Claire Fox


Claire Regina Fox is a British libertarian writer and politician. She is the director and founder of the think tank the Institute of Ideas, a trading name of the Academy of Ideas. Previously a member of the Revolutionary Communist Party, she later became a registered supporter of the Brexit Party and served as Member of the European Parliament for North West England from 2019 until 2020.

Early life and career

Fox was born in 1960 to Irish Catholic parents John Fox and Maura Cleary and is the elder sister of Fiona and Gemma Fox. She grew up in Buckley, Flintshire, Wales. After attending St Richard Gwyn Catholic High School in Flint, she studied at the University of Warwick where she graduated with a lower second class degree in English and American Literature. She later gained a Professional Graduate Certificate in Education.
Fox was a mental health social worker. She was an English Language and Literature lecturer at Thurrock Technical College and at West Herts College.

Revolutionary Communist Party

Fox joined the Revolutionary Communist Party as a student at the University of Warwick. For the next twenty years, she was one of the RCP's core activists and organisers. She became co-publisher of its magazine Living Marxism, which closed in 2000 after the courts found it had falsely accused Independent Television News of faking evidence of the Bosnian genocide. In 2018, Fox refused to apologise for suggesting evidence of the genocide was faked.
Fox stayed with her ex-RCP members when the group transformed itself in the early 2000s into a network around the web magazine Spiked Online and the Institute of Ideas, both based in the former RCP offices and both promoting libertarianism. Author and environmental activist George Monbiot has argued these groups are part of the "pro-corporate libertarian right".

Media career

Fox has been a guest panellist on BBC Radio 4's programme The Moral Maze, and appeared as a panellist on BBC One's political television programme Question Time.
Fox has been criticised in The Guardian for rejecting multiculturalism as divisive and her libertarian belief in the desirability of minimal governmental control and support of free speech in all contexts. She has been accused of "supporting Gary Glitter's right to download child porn", something of which she says "I feel stupid for saying paedophilia is disgusting".
In 2015, she was listed as one of BBC's 100 Women. Fox wrote the book I Find That Offensive! in 2016.

Brexit Party

In April 2019, Fox became a registered supporter of the Brexit Party. She was in the first position in the list for the Brexit Party in the North West England constituency at the 2019 European Parliament election. The candidacy was announced on 23 April 2019.
Fox's selection was criticised by the father of murdered schoolboy Tim Parry for her past support for the Provisional Irish Republican Army and the RCP's defence of the 1993 IRA Warrington bombings, which had killed his son within the North West England constituency. Another candidate for the Brexit Party, Sally Bate, resigned, citing Fox's "ambiguous position" about IRA violence. A Brexit Party spokesperson commented on the criticism of Fox: "It's a desperate attempt to cause trouble".
Fox was subsequently elected to serve in the European Parliament. She remained in this role until the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the EU on 31 January 2020.

House of Lords

In 2020, Fox was nominated for a peerage and will sit as a non-affiliated peer, despite her claiming to be against the existence of the House of Lords.