Musk has cut ties with far-right British politician Nigel Farage as he champions divisive activist Tommy Robinson.
The chief executive of the UK’s speech and language therapists’ professional body has apologised after following Tommy Robinson on X. The Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists’ (RCSLT) boss Steve Jamieson said he was “deeply sorry for the ...
Reform insiders are convinced the billionaire’s support for Robinson stems from his conversations with the Canadian academic
Nigel Farage has vowed to “explain” to Elon Musk why he won’t co-operate with Tommy Robinson. The billionaire owner of X, who has hinted at a possible donation to Farage’s Reform, has shown support for the jailed activist on social media.
But despite his following, there are four reasons that may explain why Mr Farage is steering clear of Robinson: He didn’t want him to join UKIP, His prison sentences for contempt of court, he is could harm Reform’s popularity, and the misconception in the US that he is in prison for exposing grooming gangs.
The party is unequivocal in its rejection of the convicted criminal, even though he has won the favour of billionaire Elon Musk
ELON Musk has called for a new leader of Reform after Nigel Farage said he was wrong to praise far-right agitator Tommy Robinson. But it came just hours after the opposition politician had
Nigel Farage has distanced himself from Tommy Robinson after Elon Musk swung behind the jailed political activist, calling for his release. The Reform UK leader said Mr Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, is “not what we need”, as his party seeks to challenge Labour in upcoming elections.
Nigel Farage said he is 'on a campaign' to educate Americans on who Tommy Robinson 'actually is' after a row with Elon Musk.
A rapper who posted a ‘menacing’ video, featuring a gun gesture, about EDL-founder Tommy Robinson has been found guilty. Omar Abdirizak, known as Twista Cheese, released the TikTok video during nationwide disorder last year.
Nigel Farage has had to remind his multi-billionaire friend that Tommy Robinson is not in prison as a 'freedom fighter'.
Across the 2000s, a series of child sex exploitation cases affected British towns, including Telford, Rochdale, Oxford and Rotherham, scarring the lives of hundreds of children. In 2011, Times journalist Andrew Norfolk reported that networks – so-called “grooming gangs” – of largely British Asian men of Pakistani heritage had trafficked and raped hundreds of mainly