Meet Rupert Lowe’s latest recruit – a nazi jailbird linked to a terror group

Meet the latest recruit to be welcomed into Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain – one of the UK’s most notorious nazis who was linked to a neo-nazi terror group. Sam Melia, a leading member of Patriotic Alternative only recently released from jail, revealed yesterday that he has joined Restore and that he would be keen to…

Sam Melia
Sam Melia – notorious nazi linked to terror group;

Meet the latest recruit to be welcomed into Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain – one of the UK’s most notorious nazis who was linked to a neo-nazi terror group.

Sam Melia, a leading member of Patriotic Alternative only recently released from jail, revealed yesterday that he has joined Restore and that he would be keen to stand for parliament representing the party.

Melia is the husband of PA Deputy Leader Laura Towler and was jailed in 2024 for running an online library of racist, antisemitic and white‑supremacist stickers intended for supporters to print and distribute in public spaces.

Melia joins Patriotic Alternative
Sam Melia announces he has joined Restore Britain

The prosecution described the operation as a deliberate attempt to seed hatred anonymously across towns and cities, using anonymous propaganda to avoid detection.

The jury found that Melia curated the material, encouraged its dissemination and provided the infrastructure – the ‘Hundred Handers’ – that allowed others to spread it.

Nazi sympathies

During sentencing, the judge described him as an antisemite with clear Nazi sympathies, and referred to items found in his home when police raided him in 2021, which included a poster of Adolf Hitler, Nazi emblems and literature reflecting an “obsessive interest” in Oswald Mosley.

Although he received a two‑year custodial sentence, Melia served only ten months before being released in 2025 under an early‑release scheme introduced to ease pressure on the prison system.

But even before that, Melia had been connected with the now-banned nazi terror group National Action.

Sam Melia marching with National Action
Sam Melia (rear, 2nd from right) marching with terrorist National Action

In 2016 he was photographed marching with the group in Darlington. A year later was pictured with a group of nazis which included NA’s leader Chris Lythgoe; this was six months after National Action had been banned.

Preparing terrorism

National Action was the first far-right organisation banned under UK terrorism legislation since the Second World War.

It’s spokesman Jack Renshaw was convicted in 2018 of stirring up racial hatred, inciting a child to engage in sexual activity, and, most gravely, preparing an act of terrorism in which he planned to murder Labour MP Rosie Cooper and a police officer.

He was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Sam Melia (3rd from right) with National Action leader Chris Lythgoe (3rd from left) six months after NA was banned

National Action was banned in December 2016 after the UK government formally designated it a terrorist organisation.

‘Concerned with terrorism’

The Home Secretary’s order, laid before Parliament under the Terrorism Act 2000, was passed after the government assessed that the group was “concerned in terrorism”, citing its violent neo‑Nazi ideology, its use of extreme propaganda, and its celebration of political violence, including its praise for the murder of MP Jo Cox.

This is the group that Melia marched with shortly before it was banned.

A collection of the country’s most prominent nazis and holocaust deniers including Steve Laws and Sam Wilkes have now joined Restore Britain without any difficulty. And perhaps the most extraordinary joiner – till now – has been the US nazi Jared Taylor, who is banned from entering the UK because of his extremist views.

Perhaps it’s time for Rupert Lowe to ask himself exactly what it is that makes Restore Britain so attractive to people like this.


Paul Nowak

Paul Nowak

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TUC General Secretary

Peter Hain

Peter Hain, founder of the ANL and friend of Searchlight

British Jews have been persecuted over the centuries; British blacks since the Windrush generation of the 1950s; British Muslims, especially after the Islamist 9/11 and then 7/7 terrorist attacks in New York 2001 and London 2005. But until the last few years there has not been a simultaneous threat against all three British communities of Jewish, Black and Muslim Britons – meaning the need for Searchlight has never been greater.

Peter Hain
Labour peer, former MP and Cabinet Minster

Professor Colin Holmes

Professor Colin Holmes
Everyone who wants to understand contemporary racism and its historical background needs to read Searchlight.
Professor Colin Holmes
University of Sheffield

Alf Dubs

Lord Alf Dubs

Searchlight’s voice is more important than ever, and I am delighted that it will now be available to a wider audience than ever before in its new incarnation online. Searchlight has been extremely helpful over the years in exposing the far right, corruption, criminality and the murky links between organised crime and powerful interests in the UK and abroad. I wish Searchlight the very best.

Alf Dubs
Labour peer, former MP and Cabinet Minister, and Kindertransport child

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Nick Davies

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Multi-award-winning investigative journalist and writer

Paul Holborow

Paul Holborow

In the campaign against the National Front, Searchlight provided a rich and utterly reliable basis for much ANL propaganda – particularly with reference to the two leading NF figures, John Tyndall and Martin Webster. The appearance of Tyndall in full nazi uniform, drawn from the archives of Searchlight, was a key part of ANL propaganda, coupled with deeply damaging nazi quotes from Webster.

Paul Holborow
Founding member of the ANL and National Organiser 1977-81

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