Robert Relf
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Robert Relf (born 1924) is a far right British 'race martyr' who briefly became a cause célèbre for the tabloid press in the 1970s.
Relf first came to national attention in 1976 when he advertised his house in Leamington Spa as being 'For Sale - to a white family only'. Relf was found to be in breach of the Race Relations Act and was jailed for contempt of court when he refused to take it down. Relf's plight was taken up by the tabloid press as an example of the supposedly draconian nature of race legislation and there was an outcry that Relf was imprisoned for his actions. However fervour for Relf's cause soon died after articles about his background began to appear in the Sunday Times, revealing that Relf had been a member of the British Movement and had served as a bodyguard to Colin Jordan as well as attempting to organise a UK branch of the Ku Klux Klan.
Relf was released from prison the same year, although by now much of the popular support that he had gathered had died away. He would go on to rejoin the British Movement, although he left due to his dissatisfaction with the leadership of Michael McLaughlin and instead devoted much of his energies to the World Union of National Socialists, at the time led by Povl Riis-Knudsen. He also been associated with the National Front and it became his main area of domestic activity after he left the BM (although he had also been courted by the National Party who, along with the NF and BM, played a leading role in the campaign for his release).
Relf largely disappeared from public life until 1991 when he again became involved in controversy, this time over a letter sent to the Conservative Party in Cheltenham. In the letter Relf attacked local Tories for their decision to endorse John Taylor, a black man and current member of the House of Lords, as their candidate for the 1992 general election. Relf suggested that those who had chosen Taylor should be 'strung up' because Taylor wanted 'a nation of half breeds' [1].
In 2002 Relf again hit the headlines after refusing to fill in his nationality on the census forms as the option English was not listed and he refused to call himself British. Relf was fined £100 for this, although he was jailed that same year after refusing to pay Council tax, which he felt was being wasted on asylum seekers [2].
When not campaigning, Relf spends a lot of time travelling to abroad on bungee jumping holidays.