Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
Windrush campaigners urge the government to save Notting Hill Carnival
Marchers during the Children’s Parade, part of the Notting Hill Carnival, last year

CAMPAIGNERS have urged the government to step in to protect the future of Notting Hill Carnival as they marked Windrush Day today.

The west London carnival is in jeopardy, its chairman Ian Comfort said in a letter on Wednesday, when he asked Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy to provide urgent funding to save the event.

Jacqueline McKenzie, a campaigner and human rights lawyer who helped victims of the Windrush scandal, said the carnival holds “huge national and international significance.”

“The government needs to recognise this and act urgently to protect it,” Ms McKenzie said.

In the late 1950s, Notting Hill became home to many people from the Caribbean who arrived in Britain on the Windrush and accompanying ships, and the carnival was founded by pioneers of that generation including communist Claudia Jones.

Ms McKenzie said the carnival being at risk “adds insult to injury” for victims of the Windrush scandal.

“It should not be lost on us that these funding concerns coincide with Windrush Day on Sunday,” she said.

“Carnival embodies the fundamental role of black and Caribbean communities in Britain, and the government should be upholding the Windrush legacy instead of undermining it.”

Professor Patrick Vernon, a cultural historian and Windrush campaigner, called Notting Hill Carnival “a vital cultural institution with both national and international significance.”

A government spokesman said: “Notting Hill Carnival is an important community event, and we recognise that for many it is a moment to come together and celebrate.

“We all want this to go ahead, and event organisers should work with local authorities and the police to keep it safe for everyone attending.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Newly appointed Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood leaves 10 Downing Street, London, following Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer's Cabinet reshuffle after the resignation of Angela Rayner. Picture date: Friday September 5, 2025
Labour Party / 7 September 2025
7 September 2025
Labour MP for Leeds East, Richard Burgon, joins rail workers on the picket line in Leeds during a 24-hour strike by four transportation trade unions, October 1, 2022
Britain / 7 September 2025
7 September 2025
The HMT Empire Windrush, docked at Southampton, March 28, 1954
Windrush / 5 September 2025
5 September 2025
Similar stories
IN THE BEGINING: Carnival band photo taken by Dr Ted Hill, in Port of Spain in the early 1950s and made available in public domain by his son John Hill
Features / 23 August 2025
23 August 2025

DAVID HORSLEY reminds us of the roots and staying power of one of the most iconic festivals around

Waspi (Women Against State Pension Inequality) campaigners s
Britain / 17 December 2024
17 December 2024