Lucy Connolly Case Brought to America’s Attention by Wall Street Journal

With Lucy Connolly now languishing in jail for over 330 days for a tweet, the Wall Street Journal has run an article highlighting her plight and the sorry state of free speech in the UK and Europe, where the US First Amendment does not apply. Here’s an excerpt.

Lucy Connolly, a 41-year-old nanny in central England, has been in jail now for more than 330 days because of a message she posted on X. 

Last July, Connolly was at her home, where she runs a small daycare, when news broke that three girls in the town of Southport — aged six, seven and nine — were murdered by a knife-wielding man at a dance workshop. 

False rumours soon spread online that the perpetrator was a Muslim asylum seeker — he had been born in the UK to Christian immigrants from Rwanda. 

Connolly, who is mother to a 12 year-old girl and a boy who died as a toddler years ago, and whose husband was then a Conservative councillor for their county, tapped out an angry message to her 6,000 followers that evening:

“Mass deportation now. Set fire to all the f—ing hotels full of the bastards for all I care. While you’re at it, take the treacherous government and politicians with them. I feel physically sick knowing what these families will now have to endure. If that makes me racist, so be it.”

A few hours later, after cooling off and walking the family dog, she deleted the post. It had been retweeted 940 times. In the days that followed, anger over the attack and online misinformation led to days of riots, including several instances where protesters tried to set fire to hotels used by asylum seekers.

Connolly received a 31-month prison sentence for publishing material intending to stir up racial hatred. Her appeal was rejected. Her sentence was longer than many of the rioters themselves sentenced for criminal damage such as smashing up cars. “Lucy got more time in jail for one tweet than some paedophiles and domestic abusers get,” said her husband, Ray Connolly. 

The Connolly case is helping fuel a debate about free speech in the UK, a debate also playing out across Europe. While the US First Amendment stipulates that Congress “shall make no law” to restrict free speech, and hate speech is generally protected, governments aren’t so constrained in Europe. In a continent scarred by the Holocaust, loosely defined hate-speech laws and the rise of social media have created fertile ground for authorities to crack down on those seen to be stirring up trouble. Rarely a week goes by without a tale of zealous policing. 

A German Right-wing journalist posted a fake image online of the interior minister holding a sign that read “I hate freedom of opinion” and was subsequently handed a seven-month suspended prison sentence. A woman who posted images of politicians with painted-on Hitler moustaches and called a minister a terrorist was fined about $690.

In France, a woman spent 23 hours in custody for giving French President Emmanuel Macron the middle finger. (She was acquitted after arguing she had pointed her finger in the air and not directly at the President.) Denmark passed a new law outlawing “improper treatment” of religious texts after a series of incidents in recent years when Quran burnings sparked an angry response. A landmark trial began in May for two men accused of burning a Quran at a folk festival in front of an audience. 

Another controversy arrived in the UK last week during the Glastonbury music festival, after British duo Bob Vylan led chants of “Death, death to the IDF,” referring to the Israel Defence Forces. Police launched a criminal investigation into whether the statements constituted a hate crime. The band has said it doesn’t advocate the death of any group of people but that “we are for the dismantling of a violent military machine”.

Cases like Connolly’s are partly why the Trump administration, including Vice President JD Vance, have sharply criticized European governments for curbing free speech. The administration has also taken aim at European laws to police online content, making US tech firms such as X responsible for ensuring certain types of harmful material aren’t published. The US State Department has said such laws are leading to a “global censorship-industrial complex”. …

British police made 12,183 arrests in 2023 — an average of 33 a day — under laws that make it illegal to say something “grossly offensive” or share content of an “indecent, obscene or menacing character” via a public communications network — up by 58% compared with 2019. 

A spokesperson for the National Police Chiefs’ Council said officers aren’t trying to “police political views” but to protect the public, adding that “in every decision we must balance the right to freedom of expression with the right to tackle crime.” 

Critics say police struggle to define what is indecent or obscene. In the U.K., a woman was recently charged for having a bumper sticker with an expletive.

“It’s going to get a lot worse,” said Toby Young, the founder of the Free Speech Union, which funds the legal defence of people in several countries who are arrested over free-speech matters. His group’s paid membership has nearly doubled to 25,000 over the past year, with the money used to defend people like [Koran-burner] Hamit Coskun. …

Britain’s crackdown on speech is particularly surprising given its role in pioneering Western democracy. British legislators are debating a new employment law dubbed the ‘banter ban’, which would hold employers responsible for offensive comments made within earshot of employees in the workplace. The government recently considered banning ‘legal but harmful’ speech on social-media platforms, a plan abandoned over concerns that such demands to tech companies could jeopardise trade negotiations with the U.S.

The UK police are investigating an escalating number of ‘non-crime hate incidents’, where people can notify the police if someone says something that targets their ‘personal characteristics’. This is aimed at stamping out racist abuse or other harassment, but free-speech campaigners say it has been weaponised. 

Those who claim to be a victim can report anyone for anything perceived to be hateful and don’t have to provide evidence of harm. Examples include a schoolchild investigated for calling a classmate a “retard” and a former police officer probed for making allegedly anti-transgender comments on Twitter. He later won his case in court.  

The Free Speech Union calculated that there were 250,000 NCHIs recorded between 2014 and 2024 — an average of 68 a day. In some cases, the alleged perpetrator’s name is recorded on police records, which could turn up in background checks and affect the person’s ability to get a job, the FSU says. 

Worth reading in full.

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BS Whitworth
BS Whitworth
9 months ago

I wonder who is giving Macron the middle finger today?

REG1US
REG1US
9 months ago
Reply to  BS Whitworth

Me for a start. Begone failed French Premier. And the latest UKish one.

Tonka Fairy
9 months ago

Good stuff. This must look utterly ridiculous to the Americans.

MajorMajor
MajorMajor
9 months ago
Reply to  Tonka Fairy

That you can be given a 31 month prison sentence for an angry tweet is all you need to know about the state of personal freedom in Britain today.
By the way, I think her tweet was wrong. But the entire procedure she was put through and the sentence she was given is a disgrace. Furthermore, it’s stupid as well because it is an overreaction and thus it draws attention to the hidden nasty bias of the British political system. Had she been given a £500 fine we wouldn’t be here talking about her today. So the political system is not only nasty but idiotic as well.

Old Arellian
Old Arellian
9 months ago
Reply to  MajorMajor

Not just the sentence but the way she has been treated. No compassionate leave to see her sick husband and child. Then forcibly restrained in handcuffs and thrown into the wing with 23hour lockdown with the most violent inmates. Now we hear many will serve maybe just 20% of their sentence. No way they can say they can say it’s “not two tier” Scumbags.

Terry Morgan
Terry Morgan
9 months ago
Reply to  Tonka Fairy

Things are likely to get even worse if Labour’s Islamophobia Policy gets passed into law.

Mogwai
9 months ago

Lucy, along with Wayne Rourke and other ‘keyboard warriors’, spoke for countless British citizens with those comments they posted, and now they’ve paid the ultimate price, due to the fact there is no genuine free speech in the UK. There’s only approved speech, and this will remain the case whilst this crappy, treasonous Uniparty have their bums parked in number 10. And it’s great to think that mass deportations might one day happen but isn’t this just a fanciful pipe dream? Farage doesn’t seem overly keen, does he? ”@RupertLowe10 You’re right, Rupert – but saying “deport” isn’t enough. It has to happen, en masse, backed by law, strength, and political will. Otherwise, Britain keeps sleepwalking into a future it won’t recognise – or survive. Here’s the hard reality: we’ve imported a security threat. Not by accident, but by policy – driven by open-borders ideologues, corporate cowards, and bureaucrats more worried about their careers than our safety. For decades, we’ve let foreign nationals settle here without any real cultural vetting and with no expectation of loyalty. What’s the result? Islamist grooming gangs operating with impunity while the authorities look the other way. Hate preachers living on benefits in taxpayer-funded homes. Cities… Read more »

Mogwai
9 months ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Totally ridiculous. Another keyboard warrior’s predicament, but look at the contrast to Lucy’s situation; ”In case you missed it… This is Joseph Haythorne. He’s 26 years old—and now the latest Brit to be jailed for a social media post. In the wake of the Southport child murders and the resulting unrest, Haythorne took to X and wrote: “Go on Rotherham, burn any hotels with those scruffy b*****ds in it.” It was a grim post. But he deleted it in just 17 minutes and subsequently handed himself in to the police. Still, Judge Jeremy Richardson KC—yes, the same man who sentenced the now-deceased grandfather Peter Lynch—gave him 15 months behind bars last week. But here’s the thing… And this really speaks to the level of inconsistency in our courts… Unlike Lucy Connolly’s post, which arguably constituted pseudo-incitement, Joseph’s post constituted explicit incitement. There’s a big difference between saying you “don’t care” if violence happens and outright calling for it. And yet—Joseph received a sentence less than half of what Lucy did. Put differently: the courts have now punished overt incitement less harshly than perceived incitement. Progressive lawyers will likely argue Lucy’s post reached more people, which justifies the longer prison sentence.… Read more »

EppingBlogger
9 months ago

Then UK was not a part of “a continent scarred by the Holocaust”. That was Germany and its allies and France which enthusiastically sent Jews to their death.

“Britain’s crackdown on speech is particularly surprising” – no it isn’t surprising at all. Does the newspaper not know how thge coutry has been taken over by illiberal pro-Hamas, anti-freedom zeatols. Surely it knows that.

Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
9 months ago

Hopefully msn’s censorship will come to the attention of Trump and Vance. People can include any vile lies about Israel and the IDF they can dream up in comments. Comments quoting the Koran or even hinting that it contains a lot of nastiness are removed along with comments hinting that there were 100 or more mass killings of Jews by Arabs prior to 1947, to give just 2 examples. I must of had 50+ comments removed by human not automatic moderators in the last 3-4 months.
MSN will have links to America, hopefully Trump will come down on them like a ton of bricks for suppressing free speech. If he doesn’t hopefully Farage will after the next election. Liebour will totally agree with what they’re doing, it’s now a lot worse than it was before the last election but Rishi wouldn’t of had the balls to stand up to msn over moderate levels of censorship. Has Farage got the balls to do what even Kemi won’t do?

Pembroke
Pembroke
9 months ago

Well the WSJ article is nice for the yanks to read, but I’m sure everyone on this list would agree that one sovereign nation shouldn’t interfere with anther sovereign nations justice system.

So it’s really just an article to fill a bit of space and poke a finger at the mad bad Europeans and Brits.

RW
RW
9 months ago

The second world war ended 80 years ago. If the Europe of today is scarred by something, it must be the neverending holocausting of so-called postwar politicians unwilling to accept that their pet war is actually over and that they ought to stop blaming a dead man (Hitler) for all their very own misdeeds.

Accepting responsibility for 50 years of ‘communist’ Russian reign of terror in half of Europe would be a nice bonus on top of that.

Westfieldmike
Westfieldmike
9 months ago

Soviet Russia was less tyrannical.