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This footage shows nine minutes of the march in just 90 seconds, starting at 14.45GMT.
An estimated 1 million people flooded the streets of central London on Saturday in favour of a final say on Brexit.
Protesters demanding another Brexit referendum reacted with jubilation as MPs voted to force a further delay.
They were charity assistants, health professionals, teachers and parents … all demanding a final say in their future.
An aerial image of a mass of people near Hyde Park Corner in London has been shared widely on social media, with people claiming it shows the anti-lockdown protest on 24 April 2021.
Multiple Instagram, Facebook and Twitter posts have shared an aerial photo which they claim shows a protest against coronavirus lockdowns in the UK capital of London in April 2021. The claim is false: the photo shows a march in October 2018 that called for a fresh referendum on Brexit.
Hundreds of people waving European Union flags on Saturday rallied in central London calling for Britain to rejoin the bloc.
Thousands of protesters marched through central London calling for the UK to rejoin the European Union on Saturday (22 October). / The National Rejoin March, organised by lorry driver Peter Corr, saw protestors walk from Park Lane to Parliament Square. / Attendees carried signs saying “Brexit was never going to work”, “For lower bills #rejoin the EU” and “We voted romaine”.
They came to London from across Britain and Europe, filled with enthusiasm for the new three Rs: revoke, remain, reform.
Number of people who have pre-registered on the website is 'significantly higher' than those for October march, organisers say.
Politicians from all parties have urged the Prime Minister to give the public the final say over Brexit at the Put it to the People march in London.
British voters now say that they would vote to rejoin the EU in a new referendum.
The March. The Revoke petition. The Government that can’t govern and the amendment that put MPs in charge of Britain’s destiny at last. Was this the week that Brexiters lost control of Brexit?
We were expecting a funeral march. Instead we got a victory procession – of sorts. After the big march and the even bigger vote, heroic Best For Britain march organiser Naomi Smith and truly knackered journo Ian Dunt join Andrew Harrison in an echoey Portcullis House to work out exactly what happened, and what happens next.
Alyn Smith spoke at a rally in Edinburgh on Tuesday evening, marking the third anniversary of the UK leaving the EU.
With large-scale, pro-EU protests set to hit London next month, UK citizens seem to have lost patience with Brexit.
The National Rejoin March on 22 October 2022 was a sunny, joyous occasion in the heart of London. It was also big – bigger than even the march organisers were expecting.
An aerial image of a large protest has been shared on Facebook and Instagram alongside a claim that it shows an anti-lockdown demonstration in the UK capital of London in March 2021. The claim is false; the photo in fact shows an anti-Brexit protest in March 2019.
This was the silent majority finding its voice, the centre turning radical, the slow-to-anger rising up against the destruction of their values and their country.
When it comes to placard making, recent political turmoil has provided an abundance of creative inspiration.
Demonstrators say Brexit and austerity have increased support for leaving the UK. / Thousands have demonstrated in Cardiff to call for an independent Wales in what organisers said was the first such march in Welsh history.
The National Rejoin March 2 attracted remarkable coverage from world media - unlike UK mainstream media. One of Spain’s leading papers carried this insightful on-site report by its London correspondent
EU exit ‘slow death that has been bleeding UK dry for years’. / Thousands of protesters have marched through central London calling for the UK to rejoin the EU.