Tens of thousands of people marched through London today in protest against government spending cuts, with some activists demanding Prime Minister David Cameron's resignation over his family's offshore finances.
Demonstrators converged on Trafalgar Square calling for increased investment in the health service, housing, education and public sector pay, as well as action to stop the loss of thousands of steel workers' jobs in Wales.
"No ifs, no buts, no public sector cuts," they chanted.
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"For somebody in that position, you have a duty of care to the people of the country to be very open, very transparent. Just because something is legal doesn't always make it right," protester Sarah Henney told AFP.
The march was planned before Cameron's family finances were revealed in the so-called Panama Papers, but organising group The People's Assembly said it "proves that this is a government for the privileged few".
Trade union leaders and politicians addressed the crowd gathered in a rainy Trafalgar Square, with the opposition Labour party promising to end years of austerity imposed following the global financial crisis.
In a video message, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said: "The austerity we are in is a political choice, not an economic necessity."
Cameron said he sold his offshore holdings before taking office in 2010 and denied allegations that his father had set up his fund to avoid paying tax.
But the row has put the premier under pressure at a difficult time, as he seeks to manage an increasingly bitter fight within his Conservative party over the upcoming referendum on EU membership.
Some 128 of the 330 Conservative lawmakers in parliament and several of Cameron's own ministers are campaigning against him in favour of leaving the EU ahead of the June 23 vote.
Veteran Tory MP Ken Clarke warned today that if Cameron loses the vote, he will be forced out of office.