Background
Robinson was born in Burslem, Staffordshire the son of William Robinson of Stoke on Trent.
Robinson was born in Burslem, Staffordshire the son of William Robinson of Stoke on Trent.
He had a particular interest in housing and transport issues. He stood for only once being elected Liberal Member of Parliament for Stoke-on-Trent, Burslem at the 1923 general election. In a straight fight (apparently with Unionist support) he defeated the sitting Labour Member of Parliament, Andrew MacLaren by the narrow margin of 63 votes, just 0.2% of the total poll.
Robinson, perhaps mindful of his local arrangement with the Conservatives, voted against his own party in the division which brought in the first Labour government.
Robinson was also one of a minority of Liberal MPs who voted with the Tories to force a debate on unemployment in May 1924 and again on an employment issue in August. Most of the candidates were former Liberal Party members, and many of them joined the Conservative Party soon after being elected.
The best known Constitutionalist candidate was Winston Churchill. Robinson did not try to re-enter the House of Commons.
Robinson died on 10 May 1927 aged 63 years.
Constitutionalist was a label used by some anti-socialist candidates in United Kingdom general elections in the early 1920s.
He decided not to defend his Burslem seat in 1924 when Labour was opposed by a Constitutionalist candidate, the former Liberal William Allen.
33rd United Kingdom
He was an elected member of Stoke on Trent council, becoming an Alderman and was later Mayor of the town circa 1918 for three years in succession.