Brother of murdered Stephen Lawrence slams Boris Johnson for having ‘extreme’ views

The brother of murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence has offered to meet Boris Johnson to discuss racial issues – after slamming the Prime Minister for his ‘extreme’ views and attacking his Cabinet for a lack of diversity.

Stuart Lawrence appeared on Good Morning Britain today where he told hosts Adil Ray and Charlotte Hawkins the country now needs to implement changes to bring about equality. 

His brother Stephen was murdered in a racially motivated attack while waiting for a bus in Well Hall Road, Eltham, south-east London, 27 years ago. 

Mr Lawrence now says that, following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, he wants to talk to Mr Johnson about his recommendations for a fairer society. 

He said: ‘Since poor George [Floyd] lost his life, I’ve been saying I’m willing to sit down with Boris to talk to him about some of things I think in particular could help to change this nation to make it a better place.

‘Since then I’ve just heard the same things coming out of his mouth, some of his team say the same sort of things as well.

Nearly a third of black people said that racism has gotten worse in their lifetime, while the majority of Britons believe that racism is rife in the UK

Stuart Lawrence appeared on Good Morning Britain today where he told hosts Adil Ray and Charlotte Hawkins the country now needs to implement changes to bring about equality

Stuart Lawrence appeared on Good Morning Britain today where he told hosts Adil Ray and Charlotte Hawkins the country now needs to implement changes to bring about equality

‘It’s about changing the rhetoric of 400 years, this is what we keep on talking about as well, institutions have been established and set up in such a way that black people have been suppressed, we have been put to the side, we have not been seen as equal.’ 

It came as a new poll reveals nearly four in five black people say they have suffered racial abuse. 

And speaking as part of an ITV panel discussing racism in the UK since the death of his brother in 1993, Stuart Lawrence said action was needed to make change happen. 

On race relations in the country veteran broadcaster John Humphreys – who was on of the panel – claimed that Enoch Powell’s inflammatory ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech would not be made by a politician today.

But Mr Lawrence said the current Prime Minister has some ‘extreme’ opinions and that the fight against racism was not over. 

He said: Now we’ve got a current Prime Minister who has said some really extreme things. He used the word ‘spectacle’ when he spoke about George Floyd and for me that means we haven’t moved forward enough, it means we are not represented enough, that top table at cabinet, there’s no-one that looks like me there.’

Mr Lawrence said: 'It's about changing the rhetoric of 400 years, this is what we keep on talking about as well, institutions have been established and set up in such a way that black people have been suppressed, we have been put to the side, we have not been seen as equal'

Mr Lawrence said: ‘It’s about changing the rhetoric of 400 years, this is what we keep on talking about as well, institutions have been established and set up in such a way that black people have been suppressed, we have been put to the side, we have not been seen as equal’

Speaking as part of an ITV panel discussing racism in the UK since the death of his brother in 1993, Stuart Lawrence said action was needed to make change happen

Speaking as part of an ITV panel discussing racism in the UK since the death of his brother in 1993, Stuart Lawrence said action was needed to make change happen

Stuart Lawrence said the current Prime Minister (pictured) has some 'extreme' opinions and that the fight against racism was not over

Stuart Lawrence said the current Prime Minister (pictured) has some ‘extreme’ opinions and that the fight against racism was not over

Stephen Lawrence was stabbed to death in an unprovoked racist attack in Eltham, South-East London on April 22, 1993

Stephen Lawrence was stabbed to death in an unprovoked racist attack in Eltham, South-East London on April 22, 1993

He added: ‘This fight here ends with me, with the adults in this room and how we can make sure change really happens.

‘We’ve got to stop the lip service, we’ve got to put things into action, we’ve got to start changing policies and laws.’  

A timeline of the Stephen Lawrence murder case 

April 22, 1993: Stephen is stabbed to death in an unprovoked racist attack in Eltham, South-East London. Within days Neil and Jamie Acourt, Gary Dobson, Luke Knight and David Norris are identified as prime suspects.

July 1993: Prosecutors drop a case against Neil Acourt and Luke Knight. Months later an inquest is halted amid claims of ‘dramatic’ new evidence.

April 1996: An Old Bailey private prosecution brought by the Lawrence family against Neil Acourt, Knight and Dobson collapses.

February 1997: An inquest jury finds Stephen was ‘unlawfully killed by five white youths’. The next day this newspaper accuses all five men under the front page headline ‘Murderers’.

February 1999: The Macpherson report finds police guilty of an appalling catalogue of mistakes and ‘institutional racism’.

April 2005: The double jeopardy principle, preventing suspects being tried twice for the same crime, is scrapped for certain offences when there is compelling new evidence.

November 2007: Scotland Yard confirms it is investigating new forensic evidence.

May 2011: The Court of Appeal agrees Dobson’s 1996 acquittal for the murder can be quashed and he can be put on trial again.

January 2012: Dobson and Norris are found guilty of Stephen’s murder.

September 2016: Police announce they have received ‘significant information’ after a fresh appeal to identify a woman whose DNA was found on a bag strap left at the murder scene.

April 2018: Scotland Yard admits it has no new lines of inquiry in the investigation into Stephen’s murder and is preparing to shelve it.

It comes as a poll for the programme found 77% of black people said they had experienced racial abuse in person. 

Nearly a third of black people said that racism has gotten worse in their lifetime, while the majority of Britons believe that racism is rife in the UK. 

Nearly two-thirds of the population think there is a ‘fair amount’ or ‘great deal’ of racism in the UK, according to the study.  

It also found that black respondents are twice as likely as white respondents to say that racism is widespread. 

In a bleak view of racism in the UK, the poll found that 77% of black people say they have experienced racial abuse or slurs in person. 

55 percent of participants of ethnic minority backgrounds said racism had stayed the same or worsened in their lifetime, according to the study which was carried out by polling consultancy Number Cruncher Politics. 

The survey, which was conducted for ITV’s ‘Stephen Lawrence: Has Britain Changed?’, also found that 69 percent of ethnic minority respondents and 80 percent of black people say they have been asked ‘where they are really from’. 

Of the black people in the ethnic minority group polled, 34 percent said the level of racism in Britain has increased.

Meanwhile 25 percent said it has decreased and 30 percent said they had not seen much change. 

In comparison, nearly 39 percent of white participants said racism had decreased in their lifetimes, 27 percent said it had increased and 24 percent said it had stayed the same. 

53 percent of ethnic minority people and 76 percent of black people who participated in the polling said they feel they have been viewed with suspicion, for example when in a shop, while 32 percent of ethnic minority respondents said they had experienced violence or threats of violence. 

43 percent of ethnic minority people and 50 percent of black people believe they have experienced discrimination in the workplace. 

68 percent of the overall population polled strongly or generally support using education as a means of combating racism.

68 percent of white people, 68 percent of ethnic minority respondents and 78 percent of black people agreed that there should be an increased focus on British history, including around the empire, in the school curriculum. 

There is a split in opinion among racial groups on whether or not the Black Lives Matter movement has advanced the cause of racial equality.

White people are most likely to think it has not (44 percent), with 33 percent saying it has, and 23 percent who don’t know. People from minority ethnic backgrounds disagree, with 43 percent saying it has, 30 percent saying it has not, and 27 percent who don’t know. Black people more strongly feel it has (56 percent) vs just 23 percent who believe it has not, and 22 percent who don’t know.

The poll comes after the death of George Floyd in the US sparked widespread Black Lives Matter protests in the UK

The poll comes after the death of George Floyd in the US sparked widespread Black Lives Matter protests in the UK

55 percent of participants of ethnic minority backgrounds said racism had stayed the same or worsened in their lifetime. In comparison, nearly 39 percent of white participants said racism had decreased in their lifetimes, 27 percent said it had increased and 24 percent said it had stayed the same

55 percent of participants of ethnic minority backgrounds said racism had stayed the same or worsened in their lifetime. In comparison, nearly 39 percent of white participants said racism had decreased in their lifetimes, 27 percent said it had increased and 24 percent said it had stayed the same

The poll comes after the death of George Floyd in the US sparked widespread Black Lives Matter protests in the UK, with many calling for an end to racism and police brutality. 

Matt Singh, founder of Number Cruncher Politics, said: ‘This research sheds new light on how people view racism in modern Britain, their lived experience, and what they think should and shouldn’t change.’ 

Responding to ITV’s poll which found that 77 percent of black people, 59 percent of ethnic minority people and 42 percent of white people thought the police were racist, Met Police assistant commissioner Helen Ball said: ‘Those are devastating findings, they really hurt me, I think, and they will hurt many of my colleagues, who are joining policing to make a difference to people, to help people in crisis and to rescue people and are well-motivated and are working really hard to make people’s lives better. 

‘It’s not something that I experience, it’s not my experience of the Metropolitan Police in 2020, but I respect those findings and we must continue to talk with all our communities to make sure that we are providing the policing service that is right for them.

‘One thing that I think we have to say has changed significantly is the number of black and Asian and ethnic minority people in policing. 

‘So in 1999 when the MacPherson report came out, one police officer in 33 was from a BAME background. Now one in seven. That’s such a significant change and that is really changing policing all the way through.’