Some of the country's highest profile sports stars have joined
forces with the government's Enough campaign to tackle violence
against women and girls.
To raise awareness of abusive behaviour, stars including Arsenal
footballer Chloe Kelly, Newcastle United's Dan Burn and boxing
star Conor Benn are featured in a brand-new social content series
produced with Sky Media and planned and activated by MG OMD (part
of Omnicom Media). This series aims to help the public recognise
behaviours that are abusive and cross the line.
Major UK brands including TSB and the Night Time Industries
Association will be helping to bring the message into homes,
workplaces and high streets that women and girls should be free
to live without fear of violence or abuse. This news comes as the
government drives forward on its unprecedented mission to halve
these crimes in a decade following the publication of its
landmark Violence Against Women and
Girls Strategy in December.
With a shocking 5.1 million victims of domestic abuse, stalking
or sexual assault last year and more than 200,000 sexual offences
and over 800,000 domestic abuse related offences recorded by the
police in 2025, it is vital to do more to raise awareness of
abuse and to ensure those who cause harm are encouraged to
recognise, question, and change their behaviour.
That's why the Enough campaign aims to reach audiences across
social media, workplaces, and public transport to increase public
recognition of abusive behaviours and encourage self‑reflection
among perpetrators. By combining powerful creative content with
partnerships across sport, business and community organisations,
the campaign looks to drive real world action to change
behaviours and to make a genuine difference in the lives of women
and girls.
Minister for Safeguarding and Violence Against Women and Girls,
MP, said:
This government is on a mission to halve violence against women
and girls in a decade. To succeed, we must drive change in every
arena of our society, including sport.
That's why, through the Enough campaign, we are working with some
of the biggest names in sport to change the conversation in
homes, schools, and communities across the country. To end the
cycle of violence that's become normal in the lives of so many.
But we will not stop there. We will deploy the full power of the
state to make this country safe for women and girls.
Claudia Hellier, Partnerships Manager at MG OMD, said:
This campaign is about meeting people where they are, and sport
is one of the few spaces that cuts across age, background, and
geography.
By partnering with Sky Media and working with athletes who carry
real credibility with our young male audience, we were able to
give the ‘Enough' message the scale, resonance and visibility it
deserves.
It's been an important collaboration between Sky Media, Home
Office and MG OMD teams and is the kind of work that reminds you
why media strategy, done with intention, can make a real
difference.
Kate Osiadacz, Head of Responsible Business, TSB, said:
Domestic and economic abuse continues to devastate lives across
the country – so the government's campaign to raise awareness of
this crime is entirely welcome.
Businesses have a key role to play too – and we've seen
first-hand the life-changing impact support such as flee funds
and safe spaces provide to victim-survivors in moments of crisis.
Michael Kill, CEO of Night Time Industries Association, said:
Violence against women and girls has no place in our society, and
the Night Time Industries Association strongly welcomes the Home
Office's campaign addressing this critical issue. The night-time
economy should be a space for culture, connection and enjoyment,
and this campaign sends a clear message to perpetrators: abusive
behaviour will not be tolerated.
Across our sector, venues are already investing in staff
training, bystander intervention, reporting processes and strong
partnerships with police and local authorities. This campaign
helps amplify those efforts, reinforces shared responsibility,
and encourages safe, respectful behaviour in public spaces.
Tackling VAWG requires sustained
commitment, cultural change and collaboration. Campaigns like
this empower individuals to intervene safely, challenge harmful
attitudes, and make it clear that perpetrators, not victims, are
accountable.
The government is making progress on tackling violence against
women and girls through a series of policies that strengthen
protection, pursue dangerous offenders, and support victims. Our
cross‑government Violence Against Women and Girls Strategy
deploys the full power of the state to safeguard women and girls.
This includes strengthening victims' rights, introducing
independent legal advisers for rape victims, embedding domestic
abuse specialists in 999 control rooms under Raneem's Law,
rolling out domestic abuse protection orders, and enhancing
measures to target and monitor stalking perpetrators. The
government is also investing £53 million in the Drive Project to
disrupt the behaviour of high‑harm domestic abuse offenders.
This all forms a key part of the government's mission to halve
violence against women and girls in 10 years.