The Cross of St. George is appearing up and down England, in numbers usually only seen during soccer tournaments such as the World Cup.
“Operation Raise the Colours” is the name given to the movement, which first gained interest on social media over the summer and has continued into September.
It has come amid rising concerns and ongoing protests against illegal immigration, centering in particular around the British government’s policy of housing asylum seekers in hotels.
Despite both the Cross of St. George and the Union Flag—also known as the Union Jack—being recognized as national symbols, often flown by national and local governments, their appearance, en masse, across the country has been seen by some as politically polarizing. Flag flying in Britain is not the near ubiquitous practice it is in the United States.
Where It All Began
Beginning with flags hung from lampposts in Birmingham, the movement escalated to red crosses spray-painted onto roundabouts and other elements of public infrastructure, sparking an outpouring of both support and derision from within and without the UK.However, as of Sept. 5, numerous flags were still visible throughout the city.
“Birmingham Council took them down, but the patriots put them back up. Rule Britannia,” the user wrote.
Ground-zero for the “operation” was in the heart of England, in the suburbs of the nation’s “second city,” Birmingham.
The page, which has been active since Aug. 10, has currently generated more than 21,500 pounds (about $29,000) in donations, which it says will be spent on purchasing “flags, poles and cable ties.”

Entering Weoley Castle, the flags appear in their multitudes. Strung from lampposts and hung from windows, Union Jacks and St. George’s flags are everywhere. As far as the eye can see, they flutter in the wind.
A large English flag flies outside the eponymous local pub, the Weoley Castle. Inside, among memorabilia from local soccer teams, famed English rock bands, and the Birmingham-based hit drama “Peaky Blinders,” more flags bedeck the makeshift DJ booth in the corner, along with a permanent memorial to fallen soldiers.
Pub patrons who spoke to The Epoch Times said the flags went up around town some six weeks ago. They expressed universal support for the movement, but said that they had not been directly involved.
One pubgoer, who asked not to be named, said the media had attempted to portray the flags as racist. However, she rejected the notion that there was anything racist about the proliferation of national banners, and said they had been put up by the local community—which she described as “multicultural.”
Ross told The Epoch Times he was inspired by the Weoley Warriors and has a friend in the group, which has been supplying him with flags.
His motivation, he said, was born from frustration with the current state of the UK, but primarily from patriotism.
“So if [the media] want to spin it like that and say it’s against the illegal migrants, they can, but it’s not me,” he said. “Personally, I am all for it being a patriotic thing and a reminder to everybody, this country represents law and order, and we should be proud to be British and not embarrassed.”
Reactions from people who have seen him putting up the flags have been overwhelmingly positive, he said. He has not experienced any pushback from the local council or the police, although he mentioned one incident in which some had suggested what he was doing was “illegal.”
He said he believes the flags serve as a “tangible reminder” to politicians that the people of the UK want it to be a “safer place.”
“I think this is a brilliant way of doing it,” he added. “It’s the most peaceful way that you could do it.”
The Reaction
The campaign has been backed by numerous figures on the right of British politics.
Hope Not Hate specifically cited the initiative’s backing by Robinson, among others.
“We do feel the movement is quite dangerous and comes at a tipping point where the far right is trying to build,” he said.
The left-wing Labour government has been less critical of the campaign.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was “proud” of the flag of England and has one in his home. However, he also said he thought that sometimes when the flags are “used purely for divisive purposes, actually it devalues the flag.”
Why Now?
“These things ... don’t just emerge,” Robert Oulds of the Bruges Group, an independent think tank based in London, told The Epoch Times, giving his view of the movement.“They come from long-held beliefs about the country, national notions of national identity, and national symbols are an important part of that.
“British people are particularly proud of and proud of these symbols. They’ve just been suppressed for too, too long by authorities that are not in favor of them, and want to create some new identity.”
That involves “a different notion of national identity,” he said, which precludes the nation state in favor of “a set of values, one of which would be multiculturalism.”
“People can see somewhat belatedly, that what they knew, the country that they grew up in, and what they would hope to pass on to their children ... is slipping away,” Oulds said.







