Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative MP Andrew Jones has said he will vote against Prime Minister Boris Johnson in tonight’s confidence vote.
Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee of backbench MPs, confirmed this morning that a ballot will be held at 6pm today.
The move comes as the threshold of 15% of the parliamentary Conservative party seeking a vote of confidence in Mr Johnson was met. He will need the support of 180 MPs this evening to remain as PM.
In a statement published in various media outlets, the MP said he will not be supporting the PM due to the partygate scandal.
The MP said he has received emails from “hundreds of people” in Harrogate and Knaresborough, with most of them calling for the PM to resign.
The statement said:
“There were many harrowing stories in those emails where people couldn’t visit elderly relatives or mourn them at their funerals. These were people following the rules the Prime Minister set and championed.”
The Stray Ferret has asked Mr Jones for a copy of the statement but we did not receive a response.
The statement in full is below:

Credit – Yorkshire Post
Read more:
- MPs watch: ‘anger’ over partygate and Northern Ireland politics
- Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones MP named as Tory ‘rebel’
Harrogate district MPs to vote on Prime Minister’s future
Conservative MPs in the Harrogate district will vote on Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s future this evening after a confidence vote was triggered.
Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee of backbench MPs, confirmed this morning that a ballot will be held at 6pm today.
The move comes as the threshold of 15% of the parliamentary Conservative party seeking a vote of confidence in Mr Johnson was met.
It means Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith, and Nigel Adams in Selby and Ainsty, which includes south and east rural parts of the Harrogate district, will all have a say in the Prime Minister’s future.
Should Mr Johnson lose the vote, he will have to stand down as Prime Minister.
The ballot comes as 54 Tory MPs have submitted letters of no confidence in the wake of partygate and revelations that lockdown parties were held at 10 Downing Street.
What have the Harrogate district MPs said?
Mr Jones was named by the Daily Mail last week as one of the Conservative rebels.
Mr Jones has not publicly called for the Prime Minister to resign and has not revealed whether he submitted a letter to the 1922 committee.
Read more:
- Harrogate district MP: ‘Time for Boris to get on with the job’
- Andrew Jones MP tells constituent he feels ‘anger’ over partygate
- Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones MP named as Tory ‘rebel’
In a letter to a constituent who had asked about the Sue Gray report, he said he felt “anger” over partygate.
Meanwhile, Mr Adams has said previously that it was time for Mr Johnson to “get on with the job” following the publication of the report.
A member of the Prime Minister’s cabinet and a key ally, he said last month:
“The Prime Minister welcomes Sue Gray’s report and has apologised again.
“He now needs to get on with the job, levelling up the country, tackling global challenges including the cost of living and Ukraine crisis and delivering for the country and for the people who put their faith in him in 2019.”
Mr Smith has yet to speak publicly on Mr Johnson’s future.
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones MP named as Tory ‘rebel’Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has been named in a Daily Mail article today about Conservative MPs plotting to oust Boris Johnson.
Mr Jones has told constituents asking about partygate that his “anger is not going to lessen”.
His also said:
“I understand the anger people feel. I feel it too. Most of all I feel intensely depressed that senior people in our political system have pretended, or somehow genuinely believed, that tables groaning with bottles of wine, as we have now seen pictured, were in some way allowed work practices.”
But Mr Jones has not called for the Prime Minister to resign and has not revealed whether he has submitted a letter calling for a vote of no confidence in Mr Johnson to Sir Graham Brady, chair of the backbench 1922 committee. Fifty-four Tory MPs must do so to trigger a leadership contest.
Mr Jones has declined to respond to questions about the matter from the Stray Ferret.
Nevertheless the Daily Mail includes him in a list of 41 Conservative MPs in an article about Tory ‘plotters’.
Read more:
- Andrew Jones MP tells constituent he feels ‘anger’ over partygate
- Andrew Jones MP says Harrogate and Knaresborough train cuts’a bad mistake’
York Outer MP Julian Sturdy is also named, along with former Cabinet minister Andrea Leadsom and former Shadow Home Secretary David Davis.
The article claims the ‘rebels’ could get enough support for a confidence vote next week.
It quotes Home Secretary Priti Patel urging them to “concentrate on doing our jobs” rather than creating a “distraction”.
She adds:
“Writing letters is a sideshow, quite frankly, rather than focusing on the real challenges that we have to find solutions to.’
“Our job is to deliver on the people’s priorities. They won’t thank the Conservative Party for talking about itself at a time when people have anxieties, concerns, apprehensions. Our job is deliver for them.’
MPs watch: ‘anger’ over partygate and Northern Ireland politics
Every month the Stray Ferret tries to find out what our local MPs have been up to in their constituencies and in the House of Commons.
This month, historic elections in Northern Ireland saw Sinn Fein become the largest party and the Sue Gray Downing Street parties report was finally published.
We asked our three Conservative MPs, Harrogate & Knaresborough’s Andrew Jones, Skipton and Ripon’s Julian Smith, and Selby and Ainsty’s Nigel Adams if they would like to highlight anything in particular that they have been doing this month, but, as usual, we did not receive a response from any of them.
Here is what we know after analysing their online presence.

Andrew Jones, Harrogate and Knaresborough MP.
In Harrogate and Knaresborough, here is what we found out on Mr Jones:
- On May 5, Mr Jones attended the council election count at the Harrogate Convention Centre. He refused to speak with the Stray Ferret when approached for comment on the results.
- On May 12, Mr Jones said in the Commons that he has been contacted by ‘distressed constituents’ who are waiting for their passports. He said: “It can be highly stressful for them to be chasing documents as they approach departure day.”
- He was back in Harrogate the next day to cut a ribbon and officially open the new Carer’s Resource centre in Harrogate.
- On May 17, he met TV presenter and campaigner Quentin Willson to discuss electric vehicles.
- On May 20, Mr Jones told Parliament that cuts to Northern train services will damage business and make it impossible for some commuters to be at work on time.
- On May 22, the MP was spotted campaigning for the Conservatives in Wakefield for the upcoming by-election.
- On May 23, Mr Jones voted for the government’s Public Order Bill. Critics of the bill say it will erode people’s right to protest.
- On May 24, Mr Jones asked Thirsk MP Kevin Hollinrake if the Home Office has promised any extra funding for local services impacted by the Linton-on-Ouse asylum centre. Mr Hollinrake replied: “Apparently there will be a double-manned police car in the village at all times.”
- On May 27, Mr Jones met the group Melanoma Focus and posed for a photo.
- Harrogate & Knaresborough Conservative MP Andrew Jones wrote to a constituent that he feels “anger” over partygate — but would not say whether he has submitted a letter of no confidence in Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
Read more:

Julian Smith, MP for Skipton and Ripon.
In Skipton and Ripon, here is what we found on Mr Smith:
- On May 1, Mr Smith met with the Tory candidates in Ripon for the North Yorkshire County Council elections Cllr Mike Chambers and Thomas Averre. Both candidates failed to win on May 5.
- The MP wrote an op-ed in the Daily Mail following the elections in Northern Ireland that saw Sinn Fein become the largest party for the first time. He warned the union between the UK and Northern Ireland is under threat.
- On May 18, Mr Smith met Pateley Bridge artist James Owen Thomas. Mr Thomas likes to express himself through the beauty of the outdoors.
- On the same day, Mr Smith met Justin Scully, general manager of Fountains Abbey, to discuss the Skell Valley Project.
- In an interview with Politics Home’s podcast The Rundown, Smith suggested there was a “question” over how committed some MPs are to Northern Ireland.
- Mr Smith spoke in the Commons for the first time in two months in a debate about the Northern Ireland Troubles Bill. He said “For Northern Ireland to come to terms with its past, there is a need for acknowledgement from all sides: from the IRA for the thousands of murders; from loyalists for the hundreds of killings; from the Irish Government for their role in the troubles; and for the killings and collusion by UK forces.”
In rural south Harrogate, here is what we found on Mr Adams:
- On May 25, the Boris Johnson ally backed the PM following publication of the Sue Gray report. He tweeted: “He now needs to get on with the job, levelling up the country, tackling global challenges inc cost of living & Ukraine crisis & delivering for the country & for the people who put their faith in him in 2019.”
- On May 22, the MP hit out at London Northwestern Railway following a My Chemical Romance concert in Milton Keynes. He thundered: “Dear @LNRailway a disgrace you have not arranged enough trains to get hundreds of young people home after midnight following a concert in Milton Keynes.”
- The MP revealed himself as a fan of pop-punk act Blink 182 during a discussion about the celebrity wedding of Kourtney Kardashian and the band’s drummer Travis Barker. He tweeted: “To be fair, @travisbarker is one of the best drummers I’ve seen and worthy of his fame.”
- In The Times on May 18, Mr Adams co-authored an article with York Outer MP, and former Harrogate councillor, Julian Sturdy, that said Great British Railways should be based in York.
- He twice criticised Labour leader Keir Starmer over the so-called ‘beergate’ row. “Wowser”, he tweeted. “The hypocrisy of
@Keir_Starmer has been breathtaking and he’ll need some fancy lawyer dance moves to explain this one away.”
Harrogate & Knaresborough Conservative MP Andrew Jones has told a constituent that he feels “anger” over partygate — but would not say whether he has submitted a vote of no confidence in Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
The long-awaited Sue Gray report was published last week and found that many of the parties in Downing Street “should not have been allowed to happen”.
The report included details of vomiting and parties lasting until 4am while the UK was under covid restrictions.
Following the publication of the report, a constituent wrote to Mr Jones. The MP responded in a letter on May 27 with his thoughts on the subject.
The constituent asked not to be named, but shared the letter with the Stray Ferret.
Mr Jones wrote:
“I understand the anger people feel. I feel it too. Most of all I feel intensely depressed that senior people in our political system have pretended, or somehow genuinely believed, that tables groaning with bottles of wine, as we have now seen pictured, were in some way allowed work practices.”
Mr Jones has previously been outspoken over partygate and said in the letter that his “anger is not going to lessen”.
Read more:
- Resign and higher fines: Harrogate district bereaved families react to PM’s lockdown party fine
- Harrogate district MP: ‘Time for Boris to get on with the job’
In January, the MP wrote to a different constituent to say if criminal actions were found then “consequences must flow from that”.
In April, the Prime Minister was given a fixed penalty notice for attending a birthday gathering on June 20, 2020. It made him the first Prime Minister to have been found to have broken the law while in office.
However, the letter suggests that Mr Jones now considers the case closed.
He wrote:
“My anger isn’t going to lessen and I am not going to forget this episode in the story of Covid-19. But I won’t be commenting again unless something substantially new comes to light having already responded to hundreds and hundreds of emails and letters on every aspect of this matter.”
The BBC has reported at least 20 Tory MPs have written to the 1922 committee of backbenchers with letters of no confidence in the Prime Minister.
Fifty-four letters are needed to trigger a leadership vote, but Mr Jones would not reveal if he has submitted one, writing:
“This is a matter that will remain between myself and the chair of the 1922 committee.”
The Stray Ferret has asked Mr Jones for his views following the publication of the Sue Gray report, but has not received a response.
Harrogate district MP: ‘Time for Boris to get on with the job’Nigel Adams is the only Harrogate district MP to comment so far on the publication of the long-awaited Sue Gray report.
The senior civil servant found that many of the parties in Downing Street “should not have been allowed to happen”.
The report included details of vomiting and parties lasting until 4am whilst the UK was under covid restrictions.
Mr Adams, whose Selby and Ainsty constituency includes several Harrogate district villages, is a member of the cabinet and a key ally of Prime Minister Boris Johnson. He tweeted this afternoon:
“The Prime Minister welcomes Sue Gray’s report and has apologised again.
“He now needs to get on with the job, levelling up the country, tackling global challenges including the cost of living and Ukraine crisis and delivering for the country and for the people who put their faith in him in 2019.”
Other cabinet ministers including Rishi Sunak, Dominic Raab and Nadine Dorries all tweeted similar messages of support for the Prime Minister at the same time.
The Prime Minister welcomes Sue Gray’s report & has apologised again.
He now needs to get on with the job, levelling up the country, tackling global challenges inc cost of living & Ukraine crisis & delivering for the country & for the people who put their faith in him in 2019.
— Nigel Adams (@nadams) May 25, 2022
What have Andrew Jones and Julian Smith said?
The Stray Ferret asked the two other Tory MPs in the district, Harrogate and Knaresborough’s Andrew Jones and Skipton and Ripon’s Julian Smith for their response to the report but we did not get a reply.
In January during a Commons debate, Mr Jones said the Sue Gray report should be published in full.
In the same month, an email to a constituent revealed Mr Jones thoughts on ‘partygate’ scandal. The MP said: “I take the maxim ‘lawmakers can’t be lawbreakers’ seriously.”
Mr Jones said if criminal actions were found then “consequences must flow from that”.
“In respect of the investigation announced by the Prime Minister in December, if this finds wrongdoing, and the police find that these actions were criminal, then consequences must flow from that.”
Julian Smith is yet to comment publicly on the report.
Read more:
- Harrogate council chief scolds councillor for calling influencer a ‘waste of money’
- Home Office asylum centre near Harrogate district an ‘abuse of power’, says MP
Andrew Jones MP says Harrogate and Knaresborough train cuts ‘a bad mistake’
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has told Parliament that cuts to train services in the towns will damage business and make it impossible for some commuters to be at work on time.
The two early morning weekday services from Harrogate to Leeds were axed this week, meaning the earliest commuters can arrive in Leeds is 7.28am
Speaking in a Commons transport debate yesterday, Mr Jones said it was a “bad mistake” to think that the decline in passenger numbers due to covid was now at a fixed level and “service levels can be cut back accordingly”.
He added:
“We have seen some of the implications of this locally on the Leeds-Harrogate-Knaresborough-York line.
“The services that have been cut back are the early morning services to Leeds, although many people from Harrogate commute to Leeds for work.
“Some will now find it impossible to be in work on time. For other service users, it is now impossible to connect with the Leeds to London services that get into our capital before 10am.
“That is not good enough for business people, and Harrogate has significant conference business at its convention centre, with many people travelling to it from across the country.
“Other rail cuts have created long gaps in the evening services and an earlier finish on the Knaresborough service. These cuts are obviously bad for our night-time economy.”

Mr Jones, a former transport minister, said the cuts were “not great to see” because rail services had been “making such great progress after all of the years of Labour’s no-growth northern franchise”.
He cited the six daily direct London services and better rolling stock as examples.
Read more:
- Harrogate commuters frustrated as early trains axed today
- How did a First World War bomb end up in Knaresborough?
Mr Jones said he’d had a “very positive meeting” with Robin Gisby, the chair of rail operator Northern, who he said “recognised the significance of the services that have been cut, and he is working on reinstatement for later this year”.
One of the key issues, he added, was training more drivers.
Praise for local buses
Mr Jones also used his speech to praise the “excellent leadership” of Don Mackenzie, who was the North Yorkshire county councillor in charge of transport until the local elections on May 5, for securing £8m from the government for a scheme with Harrogate Bus Company to bring 39 electric buses to Harrogate and Knaresborough.
Mr Jones added:
Lib Dem leader Ed Davey says Conservatives have ‘taken Harrogate for granted’“The bottom line is that the new electric buses are very popular, and the customer response has been excellent.
“I have checked this with the bus company and with passengers. People like the ride quality and the quietness, alongside the fact that the vehicles are bright, airy and pleasant to be in. They are obviously also emission free, which is highly popular.”
Liberal Democrats leader Ed Davey has said the Conservative Party has “taken Harrogate for granted” in the wake of this month’s local election results.
Ten Liberal Democrat councillors were elected in the Harrogate district, compared with nine Conservatives, one Green and one Independent. However, the Tories still have a majority across North Yorkshire as a whole.
The positive results for the local Lib Dems has spurred the party on to make further gains in the area, with the ultimate prize being the seat of Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, Andrew Jones.
The party previously identified the constituency as one of its top 30 target seats in the next general election, which will be held no later than May 2024.
Mr Davey said:
“Harrogate has been taken for granted by the Conservative Party and clearly people have had enough. This month Harrogate joined countless other parts of the country in voting Liberal Democrat to send Boris Johnson a message.
“His government is failing to help people with the cost of living crisis and making matters worst through grossly unfair tax hikes.”
Read more:
- Are the Tories or Lib Dems calling the shots in Harrogate and Knaresborough?
- What cost the Tories votes in the Harrogate district?
Mr Davey criticised the Conservative-run Harrogate Borough Council for spending £17m on new offices as well as £5,000 on a snow globe at King’s Cross station.
He said the soon-to-be abolished authority had “stopped listening to local people”.
“The Conservative party in Harrogate has wasted huge sums of taxpayers’ cash on giant snow globes and a council office for a council that is being abolished.
“They’ve stopped listening to local people, as developers build all over Harrogate and Knaresborough’s green fields and they’ve failed to deliver on the long-promised electrification on the rail line to Harrogate.”
General election
Andrew Jones has been the MP since 2010 and has won four elections. He succeeded Liberal Democrat Phil Willis.
In the 2019 general election, Mr Jones won 29,962 votes, beating Lib Dem candidate Judith Rogerson by almost 10,000 votes. The Lib Dems did gain a 12-point swing on 2017, which largely came at the expense of the Labour Party.
Mr Davey added:
“At the next general election it will be a two-horse race in Harrogate between Boris Johnson’s Conservative party and a hard working team of local Liberal Democrats.”
The Stray Ferret asked Andrew Jones for a response but we did not receive one.
Strayside Sunday: Was it Boris or was it local failure?Strayside Sunday is a monthly political opinion column. It is written by Paul Baverstock, former Director of Communications for the Conservative Party.
In the wake of last week’s local elections, Councillor Richard Cooper, the Leader of Harrogate Borough Council, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that the Conservatives poor showing could be put down to dissatisfaction with Boris Johnson’s national government.
And what a poor showing it was for the blues, with 10 of 21 Harrogate district seats turning yellow. The Lib Dems ended the evening as the largest group in the Harrogate district and with the most seats (8/13) on the Harrogate and Knaresborough Area Constituency Committee.
I do, however, have some sympathy with Mr. Cooper’s view that national issues predominated. My household and our area relatives voted Liberal Democrat en masse, in some cases voting that way for the first time in their lives.
We simply could not bring ourselves to vote Conservative because of the shambles in Westminster. Shambles both singular (…Boris Johnson,) and shambles plural (…his cabinet).
I felt compelled to vote against the interests of a man with no integrity, no honour and no shame. I didn’t try, nor did I need to, persuade others in my circle to do the same. As with millions of people around the country they came to the view that Boris is not to be trusted. Nor, increasingly, is he to be liked.
We know he lied and lied again about Partygate and his role in it. We know too that whatever his role he presided over a 10 Downing Street with a work culture that would make any self-respecting American frat house blush. A culture lacking appropriate sobriety. Worse yet a culture lacking appropriate accountability.
The question that gurgles out of the Downing Street cess pit is precisely what, these days, represents a resigning issue?
I don’t contest that Boris had a half-decent coronavirus and lockdown. I think too that he has been almost exemplary in his handling of British interests and leadership in respect of Ukraine.
But these issues, and the consequential negative economic and cost of living crisis effects are going to severely test the nation in the months ahead and to navigate that needs the government to reach into a now non-existent goodwill bank account.
Read more:
- What cost the Tories votes in the Harrogate district?
- Tories appoint leader for new North Yorkshire Council
Boris is responsible for that penury, along with Rishi’s wealth and wife’s non-dom status, Priti’s ghastly and shaming “send them back to Rwanda” policy, and pretty much anything to do with Jacob Rees-Mogg.
This government’s juice is not worth the squeeze: As a result councils like Westminster, Wandsworth, Barnet and Southampton slipped from Tory grasp last week and the North Yorkshire almost did.
Andrew Jones MP must now be in fear of his seat, bless him. Harrogate has a solid Liberal Democrat base again and a recent tradition of its parliamentary representation.
When approached for comment by the Ferret on local elections night he waved our intrepid journo away. Not for him it seems to speak to local residents through, by some margin, the most read news outlet in the district.
Prideful nose bitten to save fearful face? Silly man. He may well come to regret his stance come the night of the next General Election, if indeed he stands – some think that he may give way to a Richard Cooper candidacy.
If so, Stray Ferret readers can no doubt look forward to continuing ghosting from the local Conservative Party during the next couple of years. This kind of behaviour goes beyond the obviously misguided view in some local Tory circles that the Ferret is a Liberal Democrat organ and becomes a democratic insult to local constituents.
Which brings me back to the local election results. Whatever the national picture Harrogate Borough Council has not covered itself in glory these past few years. Expensive (vanity?) projects like the Knapping Mount council HQ, Appy Parking, and now the Station Gateway development substituting for a concerted and sustained effort to get the planning and economic development knitting right.
The town centre of Harrogate is a sorry mess; with empty shop fronts and discount outlets wherever you look. Oxford Street’s concrete desert lacks any sort of charm.
This was meant to sorted out through the town plan, a plan which was never used as the means to bring people together in share municipal endeavour. Instead, multiple outsourced and bought consultations led to division, stasis and, as we can see, inaction.
National issues were important last Thursday, but don’t kid yourselves that local issues didn’t matter at all, Messrs Jones and Cooper.
Your tenure has been marked by arrogance and a lack of focus on issues that matter a great deal to local people. And, notwithstanding that responsibility for highways rests with North Yorkshire County Council, the landmine like potholes and crazy pavements of the district matter too.
If indeed Double Devolution happens as Leader of NYCC Councillor Les Carl says it still will, the newly formed Harrogate Town Council will need to get a grip and quickly. If not, the local Liberal Democrat ascendency might very well continue.
That’s my Strayside Sunday.
PS Love the Stray Ferret’s royal bunting!
What cost the Tories votes in the Harrogate district?It was a dire set of results on the whole for the Conservative Party in the district.
Several high-profile councillors including Graham Swift, Stan Lumley and Phil Ireland failed to win a seat on the new North Yorkshire Council and became major scalps for the Liberal Democrats.
Out of the 21 divisions up for grabs in the present Harrogate district area, the Conservatives will now have 9 councillors. It means they will be a much less powerful force locally.
The ‘partygate’ scandal involving Boris Johnson has dominated the news for months. But some of the Harrogate district’s winning Conservatives gave diplomatic responses when asked by the Stray Ferret if that had been a factor in the party’s poor performance.
Nathan Hull, the new Tory councillor for Washburn and Birstwith, picked his words carefully:
He said:
“It’s up to MPs to look at how the party collectively operates. I can do nothing about that.”

Cllr Nathan Hull
Mr Hull said he is up for working with other parties on local issues.
“I’m focused on rural issues and schools. I’ll try not to be too partisan. We all want the same thing.”
Andrew Paraskos, the new Conservative councillor for Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale and Tockwith, said he was pleased to win, despite a bad day for many of his colleagues.

Cllr Andrew Paraskos
“It was a mixed bag on the doorstep. It was mainly the cost of living crisis and general unhappiness.”
Paul Haslam, the winning Conservative candidate for Bilton & Nidd Gorge, said he focused on local issues such as the closure of Woodfield school and anti-social behaviour.

Cllr Paul Haslam
He said:
“I’m absolutely delighted to have been supported. I will continue to fight for the people of Bilton.”
On why the Conservatives had difficult results. He added:
“It’s a tricky question. The national picture is difficult. On Boris Johnson, there had been feedback on the doorstep that suggested people are not happy.”
On the doorstep
Several of the victorious Liberal Democrats candidates said Boris Johnson was not the main issue from residents on the doorstep.
Rather, they said people were angry at the way the Conservative-led Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council had handled things like housing and the state of Harrogate town centre.
Veteran Lib Dem councillor Pat Marsh, who won Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone, said:

Cllr Pat Marsh
“On the doorstep we didn’t get so much about Boris Johnson. What we got was the state of the town centre, litter, street cleaning and no new investment. What have they done in 20 years?”
Monika Slater, the new Lib Dem councillor for Bilton Grange and New Park added:
“It’s a mix. Boris Johnson played a part but people in Harrogate are really fed up. They see Harrogate in decline and think things need to change.”

Cllr Monika Slater
Read more:
- Parties react as Tories maintain narrow majority in North Yorkshire
- Lib Dems victorious in Harrogate district
Major scalp
Conservative Graham Swift was tipped as a potential leader of the new North Yorkshire Council.
But his defeat now likely spells the end of his political career once Harrogate Borough Council is abolished next year.
Cllr Swift has been council leader Richard Cooper’s deputy at HBC and has been a forceful presence in the council chamber.
He gave a gracious speech that congratulated the new Lib Dem councillor for Coppice Valley & Duchy, Peter Lacey, but he knew the result well before it was announced and looked ashen-faced whilst he sat with other Conservatives.
The independent candidate in the division, Daniel Thompson, won 199 votes. He said he “got what he wanted” with Cllr Swift losing the vote, despite not winning himself.
Cllr Swift declined to speak to the Stray Ferret.
What does this mean for Andrew Jones MP?
Conservative MP for Harrogate & Knaresborough, Andrew Jones, looked on as HBC chief executive Wallace Sampson announced the results.
Daniel Thompson said “look out Andrew Jones” during his concession speech, which reflected the feeling of several Liberal Democrat councillors who were buoyed by their wins.
Phil Willis, the last and only Liberal Democrat MP in Harrogate & Knaresborough, tweeted that the result in Harrogate was “sensational”.
Retiring Conservative county councillor Don Mackenzie optimistically told the Stray Ferret he expects the national picture to be different when the next general election comes around.
“Covid and the cost of living crisis, these things will settle down. When it comes to the general election it will be a much more benign national picture”.
Mr Jones was at the count but declined to talk to the Stray Ferret, waving us away without saying a word.

Andrew Jones MP
