Homelessness charity Centrepoint has confirmed it has no plans to work with Sharon Osbourne in the future after she publicly endorsed a rally organised by right-wing activist Tommy Robinson.
Sharon Osbourne has been cut ties with by a charity after publicly backing a rally organised by controversial right-wing figure Tommy Robinson.
Homelessness charity Centrepoint has announced it has “no plans to work together in the future” with Sharon after she openly supported an upcoming demonstration orchestrated by Robinson.
In an online statement, Robinson declared he was organising the march for individuals “who have had enough of migration and mass immigration and the oppression from a tyrannical government”.
The TV star, perhaps most recognised from her time on The X Factor, used her official Instagram profile to write: “See you at the march” under a post advertising the event planned for next month, titled ‘Unite The Kingdom’. The demonstration intends to “bring London to a total standstill”.
Osbourne, whose husband, Black Sabbath icon Ozzy Osbourne, died last July at the age of 76, had previously backed Centrepoint through its Omaze fundraising campaign, offering the public a chance to win a high-end property, reports the Irish Mirror.
A Centrepoint representative made clear: “Sharon supported us on this campaign and, while she is referred to as an ambassador in that context, she was not an official ambassador for Centrepoint.”, reports the Mirror. “We have no plans to work together in the future. Political activity like this runs counter to our values and our long history of supporting young people regardless of their background, religion or ethnicity.
“If we want young people to thrive in this country, then we need to ensure our society continues to allow them to live without fear and to access the opportunities they need to start education or work and leave homelessness behind.”
The Unite the Kingdom rally is due to be held in London on 16 May, spearheaded by right-wing activist Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon. The last demonstration in September drew crowds estimated at between 110,000 and 150,000 attendees.
In recent times, Mrs O has generated growing controversy, including online involvement with anti-immigrant campaigns. Robinson, whose birth name is Stephen Christopher Yaxley-Lennon, co-founded the English Defence League. His 2005 conviction stemmed from assaulting an off-duty police officer.
Another assault conviction followed in 2011, resulting in a suspended sentence for head-butting someone at an EDL rally in Lancashire. That July, Robinson was given a 12-month community rehabilitation order after leading a brawl involving roughly 100 football supporters in Luton during 2010. Two years afterwards, he was imprisoned for passport fraud after attempting to enter America using someone else’s identity. In January 2014, the activist received an 18-month jail term for “conspiring with others to obtain a mortgage by misrepresentation from the Abbey and Halifax banks”. He found himself back behind bars in 2019 following a contempt of court conviction.
A five-year stalking protection order was imposed upon him in 2021 after journalist Lizzie Dearden and her partner, Samuel Partridge, filed a complaint with police. Come May 2025, he walked free halfway through an 18-month sentence he’d been serving for breaching an injunction that barred him from repeating unfounded claims about a Syrian refugee.
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