Turning Point UK
Turning Point UK (TPUK) is a British offshoot of the American student pressure group Turning Point USA.[1] The UK group was set up to promote right-wing politics in UK schools, colleges and universities, with the stated aim of countering what Turning Point UK alleges are the left-wing politics of UK educational institutions.[2] The close similarity of Turning Point UK's rhetoric and target demographic to that of Generation Identity, a continental European group with racist and Islamophobic intentions, has been noted by scholars of hate studies and the far-right.[3] Turning Point UK describes its objectives as promoting "the values of free markets, limited government and personal responsibility". It says it does this to counter what it alleges is "a dogmatic left-wing political climate, education system and radical Labour Party" which, Turning Point UK claims, "sympathises with terrorists [and] wishes to disarm the nation".[4] The group was launched in December 2018[5] by Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA, and Candace Owens, then the communications director of the US group,[6] at the Royal Automobile Club in London.[5] On the day of its social media launch in February 2019, Tory MPs including Jacob Rees-Mogg and Priti Patel tweeted supportive messages for the group.[7][8] Labour MP David Lammy stated that the launch and its Tory support are evidence that the Conservative Party "openly promotes hard-right, xenophobic bile".[9] From its inception, the organisation and its leading members were the subject of widespread popular ridicule. It was described by the BBC as "a tsunami of online mockery".[10][11] OverviewThe group was launched in December 2018[5] by Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA, and Candace Owens, then the communications director of the US group,[6] at the Royal Automobile Club in London.[5] Among those attending the event were Andy Wigmore, Paul Joseph Watson, James Delingpole and filmmaker Amanda Eliasch (a follower of David Icke).[5][12][13] The event was hosted by John Mappin, a hotel owner and QAnon supporter.[14] On the day of its social media launch in February 2019, MPs including Jacob Rees-Mogg and Priti Patel tweeted supportive messages for the organisation, as did Nigel Farage,[7] while it was marked for criticism by others.[8] From its inception, the organisation and its leading members were the subject of widespread popular ridicule on the social networking service Twitter. The ridicule continued for at least a week. It was described by the BBC as "a tsunami of online mockery".[10][11] The launch of its Twitter account was accompanied by multiple parody accounts, along with a parody of the organisation's website created by a 'left-leaning student' calling himself 'Skeptical Seventh'.[15][16] There was also a protest from the charity Turning Point over potential confusion caused by similarities between the two names.[10] Turning Point UK's chairman was George Farmer[8][12] until April 2019.[citation needed] Farmer was a Candace Owens' fiancee, a Conservative Party donor, the son of a Conservative peer, and was close to far right activist Paul Joseph Watson of conspiracy theory website Infowars.[7][12] Until 2021 its CEO was Ollie Anisfeld (the son of Lance Forman, former Brexit Party MEP for London).[12] At its launch in 2019 the group had employed several full-time staff.[5] In June 2019, it held a £180-a-head fundraising dinner, antisemitic conspiracy theorist John Mappin and Ferzana Barclay, wife of Daily Telegraph owner Aidan Barclay. This was attended by Nigel Farage, artist Amanda Eliasch, Brexit Party chair Richard Tice and digital strategist Steve Edginton, Brexit Party candidate Lance Forman, and pundit Toby Young.[17][18][19] According to the Oxford University newspaper Cherwell in early 2019, the group "claims to already have chapters at eight universities". The group's then chairman George Farmer told the paper they had chapters at the universities of Sussex, Oxford, St Andrews, York, Warwick, Nottingham, King's College London, University College London, the London School of Economics and the University of the Arts London.[5] Like Turning Point USA, it does not disclose the identities of its donors.[5] In 2019, Labour MP David Lammy described Turning Point UK as evidence that "sinister forces are taking hold of our country" and that the Conservative Party "openly promotes hard-right, xenophobic bile".[9] The scholar Chris Allen, of the Centre for Hate Studies at Leicester University, has written that while the group is linked to Turning Point USA, which Allen notes has been linked to the far-right, the UK group does not fit traditional conceptions of the far-right. Allen notes the group's closely similar rhetoric and demographic to Generation Identity, a continental European group whose intentions are racist and Islamophobic.[3] Dominique Samuels, one of the group's "Young Influencers", told the BBC during a radio interview that the UK branch would not set up the same controversial Professor Watchlist for which its US counterpart is known.[10] Samuels later became a GBNews host.[19] The group hosts the TPUK Education Watch website, where students can submit examples of political bias in the education system. The site has been described by the University and College Union as having "the acrid whiff of McCarthyism about it" after it called for videos and photos of lecturers to be sent into it for publication. Turning Point UK rejected the accusation and said that any academic they featured would be given the right to reply and that unlike the US group the default would not be to name people although they reserved the right to do so.[20][21] The Chief Operating Officer until November 2021 was Jack Ross, who then co-directed a group called Reasoned with right wing activist Darren Grimes.[22] In 2021, Reading-based personal trainer Nick Tenconi[23] tweeted that he had taken over as COO.[24][better source needed] As of 2024, its president is Conservative Party activist Marco Longhi.[25] Tenconi was reported to have attempted to broker a Reform UK candidate to stand aside on Longhi's behalf in the 2024 United Kingdom general election,[25] while also stepping up from deputy leader to interim leader of UKIP.[26] Street protestsAccording to Hope Not Hate, "following the addition of COO Nick Tenconi to the group, it appears to be in the process of reinventing itself as a street-protest organiser, taking a key role in the demonstrations against drag queen storytelling sessions throughout the year".[27] The Honor Oak pub protestsOn the 25 February 2023, Turning Point UK held a protest in Lewisham, London, against a drag queen event at the "Honor Oak" pub. Writers for the left-wing outlet Novara Media wrote on the protest, noting that the Turning Point UK activists were greatly outnumbered by counter protestors who supported the drag queen event, and the Turning Point UK activist's protest was then confined hundreds of meters away from the pub.[28] Both the PinkNews and Southwark News also reported on the number of pro-drag queen counter-protestors vastly outnumbering the Turning Point UK activists.[29][30] Turning Point UK held another protest outside the Honor Oak in June, in which three people were arrested, and one trans activist was photographed with blood pouring down their face.[31][32] Turning Point UK then made posts on twitter which implied that the activist had faked their injuries.[33][32] The Great Exhibition pub protestOn the 10 March 2023, Turning Point UK staged a protest in East Dulwich against an alleged Drag Queen Story Hour outside a pub called "The Great Exhibition."[34] However according to the BBC News the drag queen event that Turning Point UK was protesting against did not exist and that the pub was empty during the protest.[34] The drag queen event that Turning Point UK had organised a protest against was based on an outdated advertisement for a drag queen event had already happened the year prior in 2022.[34] Turning Point UK claimed that there had been a cover-up, and that the pub had deleted one of their drag queen advertisements.[30] The Turning Point UK protest was counter-protested by both LGBT and anti-fascist activists.[34] Turning Point UK's protest against a non-existent drag queen show was mocked by a writer for Novara Media.[28] Anti-Palestinian and anti-migrant protestsDuring the Israel-Hamas war, TPUK co-organised a demonstration on Remembrance Day in November 2023 to protect the Cenotaph from potential descecration by pro-Palestine protesters, a demonstration that culminated in far-right protesters fighting police.[27] Tenconi was involved in the 2024 United Kingdom riots against migrants. On 8 August in Aldershot, he led a small crowd in chanting “invaders out, close off borders, invaders out” outside a hotel housing asylum seekers.[23] References
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