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MARK KERRISON | Photojournalist

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  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-031.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-021.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-042.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-050.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-046.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-039.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-026.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-049.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-023.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Lauri Love joins thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protesting in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-022.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-015.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-007.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-016.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-008.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-035.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-029.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-044.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-024.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-018.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-038.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-020.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-037.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest outside Downing Street against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-043.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-047.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-048.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-045.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-028.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-025.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-014.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-034.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-040.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-003.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-027.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-041.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-019.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-030.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Activists from Class War protest with thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist and LGBT+ groups, demonstrating in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-036.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-033.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-032.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-017.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-051.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-009.jpg