Ambulance fire bombing ignites far-right antisemitism

The arson attack on four ambulances belonging to a Jewish community organization in north London, set ablaze outside a synagogue on Monday, ignited a frenzy of antisemitic spite from far-right cheerleaders and trolls in the U.K. and internationally. It also further highlighted the growing split between far-right figures who want to nurture a cosy relationship…

Hatzola ambulances
Burnet out Hatzola ambulances

The arson attack on four ambulances belonging to a Jewish community organization in north London, set ablaze outside a synagogue on Monday, ignited a frenzy of antisemitic spite from far-right cheerleaders and trolls in the U.K. and internationally.

It also further highlighted the growing split between far-right figures who want to nurture a cosy relationship with Israel’s hard-right, and antisemitic purists.

Far-right ghouls

Quickly, in the aftermath of the attack on emergency vehicles run by Hatzola Northwest, a Jewish charity run by volunteers providing free medical transportation and emergency response to Jewish and non-Jewish people, far-right ghouls were dusting off classic antisemitic tropes and distortions.

Jayda Fransen
Jayda Fransen – cunning Jewish trick

Jayda Fransen, the crazed Islamophobe who was formerly deputy leader of Britain First, and recently reborn as the founder of the Christian Nationalist Party, spent the hours after the arson attack insinuating it was a cunning Jewish trick and a “disgraceful attempt at dragging us into another one of Israel’s illegal wars”.

Sneered

Steve Laws, the influential Dover-based race agitator who split from the Homeland Party last year, and is now a member of Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain, sneered: “Hundreds of thousands of English girls raped and abused and nothing but SILENCE from the establishment.

“A Jewish ambulance gets set on fire and the entire establishment comes out in defence of the Jewish community. It’s all so tiresome”.

Steve Laws – “So tiresome”

Patriotic Alternative, Homeland Party and Alek Yerbury’s National Rebirth Party have been unable to summon up a single word of condemnation for the attack.

Even Nick Griffin, who can usually be relied upon to mouth off about pretty much anything, has kept his gob shut this time.

But in other sections of X’s far-right echo chamber, low-rent antisemitic drivel was rampant.

Vile responses

The Britain First feed was silent on the event, but when Paul Golding tried to link the attack to panic about hordes of Islamic extremists coming into the country, he couldn’t resist giving just a little nod to his more antisemitic followers, asking: “But why do Jews have special ambulances?”.

This provoked some predictably vile responses, including this little gem:

Comment superfluous

Pat McGinnis, a London‑based ex‑organiser for the British National Party, now fronting the obscure National Housing Party U.K, harvested 2,600 likes with a vitriolic Nazi-like post that said the “real reason” the Hatzola ambulance service was created was so, “Jewish patients do not have to be seen by goyim (animals)…Jewish supremacy is alive and kicking”.

Samantha Thompson @SamLovesEngland exemplified the Jew-baiting. In response to the video showing three suspects setting the ambulances ablaze, she wrote: “Unless they release audio of them screaming Allahu Akbar I have no reason to believe this isn’t three Jews setting their own ambulances on fire.”

Jews and Muslims

Lurid fantasies about money-grabbing Jews were wheeled out by an Australian poster, Lozzy B., who denounces multiculturalism as “a Jewish political ideology”.

The torched ambulances in north London were just a Jewish scam, she tweeted. “That means that they will get all the insurance money now.”

The same ‘enemy within’ narratives that fuel the far-right’s rampant Islamophobia were re-purposed to rubbish British Jews.

Hugh Anthony at Warwick PA demo 67 Feb 2026
Hugh Anthony – “Why not Jews?”

Hugh Anthony, the pompous “poundshop poodle,” and a self-styled ‘Christian nationalist influencer,’ manically tweeted about the ambulance arson, smearing the Jewish community for daring to live in “their own neighbourhoods,” concluding, “if they were truly integrated, why do they live apart? We criticise the Muslim community for doing this, why not Jews too?”

Likewise, the pro-Restore Britain X account named ‘Wolf’ (Strapline: “England for the English”) wrote: “Jews are often held up as a community that’s seamlessly integrated into British society. But is that true?

“No. Two thirds live in or around London. They have their own courts, police force, security service, ambulances, schools, and are infamous for their in-group preferences”.

Anonymous handles

Other social media accounts, hiding behind anonymous handles that claimed to support Restore Britain, were often at the forefront of the anti-Semitic feeding frenzy.

Meanwhile, the official Restore Britain X account was silent about the events in north London.

The ambulance burning also highlighted the growing division between far-right influencers who align with Israel and are nominally pro-Jewish, as a means of bolstering their anti-Muslim credentials, and the Aryan-first fascists.

Torrent of abuse

Tommy Robinson, who has been cultivating his followers on the Iaraeli far right, and who tweeted that the ambulance arson was an “Antisemitic Attack!!!”, was dubbed a sellout and a “zionist bitch” in a torrent of abuse, from erstwhile fellow travellers on the far-right. Robinson countered that they were “retards” and “idiots with hardons for Jew hate” with their “wild low resolution conspiracytard” thinking.

David Clews, the Unity News Network host who sympathises with the neo-nazi Patriotic Alternative, tweeted throughout the day ever more convoluted Jewish plot scenarios.

David Clews – Tommy Robinson is a “total zio shill”

Stung by Robinson’s broadside, he was left spluttering playground-level insults, calling Robinson a “midget, coke-filled, zionist shabbos goy”.

Ant Middleton, the former special forces soldier and TV personality who has been repeatedly touted by sections of the far right as a would-be candidate for the London mayoral election, got a similar blast after he defended Jews as being part of London’s culture.

A disgusted Clews moaned: “ We told people this guy was a total zio shill and not to be trusted.

“Do you need any more evidence now?”


Alf Dubs

Lord Alf Dubs

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

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Paul Nowak

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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

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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

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

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Nick Davies

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