth means an ever-increasing number of people are being exposed to his content that âfoments hatredâ.
Goldingâs account also now carries a blue tick, formerly a badge of authenticity, giving his tweets âmore credibilityâ, continued Hood â even though the only barrier to entry has become a âwillingness to hand Elon Musk moneyâ.
âThat blue badge gives Golding a range of perks he has never had before. This is a dream come true for him.â
But Britain First isn’t the only hate group to benefit from Musk’s chaotic reworking of Twitter’s policies.
A report by the CCDHÂ found the number of accounts pumping out toxic hate and abuse on Twitter has exploded since Muskâs takeover, with usage of slurs like the racist n-word soaring 202%.
‘His mission of whipping up division’
In an interview with Euronews, Golding claimed his content was not hateful, maintaining that his tweets â often a dozen per day â were âcompletely legalâ.
âWhen the media or politicians talk about the word hate on social media, they mean political beliefs or opinions that they don’t like,â he said.
âThe real reason we got closed down is that we were getting too big, our following was too large,â suggesting the British government pressured Twitter to do so.
There is no evidence to support Goldingâs claim that the closure of his account was politically motivated. His platform was closed for repeated hate speech.
On what he called the âold Twitterâ, the far-right leader alleged there was âblatant, naked censorship of opposing viewsâ, which were replaced with âdistorted narrativesâ on major political issues.
âThatâs why Musk stepped in to restore freedom of speech. Now we can say what we want,â he told Euronews.
Yet Golding has been repeatedly called out for sharing outright fake or wildly misrepresented information, especially surrounding the recent unrest in France.
On 2 July, he shared a video of a group of armed and masked men, claiming rioters in France were âshow[ing] offâ their arsenal of weaponsâ.
Scrutiny by BBC verify journalist Shayan Sardarizadeh revealed the footage in the tweet – which was viewed more than a million times – showed men in Dijon from 2020 defending their neighbourhood after a teen was assaulted by a rival gang.
It remains on his page despite being flagged as false.
Even Golding himself recognised that not everything he posts is always accurate.
âIf we see a video that’s trending and it says this is happening in France and it looks shocking, then we will share it,” he said.Â
âSometimes we get stung with inaccurate videos.â
But, according to Hood, this does not mean the group is simply inept.
âIf you look at the content Golding produces that has been quite successful on social media it is toxic, dangerous, rubbish,â he said.Â
âThey [Britain First] know exactly what they’re doing. They create controversial content, with a complete disregard for the facts, that whips up hatred of minorities.â
âFortunately, on today’s Twitter, that is a recipe for success,â he added.
âThis stuff causes harmâ
Golding may have a blasĂŠ attitude towards the truth, but digital hate and misinformation have real â and deadly â real-world consequences.
Dangerous protests outside asylum centres have broken out in the UK, at times on the basis of completely fabricated stories, and online content can help agitate violence against many different groups in society.Â
At the same time, as social media grows more vitriol-ridden, it is actually stifling freedom of speech online, with many groups increasingly driven off the platform by abuse, Hood told Euronews.
He claims the boundaries of acceptable speech on Twitter are now largely dependent on the âwhims of Elon Musk by diktatâ.
âThat is clearly a worse situation for freedom of speech,â he adds.
Musk has repeatedly deleted accounts that are critical of him, including one which tracked all of his private jet flights.
Back on Twitter, Golding believed Britain First had a âvery promising futureâ.
âMusk has put all political parties not just Britain and first of all political parties in Britain on an equal and level playing field. Five years down the line, we will see who’s popular and who isn’t.â
Source: Euro News