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Britain's Balancing Act: Inside the Battle Over the UK's First Anti-Muslim Hostility Definition

On March 9, 2026, Communities Secretary Steve Reed stood before the House of Commons to announce what the government described as a historic step: the adoption of Britain's first-ever working definition of anti-Muslim hostility [1]. The definition arrived as part of a sweeping social cohesion action plan titled Protecting What Matters, and it landed squarely in the middle of one of the most contested debates in British public life — where the line falls between protecting a minority community from hatred and preserving the right to criticize a religion.

The announcement was years in the making. But within hours, it had managed the rare feat of being simultaneously condemned as both too weak and too strong, an outcome that may say more about the depth of Britain's cultural divisions than about the definition itself.

The Definition: What It Says

The government's definition encompasses three interconnected domains [2]:

Criminal conduct: "Intentionally engaging in, assisting or encouraging criminal acts — including acts of violence, vandalism, harassment, or intimidation, whether physical, verbal, written or electronically communicated — that are directed at Muslims because of their religion or at those who are perceived to be Muslim."

Prejudicial stereotyping: Treating Muslims as "a collective group defined by fixed and negative characteristics, with the intention of encouraging hatred against them."

Institutional discrimination: Engaging in "unlawful discrimination intended to disadvantage Muslims in public and economic life."

Crucially, the definition is non-statutory — it carries no legal force and does not amend existing criminal or equality law. The government has described it as a framework for public bodies, employers, and institutions to recognize and address anti-Muslim prejudice [2].

Equally significant is what the definition does not contain: the word "Islamophobia." This omission — deliberate and contested — sits at the heart of the controversy.

A Decade of Failed Attempts

The road to this definition has been long and politically fraught. In 2018, the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on British Muslims published a landmark report proposing that "Islamophobia is rooted in racism and is a type of racism that targets expressions of Muslimness or perceived Muslimness" [3]. The definition gained backing from over 800 Muslim community organizations, more than 100 academics, and — crucially — the Labour Party while in opposition [4].

But the APPG definition also drew fierce opposition. The Policy Exchange think tank, backed by former diplomats and security figures, argued it would amount to a "backdoor blasphemy law," chilling legitimate debate about Islam and Islamic extremism [5]. Christian, Hindu, Sikh, and secular organizations raised similar objections, warning that it failed to distinguish between hostility toward people and criticism of a religion [6].

The Conservative government under successive prime ministers declined to adopt it. When Labour won the July 2024 general election, many Muslim communities expected the party to honor its previous endorsement. Instead, the new government quietly shelved the APPG definition and commissioned a fresh review [4].

In February 2025, the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) appointed an independent working group chaired by former Attorney General Dominic Grieve KC to draft a new definition [7]. The group, consisting of five experts including representatives from Muslim communities and academia, was given until late summer 2025 to report.

The Free Speech Firewall

The government's decision to replace "Islamophobia" with "anti-Muslim hostility" was not merely semantic. It reflected a deliberate effort to insulate the definition from the charge that it would shield Islam as a religion from criticism [1].

Accompanying guidance explicitly protects a wide range of expression, including [2]:

  • Criticisms of Islam or its practices
  • "Ridiculing or insulting a religion or belief, including Islam, or portraying it in a manner that some of its adherents might find disrespectful or scandalous"
  • Raising concerns in the public interest
  • Academic and political debate

Reed told the Commons there was "absolutely no question" the definition would introduce blasphemy laws by the back door, insisting it "safeguards our fundamental right to freedom of speech" [8].

Humanists UK, which had vigorously opposed the 2018 APPG definition, welcomed the new framework. The organization praised its grounding in "human rights principles, particularly the right to freedom of religion or belief and the right to free expression" [9]. It also highlighted protections for ex-Muslims who may face discrimination based on perceived identity while discussing their reasons for leaving Islam.

The Hate Crime Backdrop

The definition did not emerge in a vacuum. Home Office statistics published in October 2025 revealed that hate crimes targeting Muslims in England and Wales had reached record levels [10].

Religious Hate Crimes in England and Wales by Targeted Religion (Year Ending March 2025)
Source: Home Office / GOV.UK
Data as of Oct 9, 2025CSV

In the year ending March 2025, police recorded 4,478 hate crimes targeted at Muslims — up 19% from the previous year and representing 45% of all religious hate crimes [10]. The figures were driven by a dramatic spike in August 2024, when 10,097 racially or religiously aggravated offences were recorded in a single month — the highest monthly total ever documented [10].

That spike coincided with the Southport tragedy. On July 29, 2024, a knife attack at a Taylor Swift-themed children's dance class killed three young girls and injured eight others. Within hours, far-right accounts on social media had falsely identified the perpetrator as a Muslim asylum seeker [11]. Posts containing this disinformation reached an estimated 27 million impressions within 24 hours, triggering riots across multiple English towns and cities that targeted mosques, Muslim-owned businesses, and ethnic minorities [11].

Anti-Muslim Hate Crimes in England and Wales (2019-2025)
Source: Home Office / GOV.UK Hate Crime Statistics
Data as of Oct 9, 2025CSV

The government responded with £10 million in emergency security funding for mosques and Islamic centres, and subsequently announced a new "Combatting Hate Against Muslims" fund [12]. But the Southport episode underscored a pattern that had already been intensifying: the Israel-Hamas conflict beginning in October 2023 had driven anti-Muslim hate crimes up 13% in the year ending March 2024, while anti-Jewish hate crimes more than doubled over the same period [10].

Community Fracture: Who Supports What

The definition's reception has exposed deep fault lines — not only between supporters and critics, but within the Muslim community itself.

The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), the UK's largest Muslim umbrella body, declined to endorse the definition. Secretary General Dr. Wajid Akhter described it as "a diminished version" of the independent working group's own recommendations, citing "concerns about dilution, the motivations of those driving the dilution, the lack of transparency and meaningful engagement with grassroots community representatives" [4]. The MCB said it had been "effectively shut out" of the consultation process and continues to advocate for the 2018 APPG definition.

The MCB outlined a set of demands it expects the government to meet within six months, including positioning anti-Muslim hostility work alongside antisemitism efforts, regulating social media algorithms that amplify inflammatory content, and adequately resourcing the new Special Representative role to match the existing Antisemitism Advisor position [4].

Shaista Gohir, a crossbench peer who served on the Grieve working group, offered a more positive assessment. She noted the government had adopted "most of the wording" proposed by the group, and explained that references to "racialisation" had been removed because the term is not widely understood by the general public [7].

Faith leaders from other communities have expressed mixed reactions. Some Christian and Hindu leaders who opposed the APPG definition have cautiously welcomed the new framework's explicit free speech protections, while others worry about mission creep if the definition gains institutional traction [6].

Free speech campaigners remain divided. While organizations like Humanists UK endorsed the definition, critics from the right argue that even a non-statutory definition could be weaponized by institutions seeking to police speech about Islam, particularly in universities and schools [13].

The IHRA Parallel — and Its Limits

The government has explicitly modeled the anti-Muslim hostility definition on the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) working definition of antisemitism, which the UK adopted in 2016 [14]. Both are non-statutory and advisory. But the parallel may be more aspirational than practical.

The IHRA definition, despite lacking legal force, has achieved significant institutional penetration — adopted by universities, local councils, and political parties, sometimes controversially. Its success was driven by sustained political consensus, cross-party support, and organized advocacy [14].

The anti-Muslim hostility definition, by contrast, begins from a weaker position. The exclusion of the MCB from meaningful consultation, the deliberate distancing from the term "Islamophobia," and the working group members who have already faced public abuse all suggest that the political consensus necessary for robust institutional uptake may be fragile [14].

Professor Tahir Abbas, writing on the definition's prospects, noted that "unlike the IHRA definition — which, though similarly non-binding, has achieved significant institutional uptake through political pressure and cultural expectation — the anti-Muslim hostility definition lacks equivalent mechanisms of compliance" [14].

The Bigger Picture: Protecting What Matters

The definition is one piece of a larger social cohesion strategy. The Protecting What Matters action plan, published alongside the definition, commits the government to [15]:

  • Up to £5 billion in targeted funding over the next decade for more than 200 communities
  • A Common Ground Resilience Fund providing £5 million in 2026/27 for local cohesion initiatives
  • Stronger powers to shut down charities promoting extremism and to stop hate preachers from entering the UK
  • A cross-government Cohesion Support and Interventions Function to provide rapid support to councils and communities facing tensions
  • An annual State of Extremism report
  • The appointment of a Special Representative on anti-Muslim hostility to advise schools, universities, and public services

The plan also sets "clear expectations around integration" for people seeking to settle in the UK, including English language proficiency, local participation, and "respect for shared values" [15].

What Happens Next

The definition's real test will be implementation. Without statutory backing, its impact depends entirely on voluntary adoption by institutions and the political will to resource and monitor it.

The appointment of a Special Representative — sometimes described in media coverage as an "anti-Muslim hostility czar" — will be a key indicator. If the role is adequately funded and given genuine authority, it could drive institutional change in a manner analogous to the independent Antisemitism Adviser. If it becomes a symbolic position with limited resources, the definition may remain a paper exercise [4].

Schools and universities are likely to be early battlegrounds. The government has indicated that educational institutions should incorporate the definition into their approaches to prejudice and discrimination, a prospect that has already drawn skepticism from commentators who worry about surveillance of legitimate debate [13].

For Muslim communities, the stakes are immediate and tangible. The 4,478 anti-Muslim hate crimes recorded in the year ending March 2025 represent real people — targeted on the street, at work, in schools, and online because of their faith or appearance [10]. For many, the question is not whether the definition's language is perfect, but whether it will translate into the protection and resources they need.

The MCB's six-month deadline for the government to demonstrate concrete action introduces a built-in accountability mechanism. If the government fails to meet those benchmarks, the UK's largest Muslim umbrella body could become one of the definition's most vocal critics — an outcome that would undermine its legitimacy among the communities it was designed to protect.

Britain's first-ever definition of anti-Muslim hostility is, at its core, an exercise in drawing lines — between prejudice and critique, between protection and censorship, between symbolic gesture and meaningful change. Where those lines ultimately fall may depend less on the words themselves than on the political courage to enforce them.

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