Stop Funding Hate

[6][7][8] Stop Funding Hate's campaign targeting Virgin Media, claimed that their values were "totally at odds with the Sun's track record of misleading reporting", and was signed by over 40,000 people.

[11] In February 2020, Stop Funding Hate joined I Am Here International in a Valentine's Day action to combat hatred and extremism, inspired by the founder of the #ExtinguishHate campaign begun by Darryn Frost, the man who fought off a terrorist in the 2019 London Bridge stabbing using a narwhal tusk.

[12] In May 2020, Stop Funding Hate urged organisations to withdraw their advertising from OpIndia, an Indian far-right website, after it published an article asserting that businesses should be able to declare that they do not hire Muslims.

[18] In February 2017, the internet service provider Plusnet withdrew adverts from The Sun and The Body Shop announced they had no future plans to advertise in the Daily Mail after social media criticism.

After criticisms that the move censored the newspapers that passengers could read, Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Rail Group, reinstated the paper in January 2018.

[26] Accounts filed at Companies House with a balance sheet date of 30 April 2018 showed that Stop Funding Hate had current assets of £130,549 and owed £130,549 to creditors.

"[32] Media columnist Ian Burrell of the i newspaper wrote that the campaign to boycott GB News fed into the channel's belief that there is a cancel culture.

[34] The Daily Mail, responding to Paperchase's decision to cease advertising with them, described Stop Funding Hate as "a small group of hard left Corbynist individuals seeking to suppress legitimate debate and impose their views on the media".

[21] In August 2021, Stop Funding Hate was accused of breaching company laws by engaging in "political activity" by Members of UK Parliament in a letter to the British Secretary of State for Business Kwasi Kwarteng.