This movement is about to step up a gear.
Hundreds of thousands are expected to protest across Britain this Saturday, following Boris Johnson’s move to shut down Parliament for over a month.
It comes as MPs pledge to occupy parliament as constitutional crisis intensifies.
‘#StopTheCoup’ Organisers say that mass civil disobedience and disruption on the cards, with over a hundred trade unionists calling for strike action.
Protests this Saturday are expected from Aberdeen to Plymouth, with at least 26 organised across the country so far. In London, crowds will gather from 12 noon in front of Downing Street.
The protests follow demonstrations called on Wednesday evening in response to the suspension of parliament, with many thousands turning out at just four hours’ notice.
Crowds blocked bridges and streets, and heard from speakers including Diane Abbott, John McDonnell, Paul Mason and more. Saturday’s protests are expected to be much bigger. Over 1.5m people have already signed a petition opposing prorogation.
Labour frontbencher Clive Lewis MP has said that he will have to be “dragged out of the chamber” if Boris Johnson wants to shut down parliament to push through his Brexit plans.
Meanwhile, more than a hundred trade unionists have signed a statement calling for strike action to defeat Boris Johnson’s Brexit plans, stating:
“We believe our unions, the Labour Party, and the whole working-class movement must urgently mobilise direct action, including protests, strikes, and occupations, in opposition to this development.”
Thousands have also signed a pledge which states: “If the government tries to drive No Deal through by stopping parliament from sitting, we cannot just rely on the courts and parliamentary process. We need a massive movement of resistance, with marches, civil disobedience and protests in every corner of the country.”
Clive Lewis MP said:
“These moves are utterly outrageous. If Boris Johnson thinks he can suspend parliament and force through No Deal he has another thing coming. We will build a mass movement to save democracy, and everyone who wants to stop this travesty must get ready to mobilise, demonstrate and resist. MPs, too, will have to play their part. They’ll have to drag me out of the chamber.”
Michael Chessum, national organiser for Another Europe is Possible, said:
“We are witnessing the birth of a huge movement to fight for democracy and oppose Boris’s Brexit agenda. It’s uniting the anti-Brexit movement, the left, the labour movement, the climate strikers and many people just outraged at Johnson’s attempts to shut down parliament. The crowds are angry, energetic and hopeful, and are taking matters into their own hands. We aren’t here to ask Boris nicely, we’re here to force him to back down. That means civil disobedience and being willing to disrupt things.”
Three legal cases are currently proceeding through the courts intended to stop prorogation. But #StopTheCoup organisers say litigation cannot be relied on.
Nadia Whittome, a Nottingham Labour activist and spokesperson for Another Europe is Possible said:
“We are now seeing the true meaning of Brexit – it is a project aimed at nothing less than the destruction of what little democracy we have.
“If they are prepared to shut down our democracy to deliver Brexit, their intentions for after they succeed will be even worse…Everything is at stake, and we can’t just rely on judges or MPs.”
Full list of protests:
- Aberdeen, 12 noon at the Castlegate. Event here.
- Birmingham, 1 pm on Victoria Square by the Council House. Event here.
- Bournemouth, 11 am, Bournemouth Square. Event here.
- Brighton, 12 noon, The Level BN1 4ZN. Event here.
- Bristol, 12 noon, College Green. Event here.
- Cambridge, 12 noon, outside The Guildhall, Market Square. Event here.
- Chester: FRIDAY at Chester Town Hall, 7:30pm
- Doncaster: 12 noon, Mansion House
- Dundee, 2 pm, City Square. Event here.
- Exeter, 11 am, Bedford Square. Event here.
- Glasgow, 2 pm, George Square. Event here.
- Leeds, 11 am, Town Hall. Event here.
- Liverpool, 12 noon, St George’s Hall. Event here.
- London, 12 noon, Downing Street. Event here.
- Leamington Spa, 12 noon in the Pump Room Gardens. Event here.
- Manchester, 12 noon, Cathedral Gardens. Event here.
- Newcastle, 12 noon, Grey’s Monument. Event here.
- Norwich, 2 pm outside City Hall. Event here.
- Nottingham, 11 am, Brian Clough Statue close to Old Market Square. Event here.
- Oxford, 11 am, Broad Street outside Balliol College. Event here.
- Plymouth, 11am, Armada Dial. Event here.
- Romsey, 10am, Palmerston Statue. Facebook event here.
- Southampton, 12 noon, Guildhall Square. Event here.
- Sheffield, 11 am, Town Hall. Event here.
- Swansea, 12 noon, Big Screen at Castle Square. Event here.
- Swindon, 11 am, 29 Wood St. Event here.
- Tavistock, Friday (!) 12:30, Lockyer House, Paddons Row PL19 0HF. Event here.
- York, 11 am, St Helen’s Square. Event here.
Remain group Tech for UK say there are around 60 protests planned in total in the coming days:
Here are the protests on ONE day –
— Mike Butcher (@mikebutcher) August 30, 2019
Here is today’s https://t.co/kBh4UdS2mZ
Here is Saturday’s (the big one) https://t.co/ky5q6ECckY #DefendDemocracy #StopTheCoup
Via @TechForUK
See you in the streets…
Josiah Mortimer is Editor of Left Foot Forward. Follow him on Twitter.
16 Responses to “#StopTheCoup: Full list of protests as hundreds of thousands expected to march”
Julia Gibb
@Tom Sacold
I seen that episode of Citizen Smith.
#StopTheCoup: Full list of protests as hundreds of thousands expected to march - Politics Highlight
[…] 1 September 2019Politics Highlight This movement is about to step up a gear. Author: Josiah Mortimer | Source […]
Julia Gibb
Jeremy
What did the people vote for? Are you claiming it was “leave regardless of having no deal” / “leave even if it causes chaos and damage to the UK”
They voted for the message Utopia of having the same deal without making any contributions. We would have hundreds of new deals around the World. All the money saved from being in the EU would be poured into the NHS.
Glendon Franklin
Some of these comments are very sad as well as deluded. The EU was founded initially by Germany and France as a way of deliberately entangling their economies and their peoples in order to make impossible the idea of another war. Other mainland countries saw the benefits and joined. This was not a capitalist plot but rather the reaction of great statesmen to the war and a determination to prevent another.
I agree it seems to have lost its way somewhat and become over ambitious, some other countries have doubts about their membership as it stands too but surely rather than running away, or behaving in the pathetic manner of the Brexit Party MEPS we should be actively working to build alliances to bring about reform. The Civil servants (bureaucrats) who manage the day to day stuff in the EU are accountable to the politicians, and the politicians are accountable to us, the people. Don’t believe the right wing rubbish about the EU being the enemy. The people of those countries are our friends, if we let them be and have helped us massively over the years. I suppose I will now get attacked from both sides but that may be part of the problem. People are emoting, not reasoning.
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