
England flags are flying once again along Torrington Avenue in Bristol, the street long dubbed “the country’s most patriotic”, after residents openly defied Bristol City Council’s request not to hang flags on public property for “health and safety reasons.”
Residents traditionally drape the entire street with St George’s Cross during major football matches. This year, however, the Green‑led Bristol City Council told people to only put flags on their own homes, warning that attaching them to lampposts, railings, or any council‑owned structure could breach safety rules and the Highways Act 1980.
Despite this, after England’s first World Cup match, residents put up rows of flags extending from house to house across the road, recreating the well-known display.
Council leader Tony Dyer said that flags on lampposts can cause health and safety issues. Items attached to public infrastructure may be removed under the Highways Act 198, and Bristol must remain “welcoming, respectful and safe for everyone” during the tournament.
The council has already been removing flags in “sensitive locations” and reviewing its wider approach.
The backlash was immediate and fierce. Locals called the ban “nonsense” and “disgusting.” Some said the street now felt “dead” without the usual sea of flags, others insisted people were becoming afraid to fly their own national flag in their own country, and one resident warned: “If they want a battle, they’ve got the whole street to deal with.”
For many, the flags are about community, tradition, and football, not politics.
But not everyone was celebrating. Some residents and public figures voiced discomfort.
Former Bristol mayor George Ferguson called the display “chilling”, claiming the flag has been co‑opted by groups striving to intimidate minorities. Others said the mass display made them feel “on edge” or that the flag carries racist connotations in certain contexts.
This mirrors a broader national debate about the St George’s Cross, patriotism, and who “owns” the flag.
Across the UK, councils have been clashing with locals over St George’s flags, particularly when attached to public property without permission.
Some see enforcement as a necessary safety regulation, others as overreach or even anti‑English sentiment.
Keir Starmer has previously said people should feel “proud and comfortable” flying the flag, while urging councils to be “sensible.”
Councils lean on “health and safety” in flag disputes because it is the strongest, clearest legal basis they have for removing flags from public infrastructure — especially lampposts, bridges, and highway assets. The pattern across the UK is quite consistent, and the reason comes down to law, liability, and risk rather than the symbolism of the flag itself.
The British people have always flown flags to celebrate, and there wasn’t a problem then, so why now? They have flown flags for coronations, VE Day, royal weddings, Jubilees, football tournaments, village fêtes, you name it, and for decades, nobody batted an eyelid. So why does it suddenly feel like councils are cracking down now? Because our country changed, the law didn’t — but the way councils enforce it did.
For most of the 20th century, people put flags on their own houses, their gardens, bunting across small cul‑de‑sacs, and village greens. These didn’t involve public infrastructure like lampposts, traffic lights, or highway assets, so Councils didn’t need to intervene because nothing was attached to their property.
In the 2000s–2010s, councils were sued for falling signage, collapsing lampposts, and injuries caused by unsecured adornments. Even if the council didn’t put the item up, they were held responsible because it was on their asset, and since then, councils have become overly cautious, and “Health and safety” is the legal protection they depend on.
Why do British flags make minorities feel uneasy?
Some minorities in Britain say they feel uncomfortable around large displays of the St George’s Cross, not because the flag itself is inherently threatening, but because of what it has been used for, who has used it, and the context in which it appears. This isn’t about every flag or every person who flies one — it’s about associations built over decades.
The flag has been used by far‑right groups for decades. For many Black, Asian, Jewish, Muslim and immigrant communities, the St George’s Cross became associated — especially from the 1970s to the 2000s — with the National Front, the BNP, Combat 18, English Defence League marches, and anti‑immigration protests, but not every St George’s flag is put up for that reason; the vast majority of St George’s flags are put up for quite normal, positive reasons: football, pride, community spirit, national celebrations. Most people flying them are simply excited for a match or celebrating a moment. That’s the facts.













