Sir Keir Starmer has urged anti-monarchy protesters to “respect” people mourning the Queen and not “ruin” their experience.
The Labour leader spoke out amid controversy over a small number of protesters being arrested during royal ceremonies.
Sir Keir said protest was a “great British tradition” but that hundreds of thousands of people wanted to have a “moment” with the Queen.
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Asked about the police response to those wishing to protest, Sir Keir told BBC Breakfast: “The word I’d use around that issue is ‘respect’.
“I think if people have spent a long time waiting to come forward to have that moment as the coffin goes past or whatever it may be, I think respect that, because people have made a huge effort to come and have that private moment to say thank you to Queen Elizabeth II.”
Sir Keir added that “obviously we have to respect the fact that some people disagree”.
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“One of the great British traditions is the ability to protest and to disagree, but I think if it can be done in the spirit of respect,” he said.
“Respect the fact that hundreds of thousands of people do want to come forward and have that moment, don’t ruin it for them.”
The plea for respect comes after senior Tory MP David Davis wrote to the chief constable of Police Scotland to express his concern over the arrest of anti-monarchy activists.
He tweeted: “At a time of national mourning, we should all ensure that we behave respectfully. But we must not sacrifice the principle of free speech upon which modern Britain is built.
“I am a staunch monarchist, but republicans have as much right to voice their opinions as anyone else.”
Police Scotland have charged two people in connection with allegedly breaching the peace following two separate incidents earlier in the week.
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A protester bearing a handmade sign saying “not my King” was also spoken to by police and escorted away from the Palace of Westminster in London.
And on Tuesday, Scotland Yard was prompted to issue a statement saying the public “absolutely have a right to protest” after a barrister holding a blank sign tweeted footage of himself being threatened with arrest in Parliament Square.
Civil liberty groups and an number of MPs have expressed alarm at the actions of the police.
However, former home secretary Jack Straw said that anti-monarchy protests shouldn’t be held before the Queen’s funeral to prevent “public order problems”.
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Alongside the protests, hundreds of thousands of people are expected to wait in lengthy queues to see the Queen lying in state in Westminster Hall from this evening until her funeral on Monday.
The King and his sons will walk behind the the late monarch’s coffin as she leaves Buckingham Palace for the final time.
Sir Keir revealed this morning that he would be part of the reception gathering when the Queen’s coffin arrives in Westminster Hall, and that he would also return later to pay his respects privately, accompanied by his wife and children.