Skip to main content
The Morning Star Shop
Unison pledge to organise against Reform UK and the far right
People join civil society groups led by Stand Up To Racism during a counter-protest against a rally endorsed by Tommy Robinson in central London, October 26, 2024

UNISON must fight against the rise of Reform UK and the far right, delegates told the conference today.

The unprecedented nine-page motion, which demonstrated the strength of feeling across branches, argued that anti-immigrant and Islamophobic abuse, including from mainstream politicians, was on the rise.

Ade from the national black members' committee said our task was clear “and that was to push back against parties of the far right.”

He said the far right had been “emboldened” and their views are being echoed by so-called mainstream lawmakers in parliaments, adding: “Far-right agitators exploiting tragedies to sow divisions.

“We must not allow divisions to take hold and for workers to be divided against each other.”

North West delegate Glen Williams said his region had a “very proud history of standing up against the far right and fascists.

“But we failed years ago when the BNP’s Nick Griffin was elected to the European Parliament in the region.

“But we organised and we sent the BNP packing.”

He also told of when the White Men March came to Liverpool they were sent packing and forced to hide in the railway station.

Mr Williams said: “We have to get smarter about how we take on the fascists.

“We must not be silent and we must not be bystanders.”

Barnet delegate Helen Davis told the conference how she was forced to organise a counter-demo against the fascists in Finchley where around 3,000 turned out to oppose them.

Emma Proctor from the East Midlands said: “In our region the threat is already here. Reform UK runs six councils.

“They target our members, vilify trade unions and scapegoat migrants.

“Reform UK stokes divisions and it’s our members who are left to pull the pieces together.”

She added: “Unison will never allow the politics of hate to define our future.”

Eilleen Best, of Unison’s national LGBT+ committee, said the LGBT+ community are often one of the first to be targeted by the far right.

She said: “It was a deliberate strategy of hate that aims to weaken our movement.

“We need LGBT+ voices not just in the run-up but helping to lead the charge against division.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
DOLDRUMS: The 26th African Union Summit, 2016. Photo: GovernmentZA/Creative Commons
Features / 4 September 2025
4 September 2025

As the Alliance of Sahel States and southern African nations advance pan-African goals, the African Union must listen and learn rather than parroting the Western line on these positive developments, writes ROGER McKENZIE

A Palestinian girl walks past a heavily damaged building in the Rimal neighborhood, in Gaza City, Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025, a day after it was hit by an Israeli military strike that killed several people
Gaza / 1 September 2025
1 September 2025
A general view of staff on a NHS hospital ward
Features / 29 August 2025
29 August 2025

Money makers already exploit cleaning and catering contracts while the military-industrial complex diverts billions from health to warfare — but Bevan’s vision will endure as long as people fight for it, writes ROGER MCKENZIE

Similar stories
Unison conference 2025
Unison Conference 2025 / 17 June 2025
17 June 2025
Striking school support workers taking part in a demonstration outside First Minister John Swinney's constituency office in Blairgowrie, October 24, 2024
Features / 17 June 2025
17 June 2025

KEVAN NELSON reveals how, through its Organising to Win strategy, which has launched targeted campaigns like Pay Fair for Patient Care, Britain’s largest union bucked the trend of national decline by growing by 70,000 members in two years

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage poses outside The Waterford Lo
Britain / 15 April 2025
15 April 2025
National Education Union vows to fight Reform UK's election candidates and racist policies