By Michael Nsikan Richard – November 13th, 2025
West Ham supporters are engaged in an escalated and sustained campaign of protests against the club’s ownership, primarily targeting Chairman David Sullivan and Vice-Chairman Karren Brady.
The movement has gained significant momentum throughout 2025, representing one of the most substantial supporter uprisings against club ownership in recent Premier League history.
The Scale And Intensity Of Recent Protests
Hammer News reports that the most recent major demonstration occurred on November 8th, 2025, before the club’s match against Burnley, with estimates suggesting between 10,000 and 12,000 fans participated in the mass march to the London Stadium.
This represents the largest ever organized mass march against West Ham’s owners, surpassing the approximately 8,500 supporters who attended a similar protest in 2020.
GiveMeSport reports that the November demonstration featured particularly powerful symbolic imagery, with some fans carrying a coffin on their shoulders to represent what they describe as “The Death of West Ham” under current ownership. A hearse was driven to the London Stadium as part of the funeral procession to amplify the message that the owners are “killing” the club.
Timeline And Evolution Of The Movement

ESPN reports that the formal protest movement intensified following a vote of no confidence in the club’s board issued by the West Ham Fan Advisory Board in September 2025. Thousands of supporters staged a major protest before the Crystal Palace match on September 20, 2025, with flags and banners reading “just resign,” “no more BS,” and “sold a dream, living a nightmare.”
Protest organizers, Hammers United, have announced this is a “sustained, season-long campaign” with demonstrations planned for multiple home matches throughout the season. A half-hour sit-in protest followed the home victory against Newcastle, during which the club attempted to drown out negative chanting by playing loud music over the public address system.
Core Grievances and Demands

ESPN reports that the supporters’ discontent centers on several interconnected issues.
The Fan Advisory Board cited “an aging and uncompetitive squad” as evidence of “sustained failure on behalf of the executive management” since the club won the Conference League two years ago. The FAB has called for wholesale changes with no further board interference, prioritizing bringing people to the club who have football and commercial expertise.
ESPN also reports that a persistent source of frustration is the 2016 relocation from Upton Park to the London Stadium, the former Olympic Stadium originally built as an athletics venue. West Ham shares the football ground with an athletics stadium, which fans believe hinders the matchday atmosphere, a stark contrast to Upton Park, which was considered to have one of the best atmospheres of any football stadium in the country.
Supporters also believe the club hierarchy is not doing enough regarding player/talent recruitment, leaving the squad inadequately equipped to compete effectively.
The haphazard transfer policy and cycle of changing managers, including three managers in 2025 alone, has generated a feeling of uncertainty among the fanbase.
Current Context and Future Outlook

The protests are occurring against a background of a genuine sporting crisis. West Ham has suffered four losses in their first five league games of the season, intensifying tensions between supporters and ownership.
The club is struggling near the bottom of the Premier League table, raising genuine relegation concerns among fans who feel the ownership has failed to adequately invest in the squad.
GiveMeSport reports that despite the feel-good factor from encouraging victory under new manager Nuno Espirito Santo, action group Hammers United insists they will carry on the fight regardless of results, maintaining that supporters are backing the team while refusing to rest until there is a change at the ownership level.
The movement represents a significant challenge to the current ownership structure, with supporters demonstrating remarkable organization, persistence, and unity in their demands for change at West Ham United.
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