More than six in ten Jewish people in Britain are considering leaving the country amid rising antisemitism within the increasingly multicultural country. An annual survey from the Campaign Against Antisemitism has found that 61 per cent of Jews in Britain are contemplating moving abroad, compared to 50 per cent last year. The poll, reported by The Telegraph, additionally found that a majority of Jews (51 per cent) said that they do not see a long-term future for themselves in the United Kingdom, compared to 37 per cent in 2024.
Furthermore, 45 per cent of Jewish respondents said that they do not feel welcome in the country anymore, and 83 per cent said that they believe the police do not do enough to protect them. The survey was held in the wake of the Yom Kippur terror attack at Manchester’s Heaton Park synagogue in October that saw two people killed and four others injured on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar.


