Tommy Robinson, the founder of the English Defence League, is now a political ghost in the UK - not in votes, but in mainstream legitimacy. His failed 2019 European Parliament bid and a long criminal record have made him untouchable for major parties, including Nigel Farage’s Reform UK.
He has pivoted to a new model. On The Intelligence, Georgia Banjo notes that Robinson has abandoned traditional politics for a high-reach, digitally-funded influencer operation. American backers provide the capital and platform he can’t find at home. Elon Musk has retweeted him and paid his legal fees; Steve Bannon once called him the “backbone of Britain.” Last September, Robinson claimed a million people attended his London rally; police estimated 150,000, while Musk appeared on giant screens.
“The money and the momentum are coming from the United States. Figures like Elon Musk and Steve Bannon have essentially underwritten Robinson’s brand.”
- Georgia Banjo, The Intelligence from The Economist
His power lies in framing. Robinson uses his 1.9 million followers on X - more than almost any British politician - to reframe immigration as an “invasion” for a global audience.
Yet his influence is narrow. According to a More In Common survey, only 14% of Britons support him. Even among his base, the appeal is limited: YouGov polling shows 29% of British men view him favorably, up from 9% in 2021. The model works online but collapses at the ballot box.
Robinson’s shift shows where far-right energy now flows: not into parties, but into platforms funded from abroad. The gatekeepers he bypasses are British, but his financiers are not.
