Labour peer accuses Red Bull boss Christian Horner of giving online 'racists an excuse to let fly their vitriol and evil' at Lewis Hamilton - after his scathing criticism of Brit for his role in 180mph crash with title rival Max Verstappen

  • Red Bull chief Christian Horner has been slammed by Labour peer Lord Hain  
  • Horner was highly critical of Lewis Hamilton after his crash with Max Verstappen
  • The British driver was subjected to racist abuse on social media after the crash
  • Hamilton, a vocal anti-racism campaigner, was bombarded with monkey emojis
  • Hain described Horner's comments as 'ill-judged, intemperate and plain wrong'
  • Facebook, who are the owners of Instagram, have come under fire after taking no action against scores of accounts who racially abused Hamilton 

Christian Horner has been accused of giving 'racists an excuse to let fly their vitriol and evil' at Lewis Hamilton following his criticism of the Mercedes driver after Sunday's British Grand Prix.

Lord Hain, vice-chairman of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Formula One, believes Horner will 'regret' the remarks he made in the wake of Hamilton's 180mph collision with Max Verstappen on the opening lap of the Silverstone race.

Seven-time world champion Hamilton, 36, who is a vocal supporter of the BLM movement and is leading a campaign for more racing drivers from black and ethnic minority groups, was subjected to online racist abuse — during and after the race. He was bombarded with monkey emojis and called a gorilla. 


Facebook, who are the owners of Instagram, have come under fire after taking no action against scores of accounts who racially abused Hamilton - the Center for Countering Digital Hate had tracked 31 accounts which had abused the driver and reported them to the social media platform. 

Red Bull joined Mercedes and F1 in condemning the abuse on Monday, and team principal Horner posted a message on social media, saying: 'Whilst the rivalry is intense on track, highly-charged emotions should never cross the line into racist abuse.' 

But Hain, a Labour peer, told the PA news agency: 'Racists had an excuse to let fly their vitriol and evil at Lewis after what I thought was a very ill-judged, intemperate and plain wrong attack on him by Christian Horner.

Christian Horner has been accused of giving ‘racists an excuse to let fly their vitriol and evil’
The Red Bull chief was critical of Lewis Hamilton following his crash with Max Verstappen

Christian Horner (left) has been accused of giving 'racists an excuse to let fly their vitriol and evil'; the Red Bull chief was critical of Lewis Hamilton following his crash with Max Verstappen

Lord Hain believes Horner will ‘regret’ the remarks he made in the wake of Hamilton’s collision

Lord Hain believes Horner will 'regret' the remarks he made in the wake of Hamilton's collision

'I am not suggesting that Christian was implying anything racist in what he said. He was talking in pure racing terms and not racist terms and that is obvious.

'I hope it was something said in the heat of the moment when Christian was feeling aggrieved. But these are moments when leadership is required and not intemperate outbursts.'

Horner accused Hamilton of risking Verstappen's life in the 180mph collision that overshadowed the Briton's victory at Silverstone on Sunday. 

Asked if Hamilton's move at Copse corner could have killed his driver, the Red Bull chief said: 'Of course. His actions have put in jeopardy another driver's safety and for me that is unacceptable.

'Every driver knows that a move at that corner — one of the fastest in Formula One — is a massive, massive risk.

'You don't put a wheel up the inside without there being huge consequences. We are lucky today that there wasn't someone seriously hurt.

'What I am most angry about is the lack of judgment, and the desperation in this move. It was never on.'

The British Grand Prix got off to an explosive start when Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen crashed into each other

Hamilton was accused of being 'dangerous, disrespectful and unsportsmanlike' by Verstappen after a collision during the opening lap of the British Grand Prix on Sunday

The championship rivals came together, causing Verstappen to suffer a high-speed crash

The championship rivals came together, causing Verstappen to suffer a high-speed crash

Hamilton was dealt a 10-second penalty for the accident but went on to win British Grand Prix

 Hamilton was dealt a 10-second penalty for the accident but went on to win British Grand Prix

Hamilton received racist messages on Instagram with one user using a gorilla emoji
Another message directed at Hamilton on Instagram included the use of monkey emojis

Hamilton received racist messages on Instagram with one user using a gorilla emoji (left)

Hamilton was given a 10-second penalty by race stewards for his role in the crash but he recovered and passed Ferrari's Charles Leclerc with just over two laps remaining to win his home race for the eighth time.

Verstappen, 23, said afterwards after being released from Coventry hospital at 10pm  on Sunday night following tests: 'I'm glad I am OK. I am very disappointed with being taken out like this. The penalty given does not help us and doesn't do justice to the dangerous move Lewis made on track.

'The celebrations, while I am still in hospital, were disrespectful and unsportsmanlike behaviour, but we move on.'

Hamilton responded by saying he will continue to race 'hard but fairly'.

In a tweet, he said: 'Today is a reminder of the dangers in this sport. I send my best wishes to Max who is an incredible competitor. I'm glad to hear he is OK.

'I will always race hard but always fairly. My team showed grit and perseverance out there. It's a dream to win in front of my home crowd.'

He also dismissed Horner's criticism, saying: 'I don't really have anything to say to Christian. The win doesn't feel hollow.

'I don't think I am in a position to have to apologise for anything. We are out there racing.

'I don't agree with the stewards but I take my penalty on the chin and get on with my job. I am not going to whine about it.

The Mercedes driver vowed to continue to race 'hard but fairly' after the collision

The Mercedes driver vowed to continue to race 'hard but fairly' after the collision

Last year, Hamilton criticised the lack of racial diversity in his own sport on Instagram

Last year, Hamilton criticised the lack of racial diversity in his own sport on Instagram

Hamilton has frequently spoken about fighting racism and has pushed for more diversity in F1

Hamilton has frequently spoken about fighting racism and has pushed for more diversity in F1

Red Bull chief Christian Horner fumes at Lewis Hamilton for 'unacceptable' driving that led to first-lap crash with Max Verstappen 

Lewis Hamilton was accused of risking Max Verstappen's life in the 180mph collision that overshadowed the Briton's victory at Silverstone on Sunday.

Verstappen, who was taken to hospital for checks, also called him 'disrespectful' and 'unsportsmanlike' after their opening-lap collision in front of 140,000 fans.

But Hamilton, 36, said he had nothing to apologise for after slashing the deficit to his Dutch rival to eight points in what is now the hottest title fight of the century.

 Asked if Hamilton's move at Copse corner could have killed his driver, Red Bull chief Christian Horner said: 'Of course. His actions have put in jeopardy another driver's safety and for me that is unacceptable.

'Every driver knows that a move at that corner — one of the fastest in Formula One — is a massive, massive risk.

'You don't put a wheel up the inside without there being huge consequences. We are lucky today that there wasn't someone seriously hurt.

'What I am most angry about is the lack of judgment, and the desperation in this move. It was never on.'

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'Everyone is going to have a different opinion and I don't really care what people think so I just do what I do and I am really grateful for today.'

Hamilton is yet to comment on the abuse but last week issued a post after Marcus Rashford, Jordan Sancho and Bukayo Saka were racially abused following England's Euro 2020 final defeat against Italy at Wembley.

He wrote: 'The racial abuse on social media towards our players after yesterday's game is unacceptable. This sort of ignorance has to be stopped.

'Tolerance and respect for players of colour should not be conditional. Our humanity should not be conditional.'

Mercedes, Hamilton's team, has hinted that police should investigate some of the vile slurs aimed at their star driver and called on social media companies to do more to stop racist posts before they go online - and close the accounts of the culprits. 

Imran Ahmed, CEO of the Center for Countering Digital Hate said: 'It is beyond belief, after all the promises made in the last week by social media companies, that Instagram has failed to take any action against its users who have now racially abused Lewis Hamilton.

'By failing to act on racism towards England players last week, Instagram have created a culture of impunity for racists. 'It has publicly promised to issue automatic lifetime bans when it has clear, irrefutable evidence of serious racial hatred.

'But from its failure to identify monkey emojis as racist, to its flat-out refusal to issue lifetime bans to racists, Instagram—and its parent company Facebook—have chosen to side with racists over the victims of racial hatred. 

'The values and business model that underpin this powerful industry are broken beyond repair. It's time for the Government to pass serious legislation which will force Big Tech to keep their promises and finally clean up their platforms.' 

Facebook, which owns Instagram, insists it is filtering comments but insisted 'no single thing will fix this challenge overnight'.

A spokesman said: 'In addition to our work to remove comments and accounts that repeatedly break our rules, there are safety features available, including Comment Filters and Message Controls, which can mean no one has to see this type of abuse. No single thing will fix this challenge overnight but we're committed to the work to keep our community safe from abuse.' 

Last year Hamilton hit out at the Formula One community over a lack of racial diversity amid the George Floyd protests.

The seven-time world champion - - the only black driver to ever race in the competition - said he felt isolated in trying to combat racial discrimination in a sporting discipline he described as 'white dominated'. 

In a post on Instagram, he said: 'I see those of you staying silent, some of you the biggest stars yet you stay in the midst of injustice.

'Not a sign from anybody in my industry which of course is a white dominated sport. I'm one of the only people of colour there yet I stand alone. I would have thought by now you would see why this happens and say something about it but you can't stand alongside us.

'Just know I know who you are and I see you.'

Last year, Hamilton established the Hamilton Commission with the Royal Academy of Engineering, which is attempting to help more young people from black backgrounds to be employed in motorsport or in other engineering sectors. 

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