British far-right activist Tommy Robinson welcomed at State Department


The glowing reception contrasts with the tone often adopted by President Donald Trump and his officials toward mainstream politicians across Europe, a frequent target of public criticism.

Dame Sara Khan, the British governmentโ€™s former counter-extremism commissioner, said she was โ€œdisappointedโ€ to see Robinson hosted at the State Department.

โ€œThis is an individual who has fueled significant violent disorder on our streets,โ€ Khan, who was also appointed under Conservative Prime Minister Boris Johnson as an independent government adviser on social cohesion and resilience, told NBC News in an email.

โ€œHe has a history of criminal convictions as long as my armโ€ and is โ€œwidely despised by overwhelming sections of the British population,โ€ she said.

Polling by YouGov last year found that 61% of British adults held an unfavorable view of Robinson, while 12% held a favorable view of him.

Robinson and the British Foreign Office did not respond to NBC Newsโ€™ requests for comment.

Once the owner of a tanning salon in his hometown of Luton, a town outside London, Robinson was first jailed in 2005 for assaulting an off-duty police officer. Other convictions have included mortgage fraud, contempt of court, and attempting to circumvent a travel ban into the United States by entering the country using someone elseโ€™s passport.

The activist first came to prominence as co-founder of the English Defense League, a protest organization that vowed opposition to Islam and intermingled with the countryโ€™s soccer hooligan scene.

In recent years, he has amassed millions of followers across X and YouTube, billing himself as an independent journalist focused on the issue of โ€œgrooming gangsโ€ โ€” children being sexually abused by groups of men.

Robinsonโ€™s high-water mark came last September when his โ€œUnite the Kingdomโ€ march attracted more than 110,000 people to the streets of central London, according to police estimates. Elon Musk, who reversed Robinsonโ€™s ban from the X platform in 2023, joined the rally via video link, telling the crowd that โ€œviolence is comingโ€ and โ€œyou either fight back or you die.โ€

Kate Hopinks and Tommy Robinson.
Tommy Robinson, right, attends the “Unite the Kingdom” rally in London in September 2025.Ben Montgomery / Getty Images
Protesters at the "Unite The Kingdom" rally.
Protesters at the “Unite the Kingdom” rally in London in September 2025.Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

For years, Robinson and others accused the government and officials of covering up grooming gang cases carried out by people of South Asian heritage.

His claims have been frequently amplified by Musk, who has used his X megaphone to broadcast the issue worldwide.

An independent, government-commissioned report last year, conducted by Britain’s former victims’ commissioner, found โ€œclear evidence of over-representation among suspects of Asian and Pakistani-heritage menโ€ and that organizations had been โ€œavoiding the topic altogether for fear of appearing racist.โ€

The government has since established a national inquiry, with Shabana Mahmood, the interior minister โ€” whose parents are of Pakistani origin โ€” criticizing an โ€œabject failure by the stateโ€ on the issue.

Robinson’s critics challenge the idea put out by Rittenhouse and others that he is a โ€œfree speechโ€ champion, noting his 2019 contempt of court conviction for public interventions in a criminal grooming gangs case.

โ€œWhat Robinson does do is hide behind the banner of free speech and weaponize it to justify spreading racist and antidemocratic beliefs,โ€ Khan said.

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.