Anti-Islam Influencer Valentina Gomez Blocked from Entering UK
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood bars US-based activist after she planned to speak at Tommy Robinson rally in London
Quick Look
- The UK Home Office has blocked anti-Islam influencer Valentina Gomez from entering the country, ruling her presence would 'not be conducive to the public good'.
- The 26-year-old US-based activist, born in Colombia, had planned to speak at a Tommy Robinson-organised Unite the Kingdom rally in London on 16 May.
- Gomez has previously burned a Quran in a campaign video and made anti-Islam comments at a September rally.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
The UK Home Office has previously intervened to block visas for public figures whose presence it views as potentially inflammatory. The Muslim Council of Britain had specifically warned that allowing Gomez to speak would 'grant legitimacy and sends a troubling message about the selective application of Home Office standards'.
An anti-Islam influencer based in the US has been blocked from entering the UK by the Home Office. Valentina Gomez, who has unsuccessfully sought election in Missouri and Texas on an anti-Islam platform, previously filmed herself burning a copy of the Quran in a campaign video on social media. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood decided that Gomez's presence in the country "would not be conducive to the public good". Gomez wrote on social media last week that she would be speaking at the Tommy Robinson-organised Unite the Kingdom rally in London on 16 May. At a Unite the Kingdom march in London last September, Gomez referred to "rapist Muslims" and said Islam was "the sword that the left is using to destroy Christian nations". The 26-year-old, who was born in Colombia, said she was coming to speak at the next Unite the Kingdom rally in May. Before the Home Office's decision to block Gomez on Monday, the influencer previously said her application to enter the UK had been approved. That prompted the Muslim Council of Britain to write to the home secretary expressing concern that Gomez was being allowed to come to the UK again. In a letter published on 17 April, it said allowing Gomez to speak on a public platform in the UK would "grant legitimacy and sends a troubling message about the selective application of Home Office standards". The organisation welcomed the decision and said it should act as a "precedent for others who chose to promote disinformation and hatred". The Home Office has previously intervened to block visas for public figures whose presence in the UK it views as potentially inflammatory.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
The Home Office decision may face legal challenge from Gomez
Possible · Within weeks
Similar visa rejections may occur for other known hate speech promoters
Likely · Within months
Open Questions
- What specific evidence did the Home Office use to justify the ban?
- Will Gomez challenge the decision?
- Will other anti-Islam figures be similarly blocked?






