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Michelle Froome deletes social media account after Muslims “drain on modern society" rant, as pro-Palestine activists call for protests against Israel-Premier Tech

The agent and wife of Chris Froome said Muslims were “here to take over” and claimed “there are no innocent Gazans” during a string of social media posts, with the UCI ProTeam distancing itself from “comments made by third parties"...

Michelle Froome, the agent and wife of seven-time Grand Tour winner Chris Froome, appeared today to have deleted her X (formerly Twitter) account, only to reinstate it hours later – two days after publishing a series of inflammatory posts claiming that Muslims are “here to take over” and are a “drain on modern society”, and that “there are no innocent Gazans”.

Earlier this week, Israel – Premier Tech, the UCI ProTeam Chris Froome has represented since 2021, distanced itself from the social media posts, which have sparked renewed calls from pro-Palestine activists to target the team at this year’s Giro d’Italia and Tour de France.

Responding to a question from road.cc about Michelle Froome’s posts, Israel – Premier Tech said: “Any comments or beliefs made public by third parties associated with the team’s riders or staff do not represent Israel – Premier Tech, its team members, or its partners.”

> "We continue to race proudly as Israel – Premier Tech": Israel name removed from cycling team's vehicles as "precautionary measure"

That comment came after Michelle Froome had made a hugely controversial return to X/Twitter on Monday with a string of posts about the ongoing situation in Israel and Gaza, having not posted on her account since 2020.

"First they'll come for Israel, then the rest of the world. Be warned... it doesn't end here," the first tweet said.

"Women’s rights matter! Gay rights matter! Trans rights matter! Hamas doesn’t support any of those. Take the blindfolds off and see the reality of the hatred they are spreading. There are no innocent Gazans.

"I'm sick of sitting idly by quietly supporting Israel while the Hamas propaganda takes over social media. Enough is enough! The silent majority needs to stand up and be heard. We don't want your religion, we don't want your beliefs. It is not compatible with modern civilisation.

"Muslims are no longer the minority they claim to be. They are here to take over. The UK, France, they are happy to claim the benefits but will not integrate into those communities. They will continue to TAKE what suits them. They are a drain on modern society. 

"It's time people stop pandering to the political correctness. It's all a facade. They burned babies alive. They deserve no remorse whatsoever. This is just the beginning. WAKE UP."

Other tweets said she had "reported multiple posts on TikTok sharing Hamas propaganda" and "if anyone is surprised that I have strong opinions they clearly haven't been around cycling long enough."

"I have been quiet but I will not be quiet anymore," she continued. "This is not about cycling it is about the world my children are being raised in, more parents need to be concerned about this."

The account had not posted in a few years, but old posts include reaction to Froome's 2017 Tour victory and crash at the 2019 Critérium du Dauphiné. 

The 38-year-old professional cyclist, aiming to return to the Tour this summer having missed out on selection in 2023, has not commented on his wife and agent’s posts, having last posted on Instagram at the weekend. In January, he appeared in social media videos shared by Israel's Foreign Ministry and the official State of Israel account promoting a solidarity ride in support of hostages held in Gaza.

Chris Froome RideToBringThemHome promotional video (Twitter/official Israel account)

Following an online backlash to her anti-Muslim rant, Michelle Froome’s X/Twitter account appeared to have been deleted on Wednesday morning, only to be reinstated a few hours later, as she posted another inflammatory anti-Muslim message.

Her social media outbursts also appear to have sparked renewed calls from pro-Palestine activists to protest her husband’s Israel–Premier Tech team along the route of this year’s Giro d’Italia and Tour de France.

“We call for more protests than ever along the race routes of the Giro d’Italia and the Tour de France, which will start from Italy this year,” the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel said on Monday.

The group also claimed that Israel–Premier Tech is “Israeli government-sponsored” (despite its strong links to Israel through its owners, the team is not directly connected to the state), and that it exists to “sportswash” what it calls a “75-year-long regime of military occupation and apartheid”.

> Brailsford threatened to fine Wiggins if he didn't support Froome in Tour de France

During the 2012 Tour de France, Michelle and Cath Wiggins, ex-wife of Bradley, became embroiled in a Twitter spat moments after the two riders crossed the finish line on stage 11, Froome having controversially attacked teammate and yellow jersey Wiggins before waiting on team orders.

"Beyond disappointed… I know what happened just then," Michelle tweeted, before adding in a follow-up post: "If you want loyalty, get a Froome dog… a quality I value… although being taken advantage of by others!"

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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69 comments

Avatar
ErnieC | 7 months ago
1 like

I would love to see the same level of protest against Bahrain Victorius and the UAE teams. 

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Owd Big 'Ead | 7 months ago
3 likes

Odious ****!

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Rome73 | 7 months ago
9 likes

isreal has been brutally killing children for 6 months. Over 14000 children have been burnt, crushed, bombed, shot in the head, killed by missiles, tank shells, fighter jets. And now children are being starved to death.  And these are children who were born to a life already under siege and occupation, who did not have freedom to travel and not even really have a voice as the occupier, Israel, has dehumanised Palestinians for decades to such an extent that nihilistic, genocidal propaganda like 'all Gazans are guilty' is normal.  

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lycralout replied to Rome73 | 7 months ago
2 likes

They have been trying to eradicate Hamas for the last 6 months.  Based on their recent and historical actions and oft-repeated intent to kill all Jews, a reasonable objective except for those that support terrorist and Islamist causes.  Like all wars, lots of civilians are killed especially in urban warfare.  They have managed to kill less than in other recent conflicts in Iraq, Yemen, Syria, Afghanistan, Ethiopia despite a significantly more difficult environment.  For some reason Israel are being denigrated more than when Western, Arab or African military offences cause major casualties.

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Slartibartfast replied to lycralout | 7 months ago
3 likes

You're defending bombing hospitals and refugee camps and starving children.

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brooksby replied to Slartibartfast | 7 months ago
2 likes

Dogless wrote:

You're defending bombing hospitals and refugee camps and starving children.

Ah, but the terrorists build their invisible bases under those hospitals and refugee camps, and some of those children are just really short adult fighters.

Or something.

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wycombewheeler replied to lycralout | 7 months ago
3 likes

lycralout wrote:

They have been trying to eradicate Hamas for the last 6 months.  Based on their recent and historical actions and oft-repeated intent to kill all Jews, a reasonable objective except for those that support terrorist and Islamist causes.  Like all wars, lots of civilians are killed especially in urban warfare.  They have managed to kill less than in other recent conflicts in Iraq, Yemen, Syria, Afghanistan, Ethiopia despite a significantly more difficult environment.  For some reason Israel are being denigrated more than when Western, Arab or African military offences cause major casualties.

eradicating Hamas is a laudibale goal. Achieving this goal by killing or driving out every palestinian in Gaza, is either genocide or doomed to fail. Any palestinians remaining after the current operation will be all to keen to join up to any organisation to oppose the Israeli government that has destroyed their homes and killed their relatives.

A permanant peace deal was on the table in 2000 at camp david, Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian Authority chairman Yasser Arafat neary signed the deal.

Within months both Palestine and Israel had replaced these leaders with more hardline alternatives in elections and the potential for a peaceful solution disapeared.

I have trouble accepting either side as the innocent victim that would just live peacefully if not for the actions of the other

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Milkfloat | 7 months ago
2 likes

How long until she claims her account was hacked?

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john_smith replied to Milkfloat | 7 months ago
2 likes

 Just imagine how disappointing that would be. All that self-righteous anger for nothing.

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chrisonabike replied to john_smith | 7 months ago
1 like

"The plays were not in fact written by Shakespeare!  No, it was another gentleman entirely, with the same name..."

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Gbjbanjs | 7 months ago
2 likes

This is not a cycling story. It is perpetuating hate speech.

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john_smith replied to Gbjbanjs | 7 months ago
4 likes

It's certainly generating plenty of hate.

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Wingguy | 7 months ago
17 likes

Woman who lives in tax haven complains about immigrants stealing benefits.

Why does she care? She ain't paying for them.

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Rome73 replied to Wingguy | 7 months ago
4 likes

And neither are you 'paying for them'. Immigrants are not a drain on an economy. They contribute far more in taxes than they take out. Demonising immigrants and preventing them from working is a drain in all of us. 

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Owd Big 'Ead replied to Rome73 | 7 months ago
3 likes

Indeed.
The UK needs immigrants to make the system work, especially the Ponzi pensions system.
Net immigration last year was over 1 million, but let's focus on the 40,000 arriving by small boats.
The sooner we vote out this cancerous government, the better.

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john_smith replied to Wingguy | 7 months ago
0 likes

Depends. You don't have to live here to pay tax here. Indeed a rich person who occasionally visits the UK might pay more UK tax than many people who live here do.

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brooksby replied to john_smith | 7 months ago
0 likes

And a rich person who does live here but claims that they live overseas and only visit here can pay far less tax.

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john_smith replied to brooksby | 7 months ago
0 likes

And cyclists who live here don't pay any road tax. And if a cyclist who lives here and pays no road tax rides through a red light and kills you, then you will no longer live here but may well have to pay inheritance tax.

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brooksby replied to john_smith | 7 months ago
3 likes

Trust me: my estate will never reach levels where inheritance tax becomes due 

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Rendel Harris replied to john_smith | 7 months ago
3 likes

john_smith wrote:

And cyclists who live here don't pay any road tax. And if a cyclist who lives here and pays no road tax rides through a red light and kills you, then you will no longer live here but may well have to pay inheritance tax.

I'm no accountant but I'm fairly sure that you don't have to pay inheritance tax after you're dead, though your beneficiaries may have to. Even HMRC have yet, as far as I'm aware, to find a way to send their bills beyond the veil. I'm sure if they could they would...

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john_smith replied to Rendel Harris | 7 months ago
0 likes

If only it were the beneficiaries who were taxed, then it would be a lot fairer.

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SaneRebel | 7 months ago
16 likes

Who's taken over who's land in Israel, and against international law? https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/campaigns/2017/06/israel-occupation-50...

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theJewishcyclist replied to SaneRebel | 7 months ago
2 likes

Amnesty international is considered by Jews to be one of the most antisemitic organisations that is accepted in the western world.

My great great grandparents, religious orthodox Jews, moved to The Land in the 1920's. They did not take over anybody's land, but moved for religgious reasons, so were even willing to live by swampland which harboured the mosquitoes that gave my great grandfather malaria. A few years ago, there was international uproar when some arabs were evicted from properties in Jerusalem. Those shouting "Filthy land-grabbing Zionists" did not care that Jews bought the land in the nineteenth century, but were forced out by Jordan when Jordan captured the land in 1948, in the war they (and the other surrounding countries) started, for the sole purpose of trying to stop the land (British Mandate of Palestine) going to the Jews.

2 years ago, in the summer, I stayed in an area called Alon Shevut for a few weeks.  Its name means 'the captive oak tree'. It is called this, becuse up until 1948 is had a Jewish community, and so did the surrounding hills,  until during the war of independance the Arabs conquered the entire area and threw grenade after grenade into the bunker being used as the hospital. 

I saw that bunker in Kfar Etzion with my own eyes.

For the next 19 years, all that was left of the Jewish life there was one oak tree.

Whose land was stolen?

(Just a few dozen metres down the road from Alon Shevut is the spot where in 2014 three students were kidnapped by terrorists and murdered, one of the events which caused the 2014 war with Hamas, in which groups of people filled London's streets chanting 'Hitler was right' in arabic.)

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Rendel Harris replied to theJewishcyclist | 7 months ago
2 likes

theJewishcyclist wrote:

Amnesty international is considered by Jews to be one of the most antisemitic organisations that is accepted in the western world.

All Jews? Quite presumptive to speak on behalf of such a diverse population with such a wide range of views, no?

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brooksby replied to Rendel Harris | 7 months ago
1 like

Rendel Harris wrote:

theJewishcyclist wrote:

Amnesty international is considered by Jews to be one of the most antisemitic organisations that is accepted in the western world.

All Jews? Quite presumptive to speak on behalf of such a diverse population with such a wide range of views, no?

Maybe by "Jews", in this case, they actually mean the government of the State of Israel?

After all, we do seem to be gradually creeping toward the viewpoint that criticism of the State of Israel is the same thing as criticism of "all Jews"…

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chrisonabike replied to brooksby | 7 months ago
2 likes

I've had to put my wellies and gloves back on again ... but perhaps a thoughtful consideration of the following would be helpful for those - with a range of views?

Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism wrote:

The Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism is a tool to identify, confront and raise awareness about antisemitism as it manifests in countries around the world today. [...] It was developed by a group of scholars in the fields of Holocaust history, Jewish studies, and Middle East studies to meet what has become a growing challenge: providing clear guidance to identify and fight antisemitism while protecting free expression.

[...] The Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism responds to “the IHRA Definition,” the document that was adopted by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) in 2016. Because the IHRA Definition is unclear in key respects and widely open to different interpretations, it has caused confusion and generated controversy, hence weakening the fight against antisemitism. Noting that it calls itself “a working definition,” we have sought to improve on it by offering (a) a clearer core definition and (b) a coherent set of guidelines.

https://jerusalemdeclaration.org/

Of course, other definitions are available:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Working_definition_of_antisemitism#Competi...

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Rendel Harris replied to brooksby | 7 months ago
2 likes

brooksby wrote:

After all, we do seem to be gradually creeping toward the viewpoint that criticism of the State of Israel is the same thing as criticism of "all Jews"…

Indeed, which is somewhat confusing given that the IHRA definition of antisemitism specifically includes conflating all Jews with the state of Israel as being antisemitic.

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theJewishcyclist replied to Rendel Harris | 7 months ago
2 likes

Yes, but all religious Jews are by default Zionists. We beseech G-D 3 times a day in our prayers to gather us to the Land of Israel and "Gather us together from the four corners of the world,"  "And to Jerusalem Your city return with mercy, and dwell within it as You said..." (we also always end the Standing Prayer, the key part of our prayers with a prayer for peace).  So while conflating all Jews with the State (government) of Israel, and blaming them for its actions is antisemitic, e.g. shouting at someone on the mere basis of him being Jewish, conflating Jews with the Land of Israel is not, hence the now disused term for Jews 'Israelites'.

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Rendel Harris replied to theJewishcyclist | 7 months ago
3 likes

theJewishcyclist wrote:

Yes, but all religious Jews are by default Zionists.

So when you said "all Jews" you didn't actually mean all Jews, just religious ones. However even that distinction is erroneous, as you must surely know. There are numerous practising religious Jews who oppose Zionism, ranging from the ultraorthodox to the extremely liberal. What you really mean, I assume, by "all religious Jews" is "all Jews who subscribe to my view of interpretation of scripture and Jewish tradition", which is rather different.

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Legin | 7 months ago
5 likes

Does her husband know that divorce is legal in many countries?

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