Just Earth News | @justearthnews | 14 Sep 2025, 04:02 am Print

Tommy Robinson grew up in a town with a large immigrant and Muslim community. Photo: X/@TRobinsonNewEra
“We are part of a tidal wave,” hollered Tommy Robinson to the sprawling crowd.
“Britain has finally awoken, and this is never going away,” he declared, calling the rally “the spark of a cultural revolution in Great Britain.”
“We have to stop illegal migration into this country,” he screamed, asserting that his movement had long been unfairly labelled “racist” and “Islamophobe” — claims that, he vowed, would no longer silence his supporters.
The weekend’s “Unite the Kingdom” rally in London — attended by more than 110,000 people and marred by violent clashes with police — has once again placed Robinson at the centre of public debate.
Born Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, he remains one of Britain’s most polarising figures: praised by his followers as a champion of free speech, decried by critics as a dangerous provocateur who stokes division.
From Luton to the English Defence League
Born in 1982 in Luton, Bedfordshire, Robinson grew up in a working-class family in a town with a large immigrant and Muslim community. He left school as a teenager and trained as an aircraft engineer at Luton Airport before drifting into street politics. His adopted name, “Tommy Robinson,” came from a local football hooligan and was initially a pseudonym.
In 2009, he founded the English Defence League (EDL), a street protest movement that made headlines for its loud, often aggressive demonstrations against what it called the spread of “radical Islam.”
Under Robinson, the EDL tapped into post-9/11 and post-7/7 anxieties, drawing young men to rallies that frequently ended in confrontations with police and counter-protesters. He later stepped down as leader, but the organisation cemented his reputation as the face of Britain’s modern far right.
Legal troubles and public controversy
Robinson’s career has been punctuated by frequent clashes with the law. He has served time in prison for assault, passport fraud, mortgage fraud, and most controversially, contempt of court. In one high-profile case, he was jailed for live-streaming outside a grooming gang trial, with judges ruling that his actions risked prejudicing proceedings.
In 2021, he lost a libel case against a Syrian schoolboy he had accused of violence. The court ruled against him and ordered him to pay damages. Last year, he was convicted again of contempt of court for repeating the claims in defiance of a legal injunction.
Critics say these episodes underscore a pattern: Robinson testing — and often crossing — the boundaries of British law in pursuit of his agenda. Civil liberties groups accuse him of spreading hate speech and misinformation, particularly about Muslims and migrants.
Support base and online reach
Despite repeated bans from platforms like Facebook and YouTube, Robinson has remained influential online. His reach expanded again after Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter (now X), when his account was restored. He uses the platform to mobilise supporters, solicit donations, and broadcast his views directly.
To his followers, Robinson is a straight-talking truth-teller who dares to challenge political correctness and exposes what they see as the failures of Britain’s establishment on immigration and national identity. His critics, including anti-racism campaigners and mainstream politicians, see him as a dangerous demagogue whose rhetoric fuels division and violence.
These moments will live with me forever. I visualised this for 7 months on solitary confinement. Never could I have dreamed it would be this. Today we made history . Beautiful @realrikkidoolan pic.twitter.com/7lx5o4XUTj
— Tommy Robinson ?? (@TRobinsonNewEra) September 13, 2025
Why he matters now
Saturday’s rally showed Robinson’s enduring ability to draw crowds — and attention. The event, promoted as a stand for free speech, featured speeches by far-right figures such as French politician Eric Zemmour, as well as a video message from Elon Musk warning about migration. Police reported 26 officers injured and more than two dozen arrests, underlining the volatile nature of such gatherings.
As Britain grapples with divisive debates over migration and identity, Robinson remains a lightning rod. Whether viewed as a champion of free expression or as a provocateur exploiting public fears, his prominence underscores how far-right activism continues to find an audience in the UK’s turbulent political climate.
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