How one womanâs racist tweet sparked a free speech row
Lucy Connolly called for hotels housing asylum seekers to be set on fire and wrote âif that makes me racist, so be itâ
Lucy Connollyâs 51-word online post in the wake of the Southport killings led her to jail and into the centre of a row over free speech.
For some, the 31-month jail term imposed for inciting race hate was âtyrannicalâ, while one commentator said Connolly was a âhostage of the British stateâ, and another that she was âclearly a political prisonerâ.
Court of Appeal judges, however, this week refused to reduce her sentence.
Asked about her case in Parliament, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said sentencing was âa matter for the courtsâ and that while he was âstrongly in favour of free speechâ, he was âequally against incitement to violenceâ.
Rupert Lowe, the independent MP for Great Yarmouth, said the situation was âmorally repugnantâ and added: âThis is not the Britain I want to live in.â
Others said her supporters wanted a âright to be racistâ.
Connollyâs legal team argued her sentence was âmanifestly excessiveâ but the Court of Appeal disagreed
Warning: This report contains racist and discriminatory language
In July last year, prompted by a false rumour that an illegal immigrant was responsible for the , Connolly posted online calling for âmass deportation nowâ, adding âset fire to all the⊠hotels [housing asylum seekers]⊠for all I careâ.
Connolly, then a 41-year-old Northampton childminder, added: âIf that makes me racist, so be it.â
At the time she had about 9,000 followers on X. Her message was reposted 940 times and viewed 310,000 times, before she deleted it three and a half hours later.
In October she was jailed after admitting inciting racial hatred.
Three appeal court judges this week ruled the 31-month sentence was not âmanifestly excessiveâ.
PA Media A group of people standing outside the Royal Courts of Justice holding a yellow banner with the slogan âpolice our streets not our tweetsâ written in capital letters. The words are mostly black expect for ânotâ, which is in red. The banner includes the Free Speech Union logo, which is a fist clutching a sharpened pencil and the letters FSU. There is also a black and white QR code on the banner.
Stephen OâGrady, a legal officer with the Free Speech Union (FSU), said the sentence seemed ârather steep in proportion to the offenceâ.
His organisation has worked with Connollyâs family since November and funded her appeal.
Mr OâGrady said Connolly âwasnât some lager-fuelled hooligan on the streetsâ and pointed to her being a mother of a 12-year-old daughter, who had also lost a son when he was just 19 months old.
He said there was a âdifference between howling racist abuse at somebody in the street and throwing bricks at the policeâ and âsending tweets, which were perhaps regrettable but wouldnât have the same immediate effectâ.
Stephen OâGrady said Connollyâs case demonstrated âpolice overreachâ
Connollyâs case was also âemblematic of wider concernsâ about âincreasing police interest in peopleâs online activityâ, Mr OâGrady said.
The FSU had received âa slew of queriesâ from people who were âvery unsureâ about âthe limits of what they can they can say onlineâ, he said, and who feared âthe police are going to come knocking on the doorâ.
âThereâs an immense amount of police overreach,â he added.
He cited the example of a retired special constable detained after challenging a pro-Palestine supporter online, a case the FSU took on.
Responding to Mr OâGradyâs claim, a National Police Chiefsâ Council spokesperson said that Article 10 of the Human Rights Act âprotects a personâs right to hold opinions and to express them freelyâ and that officers received training about the act.
They added: âIt remains imperative that officers and staff continue to receive training commensurate with the demands placed upon them.â
Raymond Connolly said the Court of Appeal had shown his wife âno mercyâ
After the appeal was dismissed, Connollyâs husband, Conservative town councillor Raymond Connolly, said she was âa good person and not a racistâ and had âpaid a very high price for making a mistakeâ.
Her local Labour MP, Northampton Southâs Mike Reader, said he had âbig sympathyâ for Connolly and her daughter, but there was no justification for accusing the police of âoverreachâ.
He said: âI want the police to protect us online and I want the police to protect us on the streets and they should be doing it equally.â
It was a âfallacyâ and âmisunderstanding of the worldâ if people did not âbelieve that the online space is as dangerous for people as the streets,â he added.
âWeâre all attached to our phones; weâre all influenced by what we see, and I think itâs right that the police took action here.â
Connolly had pleaded guilty but argued at appeal she had not intended to incite serious violence
In his sentencing remarks, Judge Melbourne Inman said Connollyâs offence was âcategory Aâ - meaning âhigh culpabilityâ - and that both the prosecution and her own barrister agreed she âintended to incite serious violenceâ.
For Reader, this showed âthey werenât arguing this was a silly tweet and she should be let off - her own counsel agreed this was a serious issueâ.
At her appeal, Connolly claimed that while she accepted she intended to stir up racial hatred, she always denied trying to incite violence.
But Lord Justice Holroyde said in a judgement this week the evidence âclearly shows that she was well aware of what she was admittingâ.
Sentencing guidelines for the offence indicate a starting point of three yearsâ custody.
While the prosecution argued the offence was aggravated by its timing, âparticularly sensitive social climateâ, the defence argued the tweet had been posted before any violence had started, and that Connolly had âsubsequently attempted to stop the violence after it had eruptedâ.
The judgement also highlighted other online posts from Connolly that the judges said indicated her âview about illegal immigrantsâ.
Four days before the Southport murders, she responded to a video shared by far-right activist Tommy Robinson showing a black man being tackled to the ground for allegedly performing a sex act in public.
Connolly posted: âSomalian, I guess. Loads of them,â followed by a vomiting emoji.
On 3 August, responding to an anti-racism protest in Manchester, she wrote: âI take it they will all be in line to sign up to house an illegal boat invader then. Oh sorry, refugee.
âMaybe sign a waiver to say they donât mind if itâs one of their family that gets attacked, butchered, raped etc, by unvetted criminals.â
The FSU said she was likely to be eligible for release from August, after serving 40% of her sentence.
Some, including Mr OâGrady, argued her jail term was longer than punishments handed to criminals perceived to have committed âfar worseâ crimes.
Reform UKâs Mark Arnull, the leader of West Northamptonshire Council, said it was not for him âto pass comment on sentences or indeed discuss individual casesâ.
But he added: âItâs relatively easy to understand why constituents in West Northamptonshire question the proportionality of Lucyâs sentence when they see offenders in other high-profile and serious cases walk free and avoid jail.â
Shola Mos-Shogbamimu believed Connollyâs supporters wanted a âright to be racistâ
The issue for writer and activist Shola Mos-Shogbamimu was that âthose who have committed worse crimesâ should âspend more time in jail, not less time for Lucy Connollyâ.
Dr Mos-Shogbamimu added: âItâs not âfreedom of speech without accountabilityâ. She didnât tweet something that hurt someoneâs feelings; she tweeted saying someone should die.â
In her view, those making Connolly a âflag-bearer or championâ for free speech were asking for âthe right to be racistâ.
Free speech advocate Mr OâGrady said âno-one is arguing for an unfettered ârightâ to incite racial hatredâ.
Connollyâs case was about âproportionalityâ, he added, and âthe sense that online speech is increasingly being punished very harshly compared to other offending⊠such as in-person violent disorderâ.
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