The bigoted online rabble-rouser who should be too toxic for any party

It rarely takes long for Tommy Robinson’s carefully crafted image to unravel. Despite repeated attempts to present himself as a defender of British values, he repeatedly exposes a far darker reputation marked by prejudice and intimidation.

Any quiet signals of support from Restore Britain do little to lend him legitimacy.

If anything, they suggest that party leader Rupert Lowe is willing to open the door to some of the most toxic figures on the political fringe.

That development is hardly unexpected after The Mail on Sunday reported that Restore activists had joined neo-Nazis at a white supremacist gathering in Portugal last month.

Robinson himself, who was detained at Heathrow under counter-terrorism powers after returning from Russia over the weekend, has also faced accusations of inflaming unrest in recent weeks in the wake of the Belfast knife attack and the Henry Nowak murder trial.

Yet allegations surrounding him are not new, with a long record of violence, criminal convictions and far-right extremism stretching back many years.

Now aged 43, Robinson – whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon – was born to an English father and a mother who had moved here from Ireland.

With his parents splitting up when he was a toddler, he was raised in Luton by his mother and her second husband. He left school at 16 after scoring 11 A-C grades at GCSE and, after seeing off stiff competition that reportedly saw 600 applications for just four apprenticeship positions, started training as an aircraft engineer at Luton airport.

For all his efforts to reinvent himself as a well-intentioned protector of the British way of life, Tommy Robinson (pictured centre at a protest in Southampton on June 2) invariably ends up revealing his true nature as a bigoted and deeply sinister hoodlum

But Robinson’s fledgling career crashed in 2004 when he was jailed for 12 months on charges of actual bodily harm after punching and kicking an off-duty police officer.

He subsequently retrained as a plumber and carpenter, eventually specialising in renovating properties before selling them on. Other entries on his CV include a stint as the owner of a tanning salon.

By the time Robinson reached his mid-twenties, he had briefly been a member of the deeply racist British National Party.

He later claimed in interviews that he had been warned about immigrants from a young age, with family members telling him, ‘Don’t look at the Asians. Don’t make eye contact’… and I thought what the f*** am I walking around looking at the floor for?’

Speaking about his school days, he insisted ‘the divide’ was clear even then. ‘They had their playground,’ he said.

‘We had ours. And that’s not just our school. That’s every school in Luton. There’s always been problems.’

Robinson first came to national attention in 2009 on the back of a small demonstration in his hometown.

Parading through the centre of Luton after returning from duty in Afghanistan, soldiers from the 2nd Battalion The Royal Anglian Regiment faced shouts of ‘terrorists’ and ‘butchers of Basra’ from a group of Islamist protesters. Robinson and other white football supporters led a noisy counter-protest.

Stephen Yaxley-Lennon (pictured speaking to demonstrators at Aldgate Station in London in September 2011) adopted the alias Tommy Robinson from the organiser of Luton Town’s football hooligan firm in the early 1980s 

It was effectively the start of the neo-fascist English Defence League (EDL), which began as a local pressure group and ultimately spread its tentacles to stage violent protests across Britain. In one of his first interviews, Robinson – the EDL’s then 26-year-old leader – complained of town centres being ‘plagued by Islamic extremists’.

Around the same time, he adopted the Tommy Robinson alias from the organiser of Luton Town’s football hooligan firm in the early 1980s.

Before long, he became a regular in court. In 2011, he received a 12-month community rehabilitation order for his involvement in a massive football brawl the previous year. As violence flared between fans of Luton Town and Newport County, he chanted ‘EDL till I die’.

Robinson was jailed for ten months in January 2013 for travelling to a planned speaking engagement in the US on someone else’s passport in an attempt to avoid an entry ban. Later that year, he left the EDL because it had, in his words, become ‘too extreme’.

In 2014, he was sentenced to 18 months over a complicated mortgage fraud that, the court was told, had netted him £160,000 over a six-month period. His other custodial sentences include a stretch for almost causing the collapse of a grooming trial. On that occasion, he posted a video of the defendants to Facebook while the proceedings were active and encouraged ‘vigilante action’.

Little was heard from divorced father-of-three Robinson for five years after he was booted off Twitter in 2018 for breaching rules on hate speech.

Both Facebook and Instagram took similar action the following year. He announced his unrepentant return to social media when he posted ‘I’m back, who’s missed me?’ on X, formerly Twitter, days after his account was reactivated in November 2023.

But it wasn’t until the summer of 2024 that Robinson started making his online presence fully felt again.

Little was heard from divorced father-of-three Robinson (pictured here at the Old Bailey in July 2019) for five years after he was booted off Twitter in 2018 for breaching rules on hate speech

Little was heard from divorced father-of-three Robinson (pictured here at the Old Bailey in July 2019) for five years after he was booted off Twitter in 2018 for breaching rules on hate speech

Following the horrific knife murder of three girls in Southport, he stoked up trouble and hate in an almost non-stop stream of inflammatory posts.

As well as providing a running commentary on the riots that gripped Britain after the stabbings, he lambasted the media for describing protesters as ‘far-Right’ and attacked the then-Home Secretary Yvette Cooper for calling them ‘thugs’.

It is understood that one of Robinson’s main sources of income is through the ‘independent journalism’ brand Urban Scoop, which he uses to sell his books and solicit donations.

He has also received funding from a number of wealthy American backers, as well as from the Philadelphia-based Middle East Forum – a pro-Israel think-tank which describes itself as ‘working to protect Western civilisation from the threat of Islamism’.

Robinson has previously spoken of financial support from US tech billionaire Robert Shillman. The 80-year-old, who made his fortune through barcode firm Cognex, reportedly donated $100,000 towards last month’s Unite the Kingdom rally in London.

Since 2024, Robinson has been repeatedly endorsed by no less a figure than X owner and trillionaire Elon Musk – who, of course, added his unwelcome tuppenceworth to the Makerfield by-election discourse by voicing his support for Restore Britain.

Others to back him include Canadian academic Jordan Peterson and former Trump strategist Steve Bannon.

From their vantage point across the Atlantic, they clearly haven’t had the opportunity to take a proper look at Tommy Robinson. Anyone on British soil with eyes in their head and more than a couple of brain cells to rub together can see him for the toxic, hate-filled rabble-rouser that he is.

Except, it would appear from his remarks over the weekend, Rupert Lowe.

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