Patriots Defy Smears to Sing Carols and Put Christ Back in Christmas

Patriots Defy Smears to Sing Carols and Put Christ Back in Christmas Crowds of around one thousand everyday Brits filled central London last Saturday, December thirteen, for Tommy Robinson’s Putting Christ Back into Christmas carol service—just yards from Downing Street. Hymns like Silent Night and O Come All Ye Faithful rang out under leaden skies, with families holding candles and Bibles, reclaiming what many see as their fading Christian roots. No fights, no arrests—just pure, unfiltered patriotism. Tommy, fresh out after his prison stint, kicked things off with heartfelt Bible verses, saying faith kept him strong behind bars. Attendees told Patriot News it felt like real Britain again—not the watered-down, multicultural mush the establishment pushes. But guess who couldn’t stomach it? Stand Up To Racism, predictably, whipped up a counter-protest nearby, dragging in singer Billy Bragg to belt out anti-far-right anthems. Their flyers screamed racist extremism, yet the only thing extreme was their overreaction to people singing carols. Even Church of England leaders jumped in, dropping videos online urging Christmas is for all while finger-wagging at weaponising faith—like defending traditions is suddenly dangerous. Robinson’s crowd was smaller than his massive summer marches, but the vibe? Electric. One mum told us, We’re done apologising for loving our country and our God. It’s classic: when Brits stand up for borders, culture, or Christmas itself, lefty outfits like Stand Up To Racism slap on the hate labels to silence us. They’re not fighting racism—they’re fighting real patriots who want Britain to stay Britain. Time to keep singing louder.

Migrants Face 200 Daily Sanctions for Universal Credit Non-Compliance

About two hundred sanctions hit migrants daily for breaking Universal Credit rules, new data shows. Claimants must agree to job searches, CV building, and advisor meetings—failing any of that gets you sanctioned. Think tank Centre for Migration Control found 198,771 migrants got sanctioned from January 2023 to April 2025—that’s 200 a day, 1,600 a week. Out of 1,356,226 total sanctions, migrants made up 14.6 percent. Sanctions range from pausing payments until a missed appointment’s rescheduled to cutting them off for three months. Nearly 500 migrants join benefits daily, with 1.3 million foreign nationals on UC, up 6.7 percent last year. Robert Bates from CMC calls it insulting, saying many migrants just want handouts and should lose access to welfare by scrapping Indefinite Leave to Remain. Sanctions hit 50,655 in April 2025, with 15 percent—7,752—going to migrants, a 41 percent jump from January 2023’s 5,494. UC costs for foreign nationals hit £10 billion last year, nearing £25 billion from March 2022 to March 2025.

Britain’s Migrant Hotel Scandal

36,000 Illegal Arrivals in Taxpayer-Funded Rooms While Private Firm Rakes in Millions As we head into the festive season in December 2025, ordinary British taxpayers are footing a massive bill for a migrant crisis that’s showing no signs of slowing. The latest Home Office figures from September reveal a staggering 36,273 asylum seekers – many arriving illegally via small boats – housed in hotels across the UK. That’s a whopping 13% increase in just three months, hitting the highest level in almost two years. These migrants occupy rooms in around 200 hotels nationwide, turning once-thriving tourist spots and local businesses into no-go zones for holidaymakers. Coaches pull up regularly, dropping off groups of young men into four-star accommodations, all paid for by you and me. The company at the heart of much of this is Clearsprings Ready Homes , one of three private firms handed lucrative 10-year contracts worth billions back in 2019 to manage asylum housing. Clearsprings covers London, the South of England, and Wales, sourcing and running many of these hotel setups. While migrants get free board and lodging, Clearsprings has pocketed eye-watering profits – nearly £180 million in recent years alone, with combined profits across the providers topping £380 million. Critics slam the poor conditions in some accommodations, but Clearsprings hasn’t issued any public defence or statement on the latest backlash; they just keep cashing the cheques from the Home Office. Overall, more than 108,000 asylum seekers receive government-funded housing, with hotels still a major chunk despite years of political promises to end the practice. Small boat crossings pushed asylum claims past 110,000 in the last year, fuelling the surge. So where do the migrants go when they’re shuffled out of hotels? Mostly into so-called dispersed accommodation – private rented houses and flats scattered across communities, often in working-class areas already stretched for housing. Some end up in former military bases like Wethersfield in Essex, warehouse-style sites criticised as dehumanising and costly. Plans for more big camps, like the scrapped RAF Scampton idea that wasted tens of millions, highlight the chaos. Meanwhile, on Britain’s streets, tent camps spring up in the most unlikely places. Take Park Lane in London’s Mayfair – right on Billionaires’ Row, next to Hyde Park and some of the priciest real estate in the world. Throughout 2025, dozens of tents turned roundabouts and pavements into shanty towns, blighting one of the capital’s poshest areas. Authorities cleared it multiple times at huge expense, only for the encampments to pop up nearby on Oxford Street or other central spots. These rough sleepers are mostly Eastern European – Romanians and Bulgarians – involved in begging or cash-in-hand work, not the boat arrivals claiming asylum. London’s rough sleeping numbers hit record highs this year, but the vast majority are British nationals struggling with addiction, mental health, or economic hardship. The stark reality? Tens of thousands of recent illegal migrants get hotel rooms and support on the public dime, while private companies like Clearsprings profit handsomely, and genuine British homeless battle for scraps. With arrivals still pouring in, patriots are right to demand: enough is enough. Stop the boats, speed up deportations, and put British people first.