Glastonbury chanters or the Southport hate-tweeter – throw the book at one, you must throw it at them all | Marina Hyde

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"Concerns Raised Over Free Speech and Justice Following Investigations into Glastonbury Bands"

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The recent decision by Avon and Somerset police to initiate criminal investigations into the bands Bob Vylan and Kneecap due to their performances at Glastonbury raises significant concerns regarding free speech and the approach to policing controversial speech in the UK. The author, Marina Hyde, critiques the growing trend of prosecuting individuals for their words rather than actions, suggesting that the country risks developing a punitive culture reminiscent of authoritarian regimes. Hyde highlights the troubling implications of such investigations, noting the case of Lucy Connolly, who received a harsh sentence for a racist tweet linked to the Southport child killings, and questions the consistency of justice when it comes to public figures and artists expressing provocative opinions. The author suggests that this approach could lead to a society where individuals are labeled as political prisoners based on selective enforcement of laws regarding speech, creating a divisive atmosphere in which public perception of justice becomes polarized.

Hyde further critiques political leaders, including Prime Minister Keir Starmer, for their responses to these incidents, indicating that their reactions may prioritize legal punishment over nuanced discussions about free speech. She points out that public figures like Starmer seem to advocate for stringent repercussions for those who incite hatred, while also implying that the same standards should apply uniformly to all individuals, regardless of their status. This inconsistency raises fears of a two-tier justice system, where the consequences for speech vary depending on the individual's public profile. Hyde concludes by expressing her concern that the UK may be heading towards a society where political prisoners are perceived differently by various segments of the population, emphasizing the need for a balanced approach to free speech that avoids the pitfalls of excessive regulation and punishment based on speech alone.

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News that Avon and Somerset police havelaunched criminal investigationsinto the bands Bob Vylan and Kneecap for their Glastonbury sets reminds me that we have a severe prisons crisis in the UK, and that we need to build more of them. Perhaps we should build a special one for all the people we keep criminally investigating for saying, rather than doing, bad things. I’m pretty sure they have a few of those types of prisons in other countries. Although, it must be said that those are normally countries run by people we consider bad. Confusing! But look, maybe we’re becoming the sort of country where we imprison lots of people for saying awful things. I don’t …lovethis look for us, I have to say. But no doubt someone has thought it all through very, very carefully.

If so, they could put the two nasty idiots from Bob Vylan in it. Obviously all of Kneecap, too. Maybe those guys would have their cell on the same landing as Lucy Connolly, thewoman who was imprisonedfor two years and seven months for a repulsive tweet in the wake of the Southport child killings. They could be joined by whoever at theBBC didn’t pull the Glastonbury live streamon Saturday after Bob Vylan started their repulsive chants, given that Conservative frontbencher Chris Philp is now officially calling for thecorporation to be “urgently” investigated. I see Chris is also calling for the BBC to be prosecuted – so I guess he’s already done the police investigation for them, and all at the same time as absolutely aceing his brief as shadow home secretary for where-are-they-now political outfit the Conservative party.

In terms of Spewing Hate Into The Nation’s Living RoomsTM, it must be said that the footage of Bob Vylan’s offending set is still embedded into multiple stories on the MailOnline website, all containing an exhortation to “watch the full video”. Should whoever is leaving the videos up on MailOnline also be investigated and prosecuted? Perhaps Chris Philp could adjudicate. Either way, let’s keep a cell or five for them in the special new prison. After all, why on earth shouldn’t we imprison a few journalists, too? In for a penny, and so on.

Needless to say, embattled prime ministerKeir Starmer has made timeto have plenty of official views not just on the behaviour of the two bands, but on any future decisions to book them. If all you have is a hammer, everything is a nail – and if your big job before politics was being director of public prosecutions, then I’m sure everything looks like a prosecutable offence.

It certainly did to the prime minister after last summer’s riots in the wake of the Southport murders, when Starmer seemed to relish the response happening the best way he knew how: by rushing it through the courts. Connolly was one of those prosecuted, in her case for a manifestly revolting and racist but also clearly tossed-off post responding to a false rumour the killer was an asylum seeker, saying people could set fire to asylum hotels “for all I care”. She admitted inciting racial hatred in court, but has since becomesomething of a cause celebrefor the fact that she is a mother with an otherwise clean record (and one who had lost a young child herself), and that she has got a harsher sentence for this tweet that she later deleted than some convicted rapists.

I wrotein the immediate wake of the riots that it was clear that something big had happened in the UK – though it wasn’t yet precisely clear what. Unfortunately, the prime minister seemed to think it was fairly simple. “Let me also say to large social media companies and those who run them,”he said, albeit to some reporters instead, “violent disorder clearly whipped up online: that is also a crime. It’s happening on your premises, and the law must be upheld everywhere.”Sadiq Khan seemed to thinkit was something to do with the Online Safety Act not being “fit for purpose”.

In more successful hot takes, it was also the moment that Elon Musk test-drove his epithet “two-tier Keir”. That one has stuck, and it will stick even harder if, for example, sublebrity band Bob Vylan don’t get the book thrown at them in the same way that no-mark Lucy Connolly did. To be clear, I don’t think any of the aforementioned lot ought to be in prison, however vile and unacceptable their behaviour was. But if you don’t deal with them in pretty much the same way, then people are going to be talking far more loudly about two-tier justice again.

This type of talk has already reached all the way into the Oval Office where, in February, vice-presidentJD Vance suggested to Starmerthat the UK had a free speech problem. You might have seen that Bob Vylan have just promptlyhad their US visas revokedfor what the deputy secretary of state called “their hateful tirade”. But we can’t expect consistency from the Trump administration.

What we expect of our own country is infinitely more important. I used to think masses of legislation around what horrible things people could or couldn’t say was a niche-application civilisational advance, but I have changed my view, and now fear we are sleepwalking towards a society where half the people will think certain incarcerated miscreants are political prisoners, and the other half will think a different bunch of incarcerated miscreants are political prisoners. I am very much for living in a country where we don’t think we have political prisoners at all. Getting there isn’t simple – but stopping travelling in the wrong direction would be a good start.

Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist

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Source: The Guardian