Euro 2020: Johnson must back Rashford taking the knee - Gordon Brown

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-57439088

Version 0 of 7.

Boris Johnson should "publicly support" England footballer Marcus Rashford and his team mates in "taking the knee", former PM Gordon Brown has said.

He told the BBC that players were "bringing the whole country together" by adopting the pre-match gesture, in solidarity with Black Lives Matter.

Mr Rashford said taking the knee - set to continue through England's Euro 2020 campaign - was the "right thing to do".

But it has provoked booing from some sections of the crowd recently.

Downing Street has urged fans to be" respectful" of the players' decision, but it has not condemned the supporters who jeered when England played Austria and Romania in pre-tournament warm-up matches in Middlesbrough.

And education minister Gillian Keegan told BBC One's Question Time on Thursday that taking the knee was "creating division", saying Black Lives Matter believed in "defunding the police and the overthrow of capitalism".

Why some fans say they boo England for taking the knee

All you need to know about Euro 2020

But, speaking on the BBC's Political Thinking with Nick Robinson podcast, Mr Brown said the team had taken a "difficult decision".

He added: "I don't think it was right for Downing Street not to support Marcus Rashford.

"Marcus Rashford has stood up for some really good causes over the last year, but he's also stood up for far better race relations and community relations in this country. So we should support the team when it does this.

"I hope that the crowds... will actually acknowledge that the footballers are doing something very important and bringing the whole country together."

'Culture wars'

Mr Brown, who was Labour prime minister from 2007 to 2010, told Nick Robinson he would "like Boris Johnson to come out publicly to support the England football team in what they do".

He warned it would be "bad for Britain" if "culture wars started to develop" and "people seized on one instance of someone doing something and trying to make it a big issue that divided the public rather than united the public".

Asked about the booing on Sunday, Mr Rashford said: "It's something that we can't control, and for us we believe [taking the knee is] the right thing to do, so we're going to continue to do it."

England manager Gareth Southgate has said his team's gesture, adopted throughout the last Premier League season, is not "political" but an attempt to highlight racial injustice.

Wales will also take the knee at Euro 2020.

However, Scotland's team will stand rather than kneel before their matches, with manager Steve Clarke describing the message behind taking the knee as having become "maybe a little bit diluted".

Gillian Keegan said most of the fans booing the England team would also be against racism

On Question Time, Ms Keegan said people were "perfectly free" to take the knee, but added: "If you want to say, do I think it's symbolism more than action? Of course it is."

And she said it was "creating division", adding: "And by the way, the people who are booing, I'm pretty sure most of them would like to end racism as well. They disagree. There's a lot of things that have been, you know, there's different things that people are interpreting.

"There are some Conservative MPs [who] are very much against it. Why? Because Black Lives Matter stands for things that they don't stand for. It's really about defunding the police and the overthrow of capitalism, which is, you know, Black Lives Matter, the actual political organisation."

American footballer Colin Kaepernick started kneeling during the pre-game national anthem in the NFL in 2016, in protest at police violence against African-Americans.

Since last year, when the Black Lives Matter movement gained momentum in the wake of the murder of George Floyd by a police officer in the US, many sportspeople around the world have chosen to take the knee.