The London mobilisation did not just outnumber the far right. It shattered their sense of momentum. What happened on the streets was more than a demonstration. It was a public proof of concept that mass, broad based anti fascism still has deep roots in this country. And the shockwaves inside far right networks since then tell us exactly how to keep them contained.

/1

The first and loudest reaction in their internal channels was pure disbelief. They simply did not expect that many people to turn out. The scale, families, unions, students, faith groups, community blocs, and the huge SUTR presence, broke their narrative that the left is small or that ordinary people do not care. They were forced to confront a truth they have spent years denying. When anti fascists mobilise at scale, the far right cannot match it. Not even close.

/2

And that shock quickly turned inward.
Their channels filled with blame, resentment, and factional sniping. Robinson aligned groups accused the ethnonationalists of sabotaging unity. The purist factions accused the street action types of being unserious. Influencers were accused of grifting. Local groups complained that national figures never show up. It was a full spectrum implosion, the kind that only happens when a movement feels humiliated.

/3 fin