LONDON — In the past year, tens of thousands hostile to immigrants marched through London, chanting ''send them home!'' A British lawmaker complained of seeing too many non-white faces on TV. And senior politicians advocated the deportation of longtime U.K. residents born abroad.
The overt demonization of immigrants and those with immigrant roots is intensifying in the U.K. — and across Europe — as migration shoots up the political agenda and right-wing parties gain popularity.
In several European countries, political parties that favor mass deportations and depict immigration as a threat to national identity come at or near the top of opinion polls: Reform U.K., the AfD, or Alternative for Germany and France's National Rally.
President Donald Trump, who recently called Somali immigrants in the U.S. ''garbage'' and whose national security strategy depicts European countries as threatened by immigration, appears to be endorsing and emboldening Europe's coarse, anti-immigrant sentiments.
Amid the rising tensions, Europe's mainstream parties are taking a harder line on migration and at times using divisive language about race.
''What were once dismissed as being at the far extreme end of far-right politics has now become a central part of the political debate,'' said Kieran Connell, a lecturer in British history at Queen's University Belfast.
Europe experiencing a growing sense of division
Immigration has risen dramatically over the past decade in some European countries, driven in part by millions of asylum-seekers who have come to Europe fleeing conflicts in Africa, the Middle East and Ukraine.