❓WHAT HAPPENED: British police confronted an American woman who supports President Donald J. over comments she made online, sparking accusations of a crackdown on free speech.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Cancer patient Deborah Anderson and Thames Valley Police. The Free Speech Union also intervened.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The incident occurred in June at Ms. Anderson’s home in Slough, Berkshire.
💬KEY QUOTE: “Are there no houses that have been burgled recently? No rapes, no murders… Why aren’t you out there investigating those?” – Deborah Anderson
🎯IMPACT: The case highlights concerns over free speech in the United Kingdom.
British police are again facing accusations of suppressing free speech after Thames Valley Police visited Deborah Anderson, an American cancer patient and Donald J. Trump supporter, at her home. The visit was prompted by an anonymous complaint about an online post deemed “threatening,” though the officer did not disclose the specific comment in question.
A video of the June encounter, which has gone viral online, shows Ms. Anderson standing firm, refusing to apologise after learning her post had upset someone. “I’m not apologising to anybody, I can tell you that,” she said, urging the officer to prioritise more serious crimes. “Are there no houses that have been burgled recently? No rapes, no murders… Why aren’t you out there investigating those?” she demanded.
Thames Valley Police, which initially threatened to drag Anderson to the police station for a formal interrogation if she did not comply, has closed the case under pressure and claims it is unsure what posts prompted Anderson’s interrogation because it has lost them.
The Free Speech Union (FSU) called the incident “chilling” and suggested that Anderson’s support for President Trump and the MAGA movement may have influenced the complaint. “To make it worse, Deborah is in the midst of cancer treatment, including chemotherapy. She ought to have been convalescing. Instead, she was harassed for her tweets,” the FSU remarked.
President Trump has personally voiced concerns about increasing restrictions on free speech in Britain, saying earlier this month, “Strange things are happening over there, they are cracking down… I’m very surprised to see what’s happening.”
The incident involving Deborah Andeson fuels an ongoing debate about free speech in the UK, heightened by recent cases like the arrest of Irish comedy writer creator Graham Linehan, a critic of trans ideology, and the imprisonment of Lucy Connolly, a social media user who said she would not care if hotels hosting migrants were burned down after a mass stabbing of young girls in Southport by a migration-background teenager.
Notably, the British authorities seem to apply speech restrictions unevenly. For instance, TikTok personality Charlotte Hayes faced no action from the police after celebrating the assassination of Turning Point USA (TPUSA) founder Charlie Kirk and urging her over 200,000 followers to “kill them all, kill them all.”
🚨🚨🚨BREAKING: An American cancer patient and Trump supporter was confronted by British police and told to apologise for her online posts or face an investigation.
Deborah Anderson, a mother of two, was visited at her home in June by an officer from Thames Valley Police. He… pic.twitter.com/CaQZVUScQY
— The Free Speech Union (@SpeechUnion) September 17, 2025
Image by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street.
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