Anne Marie Dorothy Waters (born 24 August 1977) is a far-right[3] politician and activist in the United Kingdom. She founded and led the anti-Islam party For Britain until its dissolution in 2022.[4][5][6] She is also the director of Sharia Watch UK, an organisation launched in April 2014.[7] In January 2016, Waters launched Pegida UK in conjunction with activist Tommy Robinson and far-right politician Paul Weston.[8]
Waters was born and raised in Dublin in the Republic of Ireland, and went to school in Stoneybatter on the Northside of the city.[10] She became an au pair in Germany during her teens. After living in the Netherlands, she studied journalism at Nottingham Trent University in England, graduating in 2003, and gained a law degree in London while working as a secretary in the NHS.[4][11][12] She also belonged to One Law for All, a pressure group that opposed the spread of sharia courts.[13] Waters is a lesbian in a civil partnership,[14] and, although born and raised in the Republic of Ireland, has described herself as "passionately, loyally, resolutely and proudly British".[15]
Following Nuttall's resignation as party leader, Waters announced her intention to stand in the 2017 UKIP leadership election.[23] She planned to launch her campaign in Rotherham, leading to concerns among local UKIP branch members that the choice to hold it there was political opportunism. Rotherham football club cancelled her planned stadium rally and her launch took place instead at Dalton parish hall.[24][25] UKIP's Rotherham branch released a statement calling for members to boycott the campaign launch with the backing of MEP Jane Collins after their concerns were ignored by Waters's team.[26] UKIP's National Executive Committee urged members to "think very carefully" before participating in her campaign launch. In early July, over a thousand new members had joined the party in two weeks, leading to accusations of far-right infiltration in support of Waters.[23]Jack Buckby, a former member of the British National Party and Liberty GB, described himself as "basically [her] campaign manager".[27] Waters predicted several times she would have difficulties in being allowed to stand, but on 11 August she passed UKIP's vetting procedure and was allowed to stand as a leadership candidate.[11][24][28] Waters said she would not be opposed to Tommy Robinson joining UKIP, and eighteen of the party's twenty MEPs vowed to leave if she won the leadership.[29] On 29 September 2017, it was announced that Henry Bolton had been elected leader, who had said the party risked becoming the "UK Nazi party" if it chose the wrong candidate, which was perceived as a criticism of Waters. Waters came second with 2,755 votes, a 21.3% share.[9] She described the result as a victory of jihad against truth.[30]
Waters later left UKIP to establish a new far-right political party called For Britain.[5][31] Waters stood as a For Britain candidate in the Lewisham East by-election on 14 June 2018. She lost her deposit and finished in seventh place with 1.2% of the vote.[32] The Electoral Commission records that the For Britain Movement was registered by Anna Maria Waters (not Anne Marie Waters) et al.[33] In March 2021, she moved to Hartlepool and stood as a candidate in the 2021 Hartlepool Borough Council election for De Bruce ward.[34] The ward had a For Britain councillor, one of the two elected in 2019. She lost the election, coming in sixth place with 10.7% of the vote. Later in 2021, she stood in the Batley and Spen by-election, with Robinson supporting her campaign;[35] she finished twelfth out of sixteen candidates with 0.3% of the vote.[36][37]
In July 2022, she was in St Helen's Square, York, with supporters from organisations including For Britain and Patriotic Alternative. Her speech was met by counter-protesters organised by York Stand Up To Racism.[38] On 13 July 2022, she announced on the For Britain website that the party was ceasing operations immediately.[39]
In April 2023, it was announced that she was rejoining UKIP as the "Justice spokes[person]",[40] and the following month it was announced that she had been selected as the UKIP candidate for Hartlepool for the general election.[41] She stood for election in the party's 2024 leadership election, though withdrew her candidacy during the campaign.[42]
Political views
Waters has been criticised for her association with far-right politicians and organisations and has praised Geert Wilders and Marine Le Pen.[43]HuffPost has pointed to her membership of the senior management of the anti-Islam group Pegida UK alongside Tommy Robinson, former leader of the English Defence League and Paul Weston, at the time leader of the ultranationalist Liberty GB.[44] She has been described by Hope not Hate as "heavily involved in the counter-jihad scene".[45]
In an ITV documentary broadcast in November 2017, called "Undercover: Inside Britain's New Far Right", Waters advocated the reduction of Muslim birthrates, stopping Muslim immigration and accusing the EU of conspiring to turn Europe into an Islamic state.[46] She later told ITV she opposed "racism, antisemitism, misogyny and the oppression usually associated with the far right".[47] The documentary also revealed that a UKIP member who regularly attended Waters’ events was also a member of the white-nationalist group Generation Identity. Waters has since said that he was not a close associate and would not be welcome at future events.[47] However, in 2019, she spoke at a Generation Identity conference, and claimed in her speech that mass immigration was being used to remove political power from white people.[48] The speech was billed by its supporters as the "first great replacement speech by a UK politician".[49]
Waters says she has been an LGBT activist since her days at university, and she considers herself to be a feminist.[4][50] Waters is also an agnostic, and between November 2011 and June 2014 she was listed as a director of the National Secular Society.[4][51] She had left the NSS by 2017.[11]
She is the author of Beyond Terror: Islam's Slow Erosion of Western Democracy (2018).