Hotel Protest Sparks Community Pushback

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Richard Burgon MP (centre left) with local protesters
August 25, 2025

Anti-racism campaigners gathered outside the Britannia Hotel in Seacroft last Friday, mounting a counter-protest to an anti-migrant demonstration held at the same site.

Counter-protesters from Stand Up to Racism, local representatives and community organisers joined forces to challenge what they described as a dangerous escalation of anti-migrant agitation. 

Their presence in Seacroft formed part of a growing wave of community-led counter-demonstrations across the UK, aimed at pushing back against far-right activity targeting hotels housing asylum seekers.

Chanting slogans in support of refugees and holding placards denouncing racism, demonstrators said they were determined to show that Leeds would not be a place where hatred goes unchallenged.

East Leeds MP Richard Burgon, who joined the counter-protest, said in a post on Facebook:

“I was proud to join constituents at the Stand Up To Racism counter-demonstration in East Leeds. The far right offers no answers – just division.

“We need to build a mass movement against racism and the scapegoating of migrants and minorities and for a better society for the 99%.”

Hotels like the Britannia in Seacroft have been used to house asylum seekers due to long-standing delays and overcrowding in the UK’s asylum system. Protesters say this housing crisis has been exploited by far-right groups attempting to stir local resentment.

Over the past two years, towns and cities across England – including Knowsley, Rotherham, and Dunstable – have seen similar confrontations outside asylum accommodation, often fuelled by online misinformation and conspiracy theories. However, in many cases, local residents and anti-racist groups have mobilised in response, determined to counter what they see as a growing far-right threat.

Further protests and counter-protests are expected this Friday 8 August, again outside the Seacroft hotel, with campaigners calling on the wider community to show support for refugees and to stand against division.

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