Palestine Solidarity Movement

Palestine Solidarity Movement Grassroots Movement for Freedom and Justice. United for Liberation, Driven by Solidarity.
حركه تضامن مع فلسطين
📍Bournemouth
(3)

11/06/2026

Dear followers and friends
Now that the election is over, I would like to thank everyone who supported, encouraged, and voted for me throughout the campaign.

While the result was not what I had hoped for, I am proud to have stood up for the values and issues I believe in. Democracy is about participation, and I am grateful to everyone who engaged respectfully throughout the process.

Unfortunately, during the campaign, I was subjected to a coordinated smear campaign, including the circulation of misleading information and attempts to misrepresent my views and actions. Rather than respond to rumours, I believe in transparency and facts. For those interested, I have attached a video that provides context and allows people to make up their own minds based on the evidence.

Although the election has ended, my commitment to our community has not. This page will remain active and will transition from an election campaign page into a platform for community engagement, local issues, accountability, and the causes I care deeply about.

Thank you once again for your support. Elections come and go, but our responsibility to work for a better community remains.

The work continues.
https://x.com/CrispinShow/status/2057116633768890873?s=20

09/06/2026

This is what smear campaigns do.

During the recent town council election, Feda, a British Palestinian, was subjected to a campaign of smears that didn’t just stay online.

In this clip, she speaks about how that climate led to her being physically intimidated.

No one should be treated as a threat for standing up, speaking clearly, or being Palestinian in public life.

This clip is from Feda’s interview with
Please watch, share, and head to Crispin’s YouTube channel for the full interview.

07/06/2026

Caught up with Leigh Cadno at the Red Line demo in Cardigan a couple of weeks ago, where he gave us a short history lesson on Rebecca - or Merched Beca, Rebecca’s Daughters - one of Cymru’s (Wales') great symbols of resistance.

The Rebecca Riots took place mainly in rural west Wales between 1839 and 1843, when ordinary communities rose up against toll gates and the systems squeezing them dry.

Rebecca wasn’t just one person. She was a name, a disguise, a warning, and a rallying cry.

She represents collective defiance.
The refusal to be quietly broken.
The understanding that when power builds gates against the people, the people have every right to question who put them there.
SOUND FAMILIAR?

From Cymru to Palestine
We are The Red Line.✊

02/06/2026

Eid should mean new clothes, full tables, noisy homes, sticky fingers, laughter, sweets passed from hand to hand.

In Gaza, even the smallest joys now have to be fought for.

Last week, through our PSM soup kitchen, we were able to give out sweets to children for Eid - a tiny moment of softness in a place where childhood has been stolen from so many.

It isn’t enough.
It will never be enough.

But for a few moments, there were smiles. There was sweetness. There was Eid.

To our community, donors and supporters around the world: thank you for making this possible.

These children deserve so much more.

🍉❤️‍🩹

01/06/2026
01/06/2026

Another incredible demo in Wales!

24/05/2026

Today at MOD Aberporth, the Red Line came to the Welsh coast.

Because genocide doesn’t only happen where the bombs fall.

It is built through the systems that test, sell, fund and normalise modern warfare - the drones, the weapons, the contracts, the misleading language of “defence” while Palestinians in Gaza are being starved, bombed and erased.

MOD Aberporth is not just a remote military site by the sea. It is part of Britain’s weapons-testing infrastructure, including air-launched weapons and unmanned aerial systems. QinetiQ operates the range on behalf of the UK MOD.

And campaigners have long raised concerns about Aberporth’s links to drone technology connected to Israel’s military machinery.

So today we stood there because Wales should not be a testing ground for weapons used in oppression.

Not in our name.
Not from our skies.
Not while Gaza is being destroyed.

The line is RED.

And humanity has crossed it too many times.

STOP ARMING ISRAEL

23/05/2026

The Red Line is in Cardigan, Wales today.

78 years since the Nakba.78 years of dispossession, exile, stolen homes, stolen land, and a people told again and again ...
18/05/2026

78 years since the Nakba.

78 years of dispossession, exile, stolen homes, stolen land, and a people told again and again to disappear.

And still, Palestine remains.

On Saturday, we marched in London not only to remember the Nakba, but to say clearly: it did not end in 1948.

It continues in Gaza, in the West Bank, in Jerusalem, in the refugee camps, and in every Palestinian family still waiting for justice and return.

We march because silence is complicity.
We march because Palestine is not a footnote, not a “conflict”, not a debate.

It is a people.
It is a homeland.
It is a right to return.
It is freedom.🕊

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