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A Northampton childminder who was jailed for inciting racial hatred after the Southport murders has been released from prison.
Lucy Connolly, the wife of Conservative councillor Raymond Connolly, was handed a 31-month sentence in October last year after she admitted publishing and distributing "threatening or abusive" written material on the X social media site. In an apparent reference to asylum seekers staying in UK hotels, Connolly posted on the day of the murder of three girls in Southport on 29 July last year: "Mass deportation now, set fire to all the f****** hotels full of the bastards for all I care...
if that makes me racist so be it." The mother-of-three, who was working as a childminder at the time, had shared the post after false rumours circulated online that the Southport murderer was an asylum seeker. He was later named as UK-born teenager Axel Rudakubana.
Connolly's post was viewed 310,000 times in three-and-a-half hours before she deleted it. Her release means she has served nine months of a 31-month sentence.
Her sentence which was handed down at Birmingham Crown Court has been criticised as being too harsh and some argued she should not have been jailed as she was exercising freedom of speech. Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch challenged Lucy Connolly's charges, saying that "protecting people from words should not be given greater weight in law than public safety".
"If the law does this, then the law itself is broken - and it's time Parliament looked again at the Public Order Act," she said in a post on X on Thursday. The Tory leader said: "Lucy Connolly finally returns home to her family today.
At last. "Her punishment was harsher than the sentences handed down for bricks thrown at police or actual rioting.
"At that time, after Southport, Keir Starmer branded all protesters 'far-right' and called for 'fast-track prosecutions'. "Days later, Lucy was charged with stirring up racial hatred - an offence that doesn't even require intent to incite violence.
Why exactly did the Attorney General think that was in the public interest?" Rupert Lowe, who was an MP for Reform at the time, described her as a "political prisoner" in a Facebook post and said "jailing a young mother over a social media post is not fair play". However, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer defended the sentencing earlier this year, addressing Connolly's case in May after her Court of Appeal application against her jail term was dismissed.
Asked during Prime Minister's Questions whether her imprisonment was an "efficient or fair use" of prison, Sir Keir said: "Sentencing is a matter for our courts, and I celebrate the fact that we have independent courts in this country. "I am strongly in favour of free speech, we've had free speech in this country for a very long time and we protect it fiercely.
"But I am equally against incitement to violence against other people. I will always support the action taken by our police and courts to keep our streets and people safe." Lord Young of Acton, founder and director of the Free Speech Union, said: "The fact that Lucy Connolly has spent more than a year in prison for a single tweet that she quickly deleted and apologised for is a national scandal, particularly when Labour MPs, councillors and anti-racism campaigners who've said and done much worse have avoided jail.
"The same latitude they enjoyed should have been granted to Lucy.".