Partly because of his experiences in Russia, Locker-Lampson became fiercely anti-
Communist and suspicious of covert Bolshevik influence in Britain's economy, society and politics. In the 1920s he organised several mass rallies under the banner 'Rout the Reds', many of which were stewarded by members of
Rotha Lintorn-Orman's
British Fascisti. He also expressed admiration for
Adolf Hitler in the
Daily Mirror, touting the future leader of Nazi Germany as "a legendary hero" and "the most masterly expounder and contriver in the length and breadth of the Reich". In 1931, he founded the "Sentinels of Empire", also known as the Blue Shirts, a quasi-paramilitary organisation "to peacefully fight Bolshevism and clear out the Reds!" Their motto was his family motto "Fear God! Fear Naught!" Their anthem, "March On", with words written by Locker-Lampson, music originally from the film
High Treason, was sold as sheet music and as a 78-rpm record. A
phonograph record of the anthem was sent to
Mussolini, along with silver and blue-enamelled cufflinks and badge, as a gift from the Blue Shirts. Although Locker-Lampson claimed that the organisation had 100,000 members, the Blue Shirts were short-lived and appeared to make little impact. Nevertheless, they did attract the praise of the Nazi philosopher
Alfred Rosenberg, who in 1931 had lunch with Locker-Lampson at the Savoy during a visit to London. This was organised by the MI6 spy
F. W. Winterbotham who was investigating the Nazis at the time, posing as an admirer who could help the Nazis make links with prominent figures in Britain. Locker-Lampson's Blue Shirts apparently "delighted Rosenberg, and when he heard that their objective was to counter Communist propaganda he was even more enthusiastic", and Rosenberg later sent him a gold cigarette case as a "token of his esteem". Locker-Lampson returned the gift with some embarrassment. From 1933 onwards, Locker-Lampson redirected his political ire against fascism both in Britain and in continental Europe. In July 1933 he introduced a
Private member's bill to extend British citizenship to
Jewish refugees from Nazi persecution, though it failed to become law. In September, he provided
Albert Einstein with refuge at a camp on
Roughton Heath near his home in Cromer in north
Norfolk, after Einstein had received death threats while living in Belgium. A TV drama-documentary released worldwide by Netflix on 17 February 2024 included scenes recreating the Roughton Camp with actor
Andrew Havill in the role of Oliver Locker-Lampson. He later worked to help other high-profile victims of fascism, including
Haile Selassie and
Sigmund Freud, as well as numerous ordinary Jewish people, whom he personally sponsored in order they might escape Nazi persecution in Germany and Austria. Some have called his efforts "exceptional in how he saved Jews from Germany." In 1934 he introduced a
Ten Minute Rule Bill to ban the wearing of political uniforms - aimed at
Oswald Mosley's Black Shirts (
British Union of Fascists). The Bill did not become law, but a similar bill sponsored by the government did become law in 1936. In 1935 he was a founding member of
Focus, a cross-party group opposed to the prevailing policy of
appeasement of German and Italian aggression. In 1936 he was instrumental in the successful prosecution of the British fascist
Arnold Leese for his publication of
anti-Semitic literature. Throughout the 1930s he was one of the few Conservative MPs to continue to support
Winston Churchill during his "wilderness years" of political isolation. Age and ill-health prevented him from taking a very active part in the Second World War, though he joined the
Home Guard and continued to support Winston Churchill vociferously from the
backbenches. He retired from politics at the 1945 General Election. ==Personal life==