Number of
people who say Britons must be born in UK is rising, study shows
Exclusive:
Research finds ‘worrying’ surge in support for hard-right narratives on
national identity
Eleni
Courea Political correspondent
Mon 29
Dec 2025 18.00 GMT
The
number of people who believe “Britishness” is something you are born with has
almost doubled in two years, according to research that warns of a rising tide
of ethno-nationalism in Britain.
Although
a majority of the public still believe being British is rooted in shared
values, a growing proportion see it as a product of ethnicity, birthplace and
ancestry, according to analysis carried out by the Institute for Public Policy
Research (IPPR) and shared with the Guardian.
About
one-third of people (36%) thought a person must be born in Britain to be truly
British, up from one in five (19%) in 2023, a YouGov poll carried out this
month for the thinktank found.
Supporters
of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK held the most extreme views of any party backers,
with 71% saying that having British ancestry was a prerequisite for someone to
be truly British, and 59% saying they believed the nation was an ethnic, not a
civic, community.
Strikingly,
the findings suggest a significant proportion of Farage’s supporters believe
being white is an important national characteristic, and that Britain has
become too ethnically diverse. More than a third (37%) of Reform UK voters said
they would be prouder of Britain if there were fewer people from minority
ethnic backgrounds in a decade’s time, and 10% said it was important to have
white skin to be a good British citizen.
The
results are evidence that hard-right narratives are having some success in
remoulding the public’s conception of national identity; overall, though,
popular opinion still supports a progressive vision of Britishness based on
shared values, not ethnicity or ancestry.
Parth
Patel, an associate director at IPPR, said: “Politicians and activists on the
right are trying to change how we think about ourselves and one another. They
believe belonging to this nation is defined by ancient rights and historical
claims, and want the rest of us to believe that too. Worryingly, they are
starting to change the hearts and minds of some people in Britain.
“Having
become used to opponents who challenge them mainly on grounds of economic
equality, progressives now find themselves locked in conflict with those who
reject far more basic tenets of human equality. We should be meeting this
contest with confidence and conviction.”
According
to the IPPR analysis, a majority of supporters of all big parties besides
Reform, including the Conservatives, thought the nation was a civic community
defined by shared values, and not an ethnic community defined by shared
ancestry.
When
asked what made a good British citizen, the most popular answers were obeying
the law, which was chosen by 64% of those polled, raising children to be kind
(62%) and working hard (48%). Just 8% said it involved sticking up for
British-born people above other groups, and 3% said it involved having white
skin.
When
asked what would make them proud of the country in a decade’s time, people
prioritised good public services and quality of life: 69% said a
well-functioning NHS, 53% cited affordability and 36% housing. Significantly
fewer prioritised reductions in immigration (28%) or ethnic diversity (13%).
The IPPR
called on Keir Starmer to build on the contents of his speech at the Labour
party conference, where he countered ethno-nationalist views, and develop a
programme of national renewal founded on a clear vision of what kind of country
Britain should be and what binds it together.
In his
speech, the prime minister said he was engaged in a “fight for the soul of our
country” with the hard right. “If you say or imply that people cannot be
English or British because of the colour of their skin, that mixed-heritage
families owe you an explanation, that people who have lived here for
generations … should now be deported, then mark my words, we will fight you
with everything we have because you are an enemy of national renewal,” he said.
Reform
has faced criticism for its threat to deport hundreds of thousands of people
who are legally resident in Britain by scrapping the main route to settlement.
Katie Lam, a Tory shadow minister, was also criticised for endorsing mass
deportations to make Britain “culturally coherent”, in remarks that were later
dismissed by the party’s leader, Kemi Badenoch.
In recent
months, senior politicians have warned of a surge in ethno-nationalist ideas,
many of them propagated online. The Guardian reported recently that in most
weeks, far-right political content appeared in the top-five stories circulating
on social media, according to weekly summaries commissioned by ministers.
A
far-right march organised by Tommy Robinson in Westminster in September
attracted between 110,000 and 150,000 people.
The home
secretary, Shabana Mahmood, who is a practising Muslim and was born in Britain
to Pakistani parents, said this month that she was “very proud to be a citizen
of a country that is as diverse as we are”.
Mahmood,
responding to the US government’s national security strategy, which criticised
European countries’ migration policies and called for the restoration of
“western identity”, said Britain was “a multifaith, multi-ethnic country” that
“allows people to have the calling of their own conscience to live their own
life free, but also has common rules that we all live by so that we live in
peace together”.
Badenoch,
who was born in Britain to Nigerian parents, said in an interview this summer
that she had faced a wave of online “ethno-nationalism” including “lots of
stuff about my race and my ethnicity”.
“They
will try and use the tropes about black people – that they’re lazy, they’re
corrupt or they’re all DEI [diversity, equity and inclusion] hires – and it’s
something which I find extraordinary because I take everyone at face value,”
she said.
Nick
Garland, an associate fellow at IPPR and a former political speechwriter for
the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, stressed that “a vast majority of the public
still believes in a nation built on shared values and common interests, not
birthplace or background”.
“The
urgent task for the government – and for progressives more broadly – is to give
voice to this belief by setting out a compelling alternative vision of the
nation: a story of who we are that looks forward, not back. The fight over what
it means to be British must be met by rejecting division and reclaiming a
shared, inclusive national project.”

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