No Platform
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No Platform was a British anti-fascist group formed in the mid 1990s by anti-fascists willing to carry on the militant "physical force" tradition of anti-fascism begun by the 43 Group and carried on by the 62 Group, some elements of the original Anti-Nazi League and then Anti-Fascist Action until the latter's retirement from militant anti-fascism in the mid-1990s.
The name comes from the "No Platform for Fascists" policy adopted by many trade and students' unions in the late 1970s and the 80s. This policy involved denying the right of free speech to anyone they considered "fascist" and (sometimes violently) preventing such people from taking part in demonstrations, activism or even assembling in public. This they claimed to be justified by the supposed risk to the right to free speech of the opponents of their opponents (i.e. far left and "anti-fascist" groups) were the "fascists" to be democratically elected. This policy has faced frequent criticism by free-speech groups.