The Richie Allen Show is a UK-based digital radio show and podcast hosted by Irish radio broadcaster and journalist Richie Allen, and broadcast from Salford, Greater Manchester. The show started in September 2014 and is currently broadcast four days a week: Monday to Thursday.
In 2019, after a number of Brexit Party MEPs appeared as guests in the show, anti-racist advocacy group Hope not Hate published a report on the far-right and antisemitic content of the show. This led to the Board of Deputies of British Jews issuing a statement against potential guests appearing on the show. [1] [2]
In October 2024, the weekday show was put on a temporary hiatus but returned on 02 December 2024. [3] His music-themed Sunday Morning Melodies show still continues to be broadcast live every Sunday from 10:00 to 12:00 GMT.
Richie Allen is an Irish radio broadcaster and journalist. He began his career presenting late-night shows in Waterford, Ireland, where he later became the producer of the station's news show. [4] Allen left Ireland to study TV and Radio at the University of Salford and later moved to Spain where he presented an evening show for Talk Radio Europe. In 2013, he relocated to London to present a daily television show for The People's Voice. A year later, following the closure of TPV, Allen moved back to Salford to present his current radio show. [4] He is also active on YouTube, and has been active on his current channel since 2018 (after his original channel was banned for policy violations). [5]
Richie Allen has been described by Hope not Hate as a "protégé of conspiracy theorist David Icke". [6] The show (founded in 2014) [7] "emerged from Icke's short-lived broadcast The People's Voice , and was for a time hosted on Icke's website". [6] Hope not Hate have been described by Allen as "enemies of free speech" on his show. [8]
Allen rejects the far-right label, and says he is a Bolivarian socialist opposed to identity politics, who interviews the right-wing more than the left "because it balances the show". [9]
The show hosted Nick Kollerstrom, a British Holocaust denier, on Holocaust Memorial Day 2016, [5] [2] wherein Kollerstrom rejected the existence of gas chambers at Auschwitz concentration camp. Although Allen made it clear that he disagreed with Kollerstrom, saying that Hitler and the Nazis "were killing people" and were "maniacal", he believed that the figure of six million Jews dying in the Holocaust was too high. [10] Allen also praised Kollerstrom's conspiracy theories surrounding the 7 July 2005 terrorist bombings in London. [10] Allen has also praised Alison Chabloz, who gained prominence following antisemitic musical performances at the far-right London Forum in 2016, that led her to led to her being sentenced in June 2018 to a 20-week suspended prison sentence. [5] [11] Allen described Chabloz's songs as "very funny" on his show. [11] James Fetzer, an American conspiracy theorist and Holocaust denier, has also been interviewed on the programme. [10]
In 2019, anti-racist advocacy group Hope not Hate released a report which said that Brexit Party figures appeared on the programme, on the same episodes as racist and antisemitic guests. This included Brexit Party MEP and former Member of Parliament Ann Widdecombe, as well as Brexit Party MEP, former television personality David Bull, and senior lecturer of Abertay University and PPC for Dundee West and unsuccessful MEP candidate in Scotland, Stuart Waiton. [5] [6] Widdecombe's appearance (15 August 2017) was succeeded by Kevin Barrett, an antisemitic 9/11 truther who claimed that the Charlottesville car attack and violence at the Unite the Right rally were false flags staged by the American government. [11] Widdecombe was described as an "old friend of the show" by the host during one appearance. [12] Widdecombe told The Jewish Chronicle that she agreed to appear to discuss Brexit, and that she "had never heard of the Richie Allen Show until I agreed to go on." She distanced herself from the programme's antisemitic content by, among other things, pointing to her membership of the Conservative Friends of Israel, B'nai B'rith event speeches, and her novel An Act of Treachery, which is set during the Holocaust. [13]
Former television personality David Bull MEP appeared on the show on 30 April 2019, tweeting that the experience was a "pleasure" and linking to his interview via Conspiracy Daily Update, a website which contains numerous links to the show of former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke and British neo-Nazi Mark Collett. The following guest on the episode was Lana Lokteff, an American white nationalist and co-host of the alt-right outlet Red Ice Radio. Although disagreeing with Lokteff on her views on racial identity, "white genocide" and belief in a "Jewish conspiracy", Allen repeatedly praised her for her intelligence, said he did not think she was racist, and praised her programme as "very important ... long may it continue". [11] Following Hope not Hate's report, the Board of Deputies of British Jews said that potential guests should "stay far away" from the show. [1] [2]
Later that year, far-right conspiracy theorist Liz Crokin also appeared on the show to discuss then-recent Hollywood sexual abuse scandals; Crokin linked Hollywood paedophilia and the death of Seth Rich to supposed "rampant" paedophilia within the Jewish community. [14] Other guests have included neo-Nazi and former British National Party activist Mark Collett and controversial jazz musician and commentator Gilad Atzmon in 2016. [1] [15] Guests connected to UKIP have included Welsh Assembly member Neil Hamilton, party founder Alan Sked and former party president in Scotland Christopher Monckton. [1]
Although generally catering to the far-right, a number of left-wing individuals have appeared on the show including former MP George Galloway, and editor-in-chief of The Canary , Kerry-Anne Mendoza. [5] Brexit activist and climate change denier Piers Corbyn also appeared on the show. [1] Human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell told The Jewish Chronicle : "I've been on The Richie Allen Show to defend trans people and to speak out against the alt-right and conspiracy theorists. Anyone who listened to my contributions would realise that I was opposed to far-right views and advocated a liberal and left-wing perspective." [1] Liberal Democrats have also featured, including former minister Norman Baker, who suggested weapons inspector David Kelly was murdered, and John Hemming, who discussed "forced adoptions" on the show in 2016. [1]
The chair of the Liverpool Wavertree Constituency Labour Party, Alex Scott-Samuel, a Jewish Voice For Labour activist, appeared on the show a number of times from 2017 until 2019. In one appearance, he described the Rothschild family as "behind a lot of the neo-liberal influence in the UK and the US" and accused them of profiting from wars, leading his former employer, the University of Liverpool, to distance itself from him. [16] [15] Labour MP Alex Sobel said Allen and Icke are "fermentors of antisemitic thought and draw people into a series of conspiracy theories... Sharing a platform with these men is incompatible with Labour membership". [16]
In October 2020, Martin Kulldorff of Harvard Medical School appeared on the programme to oppose the COVID-19 lockdown. As a co-author of the Great Barrington Declaration, he favoured an approach based on herd immunity to the disease. [17] Conservative Party MP Desmond Swayne appeared on the same edition of the show as James Fetzer in late 2020 to talk about the COVID-19 pandemic, asserting that deaths were similar to "a bad flu season" and questioning the validity of published case and death statistics. When this was reported in January 2020, Swayne was widely condemned by anti-racist and Jewish organisations. [10] [18]
Ann Noreen Widdecombe is a British politician and television personality who has been Reform UK's Immigration and Justice spokesperson since 2023. Originally a member of the Conservative Party, she was Member of Parliament (MP) for Maidstone and The Weald, and the former Maidstone constituency, from 1987 to 2010. She was a member of the Brexit Party from 2019 until it was renamed Reform UK in 2021, and served as Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for South West England from 2019 to 2020; she rejoined Reform UK in 2023.
The Institute for Historical Review (IHR) is a United States–based nonprofit organization which promotes Holocaust denial. It is considered by many scholars to be central to the international Holocaust denial movement. Self-described as a "historical revisionist" organization, the IHR promotes antisemitic viewpoints and has links to several neo-Nazi and neo-fascist organizations.
Israel Shamir, also known by the names Robert David, Vassili Krasevsky, Jöran Jermas and Adam Ermash, is a Swedish writer and journalist, known for his ties to WikiLeaks and for promoting antisemitism and Holocaust denial. His son Johannes Wahlström is a spokesperson for WikiLeaks in Sweden.
Radio Islam was a Swedish neo-Nazi and Islamic local radio channel, now a website. The EU's racism monitoring organization has called it "one of the most radical right-wing antisemitic homepages on the net".
Gilad Atzmon is an Israeli-born British saxophonist, novelist, political activist, and writer.
David Richard Bull is an English television presenter, politician, and former medical doctor. He served as Reform UK's Deputy Leader from 2021 to 2023 and as Co-Deputy Leader, alongside Ben Habib, from 2023 to 2024. He was previously a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for North West England from 2019 to 2020.
David Vaughan Icke is an English conspiracy theorist and a former footballer and sports broadcaster. He has written over 20 books, self-published since the mid-1990s, and spoken in more than 25 countries.
Antisemitic tropes, also known as antisemitic canards or antisemitic libels, are "sensational reports, misrepresentations or fabrications" about Jews as an ethnicity or Judaism as a religion.
Nicholas Kollerstrom is an English historian of science and author who is known for the promotion of Holocaust denial and other conspiracy theories. Formerly an honorary research fellow in The Department for Science and Technology Studies (STS) at University College London (UCL), he is the author of several books, including Gardening and Planting by the Moon, Newton's Forgotten Lunar Theory (2000), Crop Circles (2002), and Terror on the Tube (2009). He has also written entries for the Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers.
The Right Stuff is a neo-Nazi and white nationalist blog and discussion forum and the host of several podcasts, including The Daily Shoah. Founded by American neo-Nazi Mike Enoch, the website promotes Holocaust denial, and coined the use of "echoes", an antisemitic marker that uses triple parentheses around names to identify Jewish people.
Michael Enoch Isaac Peinovich, more commonly known as Mike Enoch, is an American neo-Nazi, antisemitic conspiracy theorist, Holocaust denier, blogger, and podcast host. He founded the alt-right media network The Right Stuff and podcast The Daily Shoah. Through his work, Enoch ridicules African Americans, Jews, and other minorities, advocates racial discrimination, and promotes conspiracy theories such as Holocaust denial and white genocide.
The Unz Review is an American website and blog, founded and edited by far-right activist and Holocaust denier Ron Unz. It is known for its publication of far-right, conspiracy theory, white nationalist, antisemitic writings and pro-Russia propaganda.
Antisemitism within the Labour Party of the United Kingdom (UK) dates back to its establishment. One early example was comments about "Jewish finance" during the Boer War. In the 2000s, controversies arose over comments by Labour politicians regarding an alleged "Jewish lobby", a comparison by Ken Livingstone of a Jewish journalist to a concentration camp guard, and a 2005 Labour attack on Jewish Conservative Party politician Michael Howard.
The London Forum is a loose organisation of far-right individuals based in London but with regional headquarters across the United Kingdom. Emerging in 2011 out of a split within the British far-right, meetings were regularly held by the organisation. These have been met with significant protests by anti-fascist activists and have been infiltrated by journalists, most notably a 2015 investigation of the group by The Mail on Sunday with the help of Searchlight, an anti-fascist magazine that focuses on the British far-right.
Since the foundation of the Conservative Party in 1834, there have been numerous instances of antisemitism in the party, from both Conservative party leaders and other party figures.
Turning Point UK (TPUK) is a British offshoot of the American student pressure group Turning Point USA. 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. 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.
Stuart Waiton is a senior sociology and criminology lecturer at Abertay University. He teaches on matters relating to anti-social behaviour, moral panics, hate crimes, and politics. Ewan Gurr of the Evening Telegraph describes Waiton's political background as "on the far left of the political spectrum and rooted firmly within the revolutionary communist tradition". Waiton described himself as involved in anti-racist campaigns in the 1980s and 1990s as a member of Workers Against Racism, an anti-racist group associated with the British Revolutionary Communist Party.
Keep Talking is a conspiracy theory discussion group in the United Kingdom. Topics of its speakers have included the supposed faking of 9/11 and the 7/7 London terror attacks, the alleged hidden agendas behind assassinations of public figures and "secret" agendas of the Brexit negotiations. Researchers Dave Rich of the Community Security Trust and Joe Mulhall of Hope not Hate, after a three-year investigation into the group, reported that meetings often discussed alleged Jewish conspiracies, including Holocaust denial. Rich and Mulhall also reported that regular attendees included far-right activists, at least one former Labour Party member, and unspecified far-left activists.
Kay Allison "Kate" Shemirani is a British conspiracy theorist, anti-vaccine activist and former nurse who lost her licence to practise in 2020 for misconduct. She is best known for promoting conspiracy theories about COVID-19, vaccinations and 5G technology. Shemirani has been described by The Jewish Chronicle as a leading figure of a movement that includes conspiracy theorists as well as far-left and far-right activists.
Europa: The Last Battle is a 2017 English-language Swedish ten-part neo-Nazi propaganda film directed, written, produced, and edited by Tobias Bratt, a Swedish far-right activist associated with the Nordic Resistance Movement, a European neo-Nazi movement. It promotes antisemitic conspiracy theories, many in relation to World War II including Holocaust denial. The film has been promoted across multiple social media platforms by individual users, particularly white nationalists and other conspiracy theorists.