Jack Buckby


Jack Buckby is a British political commentator. He was previously active in a number of far-right groups and campaigns, including the British National Party and Liberty GB. In 2017 he was associated with Anne Marie Waters and her party the For Britain Movement.

Early life and the BNP

Buckby joined the British National Party after meeting its leader Nick Griffin. He was active in its youth movement, known at various times as BNP Crusaders and Resistance. He started a far-right youth group called the Natural Culturists in July 2012, while studying political science at the University of Liverpool. Griffin introduced him at a meeting of the Alliance of European National Movements in 2012. He was described at the time as a potential future leader of the BNP to succeed Griffin. Buckby left the party the same year, saying that the “open race hatred became unacceptable". He was expelled from the University of Liverpool.

Liberty GB and Anne Marie Waters

He joined Liberty GB, a new far-right party, in 2013. He stood as a candidate in the 2014 European Parliament election for the South East England constituency in third position on the party's list, behind the founder Paul Weston. The list received 0.11% of the vote. By 2016, he was serving as the party's press officer.
In June 2016, he tweeted that the Orlando nightclub shooting was the fault of LGBT people. Following the murder of Jo Cox in 2016 by a far-right activist, Buckby stood in the 2016 Batley and Spen by-election as the Liberty GB candidate, appearing on the ballot as "No to terrorism, yes to Britain". Large parties, including the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats didn't stand candidates due to the circumstances of the by-election. He came sixth, with 1.1% of the vote.
In February 2017, Buckby told a student activist on television to "take in a Syrian refugee, I hope you don't get raped". He is thought to have left Liberty GB in June 2017, after which he was media manager for Anne Marie Waters's campaign in the 2017 UK Independence Party leadership election. He told an undercover reporter "I'm basically the campaign manager. But I don't make it too public." Waters came second, with 21.3% of the vote. Following the leadership election, Waters started a new party called the For Britain Movement, which Buckby joined.

Elections contested

UK Parliament elections

European Parliament elections