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Nick Tenconi

Right wing political leader in the UK From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nick Tenconi
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Nick Marcel Tenconi (born 29 March 1984) is a British politician, personal trainer and activist who has been the leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) since February 2025, having served in the interim from June 2024. He is also a COO of the right-wing pressure group Turning Point UK (TPUK).

Quick facts Leader of the UK Independence Party, Preceded by ...
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Biography

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Tenconi was born into a wealthy family from Eastbourne, East Sussex. He went to a private junior school, followed by a state secondary school. He went on to work in sales, then launched his own personal training business, Tenco Training, in 2013 in Reading.[1][2][3] In 2023, Tenconi received publicity after driving to Ukraine to deliver aid.[4]

His political career began when he joined the right-wing group Turning Point UK, eventually becoming COO.[1] As the COO of Turning Point UK, in 2023 he was involved in organising street demonstrations in London's Honor Oak at a pub which had previously held drag queen storytime events. The repeated protests by TPUK saw hundreds of counter protesters outnumbering and drowning out TPUK's activists.[5][6][7] According to Trans Safety Network, Tenconi "was enthusiastically involved in the street violence, personally offering to fight individuals, and physically moving towards and grabbing at counter-protesters".[8] The LGBT news website Pink News wrote that Tenconi "uses his Twitter platform to espouse hateful anti-trans views".[9]

A feature on the radical right published by Hope not Hate said of Turning Point UK that "following the addition of COO Nick Tenconi to the group, it appears to be in the process of reinventing itself as a street-protest organiser, taking a key role in the demonstrations against drag queen storytelling sessions throughout the year".[10]

UKIP

He was elected as deputy leader of UKIP in May 2024, after having only recently joined, and later took on the role as acting leader after Lois Perry quit and endorsed Reform UK during the July 2024 general election.[11] Perry later claimed that she quit because "there was something 'sinister' going on, which she had not foreseen, certain elements in the leadership, whom she does not name, 'wanted to go after quite an extreme viewpoint'". However, she said that Tenconi was not part of this extremist tendency.[12]

After Tenconi took leadership of UKIP, he attempted to move closer to controversial activist Tommy Robinson, and appointed anti-Islam activist and preacher Calvin Robinson as its lead spokesperson,[13] and also entered into talks with anti-Muslim influencer Katie Hopkins.[14]

Tenconi was also seen with a loudspeaker at anti-migrant protests in Plymouth in August 2024,[15] and at other anti-migrant protests in Aldershot and Reading leading chants of 'invaders out'.[16] Tenconi alleged that a man who killed three young girls in Southport, which sparked the anti-migrant riots, was "under orders".[17] Tenconi was also at a protest in London on 1 August 2024 which turned violent.[18]

On 5 February 2025, UKIP announced that Tenconi had been ratified as party leader.[19][20] Since becoming leader, Mr Tenconi has made Christian identity politics an important part of UKIP’s campaign.[1]

On 8 August 2025, Tenconi published a video depicting himself in attendance of an anti-migrant demonstration in Portsmouth. In this video, he is seen performing a gesture that some, including Hope not Hate, have compared to a Nazi salute. The gesture was made while dancing to the 1999 Italian song L'amour toujours, which in 2024 was banned from being played at Munich's Oktoberfest by the organisers after it became an anthem of the German far-right.[1]

Both Tenconi and Turning Point UK denied the accusations, claiming them to be a "ridiculous smear," with Tenconi reiterating that "[the] ideology at UKIP is conservatism," with the party standing "wholeheartedly against the far-right and Nazism".[21][22][23]

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Tenconi has described himself as a "defender of masculinity, Christianity, and conservative values" and has expressed his opposition to what he describes as "satanic woke culture".[2] He describes himself as a "huge fan" of Kyle Rittenhouse, a young American who shot dead two protestors and shot and injured a third at a Black Lives Matter protest.[24][25][26][27][28] Tenconi has said that liberalism "breeds degeneracy", and that British people should "return" to traditional values. He has also been outspoken about what he percieves as an immigration "problem" in Britain, and said that British people need to "outbreed the invaders".[1]

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References

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