Hubbry Logo
search
logo
1021779

Robin Tilbrook

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Write something...
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
See all
Robin Tilbrook

Robin Charles William Tilbrook (born 1958) is an English nationalist politician and solicitor who has been chairman of the English Democrats since its foundation in 2002 and chairman of the Workers of England Union.

Tilbrook was born in Kuala Lumpur, Federation of Malaya, in 1958. He was educated at Wellington College, Berkshire, gained a BA (Hons) in politics and economics from the University of Kent at Canterbury, and then studied at The College of Law, Chester.[citation needed]

He was a Coldstream Guardsman and has worked in a factory, in junior management, and as a teacher at primary and secondary level.[citation needed] By 2003, he was a solicitor and a partner in the firm of Tilbrooks in Ongar, Essex. In 2005, he commented after a case, "It is a black day in the courts when they refuse to make a declaration that St George's Day is a special occasion."

On 27 September 2011, he became a Freeman of the City of London.

Tilbrook was a member of the Conservative Student Association and a member of the Conservative Party, at one time a Conservative candidate for Ongar Town council.[citation needed] He co-founded the English National Party in 1997, and then helped to relaunch the party as the English Democrats in 2002 to campaign for an English Parliament. He is also the leader and nominating officer. He has stood as a candidate for the English Democrats in local, parliamentary and European elections. Standing in Epping Forest, he received 1.4% of the vote in the 2005 general election, 4.4% at 2005 Essex County Council election, 18.2% in the 2007 Epping Forest District Council election, and 11.3% in the 2009 County Council election. He gained 2.01% of the vote as the lead candidate for the East of England region in the 2009 European election.

By 2006, the English Democrats, based in Norwich and chaired by Tilbrook, had adopted the policies of campaigning for a devolved English parliament, opposing membership of the European Union, opposing further immigration, and wishing to make St George's Day a national holiday.

Tilbrook said of the English Democrats in 2006 that the party "agitates for anyone living in England" and that Englishness was "akin to American notions of "Americanness": that you can be from any ethnic background and still wrap yourself in the flag." In the same year, he criticised spending on St Patrick's Day in London and added that too little was spent on St George's Day. In 2009, he said, "We're hoping to do what the Scottish National Party managed to do in the 1970s and break through to being able to influence what happens in Parliament about England". He argues that the money given by the UK to the EU is given to other parts of the country at the expense of England, which makes his party Eurosceptic.

Tilbrook has reportedly had associations with the far-right. In 2013, he confirmed that a tenth of the English Democrats membership was former BNP members and stood by comments at the party's 10th annual conference in 2011 that BNP supporters will "help us become an electorally credible party". In a 2015 interview with the BBC, Tilbrook confirmed that he had had meetings with groups on the far-right and far-left. This meeting was reportedly organised by the then leader of Britain First, Jim Dowson, and attended by members of the English Defence League. In 2023, it was reported that activists from Patriotic Alternative, a neo-Nazi party, had canvassed for him in the Epping Forest District Council elections.

See all
User Avatar
No comments yet.