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What makes the EDL’s former leader, who says he is a friend of the Jews, tick?

Inside the mind of a street thug

March 5, 2015 14:54
05032015 PA 17926582

BySandy Rashty, Sandy Rashty

5 min read

What do you really know about Tommy Robinson, the founder of the English Defence League who claims that he is an advocate of the Jews and Israel?

I assume you know that the 32-year-old, born Stephen Yaxley-Lennon to a working-class family in Luton, was notorious for setting up the "street protest" movement, which attracted neo-Nazis and football hooligans, to attack what the EDL called the "ideology of Islam". The rise of radical Islam in his Bedfordshire town, he says, made him want to tackle it head-on.

For five years, he was the EDL's Golden Boy. His oratorical skills and media appeal thrust him and the EDL into the spotlight. His racism and angry thuggery regularly stirred up angry crowds.

Then in 2013, he suddenly resigned. Sitting beside reformed Islamist Maajid Nawaz, he told a packed press conference that despite attempts to kick out neo-Nazis and white supremacists, the EDL had been infiltrated by such far-right splinter groups. He was no longer prepared to be the face of the EDL. Nawaz's anti-extremist Quilliam Foundation had, as a result, facilitated his exit.

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EDL