Alpha Men Assemble

Alpha Men Assemble (also known as Alpha Team Assemble) is a British far-right paramilitary group. It began in 2021 as an antivax group protesting COVID-19 vaccines, but has since moved onto other areas, including targeting LGBT rights. It also has taken inspiration from the men's rights movement (although it reportedly has a few female members, which is probably why they sometimes use the gender-neutral "team". )

They have held training camps where members dress in black and learn about self-defence and martial arts, and claim to be committed to direct action to "protect our children, families and future from Draconian rules, dictatorship governments or unlawful acts, statutes and mandates", but members insist they are peaceful. Nonetheless it has links to other far right activists and organisations, including the proscribed neo-Nazi groups Atomwaffen Division and National Action.

Members
According to Hope not Hate (HNH) its founder was Danny Glass, a former British soldier in the Royal Fusiliers.

HNH says one prominent figure in the movement is Richard Lumby, formerly of the British National Party, and a leader of the Independent Nationalist Network (INN), which split from Patriotic Alternative in 2021.

A later recruit was Andrew Barnes, a self-proclaimed National Socialist, and formerly of Atomwaffen Division and National Action.

According to HNH, it also has links with Patriotic Alternative, and many AMA/ATA members attended a January 2022 demonstration organised by Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, praising Yaxley-Lennon.

Anti-vaxxers
Media reports suggested it organised via secure messaging application Telegram and organised a series of training events over the winter of 2021-2; The Times reported that on December 28, "up to 100 activists took part in boxing drills and a scrummaging exercise, in which two groups of dozens of people tried to push each other back". Meetings were held across the UK in Littlehampton in West Sussex, with further meetings planned in Brownhills in Staffordshire, and Motherwell in North Lanarkshire, Scotland. Attendees were encouraged to dress in black.

At a training event an undercover reporter heard members talk about "tak[ing] it to the Old Bill" (police) and "hit[ting] vaccine centres, schools, head teachers, colleges, councillors and directors of public health in every area".

In February 2022, UK Labour Party leader Keir Starmer was attacked by a mob of anti-vaxxers, at least one of whom was a member of Alpha Men Assemble. Starmer was also heckled then and at other times for being soft on pedophilia, because when he was the Director of Public Prosecutions he didn't take any action against notorious celebrity paedophile Jimmy Savile; while this is a dubious claim about Savile and highly improbable to suggest there were darker motives, this definitely feeds into wider far-right rhetoric about "groomers" and paedophile conspiracies.

Men's rights
Someone claiming to be an AMA member told LBC radio that one of their goals was "empowering men" opposing "an agenda to feminise men".

Joe Ondrak, an expert on online disinformation from company Logically, said "There’s no way in which this isn’t a worrying development. They’re very much attempting to portray themselves as this masculine ideal, as freedom fighters. If Alpha Men Assemble were a US-based group, those videos would have them shooting guns in a field, without a shadow of a doubt."

Sovereign citizen
Posts on the group's Telegram channel suggest a strong link to the sovereign citizens movement, which use an eccentric interpretation of common law to refuse to obey actual laws.

LGBT
In 2022 it widened its attentions to attacking LGBT people. It was one of the prominent organisations in a campaign against Drag Queen Story Hour UK, an organisation which provides drag queens dressed in elaborate brightly-coloured costumes who visit libraries and other institutions to read children stories and promote inclusion and tolerance. On 1 August 2022 it was involved in anti-drag queen protests in Reading, England.

Part of their opposition involves the use of terms like "groomer" and the insinuation that LGBT people are all paedophiles; this is a common tactic of the far-right and anti-LGBT campaigners in both the UK and US.