The Green Party candidate in the forthcoming Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election in Harrogate has reported the Liberal Democrats to the police.
The by-election for a seat on North Yorkshire Council will take place on April 11 following the resignation of former Lib Dem councillor Pat Marsh, who posted anti-semitic comments on social media.
The cost of the by-election is expected to be £15,000.
Andrew Timothy, the Lib Dem candidate, sent out a leaflet saying ‘the Green’s (sic) have stood down this election’.
But the Harrogate and District Green Party has chosen Gilly Charters to contest the division, as reported by the Stray Ferret on March 11.
Ms Charters said her husband and political agent, Ian, had contacted North Yorkshire Police and he was due to be interviewed about the matter on April 1.
She said voters were confused by the leaflet and the by-election might even have to be re-run “if the police find electoral malfeasance”.
The leaflet urges postal voters to ‘return your postal vote in the next few days’.
Ms Charters said:
“I want the Lib Dems to write to their postal voters with first class stamps and very clearly say ‘we are terribly sorry, Gilly Charters is standing for the Green Party’. It would retract what has gone out.”
A spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats said:
“A small number of leaflets were printed in error. We stopped delivering them when we realised our mistake.
“Our future campaign materials will make clear this election is a two-horse race between the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives, and that Labour and Green candidates cannot win.”
Mr Charters described that as “nonsense”, adding:
“A lot has changed since the last election here in 2022. Polling for the Conservatives has gone down and down and down. It’s not straightforward.”
Read more:
- Harrogate Greens accuse Lib Dems of telling ‘blatant lie’ on by-election leaflet
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Harrogate Greens accuse Lib Dems of telling ‘blatant lie’ on by-election leaflet
The Green Party has reacted angrily to a Liberal Democrat leaflet that wrongly says they are not putting forward a candidate in the Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election.
Campaigning is underway for the by-election which will take place on April 11 following the resignation of former councillor Pat Marsh.
Gilly Charters is standing for the Greens in the division, but she was contacted by two supporters over the weekend who asked if she was stepping down after they read a leaflet credited to Liberal Democrat candidate Andrew Timothy.
The leaflet urges voters to submit their postal votes before the deadline and describes the race as being between the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives.
It says Labour “came a distant third last time” and “the Green’s (sic) have stood down this election.”
Arnold Warneken, Green Party councillor for Ouseburn, was campaigning in the division on Sunday. He told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that the leaflet includes a “blatant lie” about the Greens standing down.
He said:
“I am angry, all these people are out there working hard for us. There should be a sense of mutual respect. The Lib Dems need to read what they put through people’s letterboxes.”

The Lib Dem leaflet.
The Greens did not put forward a candidate the last time the division was contested in 2022 because Cllr Warneken said they supported Pat Marsh.
The party has made a formal complaint about the leaflet to North Yorkshire Council and North Yorkshire Police for a breach of the Elections Act 2022.
The LDRS asked the Liberal Democrats to respond but they declined.
However, we have seen a direct message on social media platform X from a local Lib Dem official that blamed an external printing company for the error.
Cllr Warneken called it a “limp excuse”.
The direct message said:
“The letter that went out on Saturday was printed by an external printer who printed an earlier draft of the letter that was neither approved by the candidate nor the election agent. At no point was the intent to mislead anyone. There is going to be a correction issued once we’ve taken the appropriate advice from party HQ.”
A full list of candidates in the by-election is below:
Conservative – John Ennis
Green – Gilly Charters
Labour – Geoff Foxhall
Liberal Democrat – Andrew Timothy
Reform – John Swales
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Labour and Reform UK by-election candidates reveal Harrogate priorities
Labour and Reform UK’s candidates in a forthcoming Harrogate by-election have spoken of their priorities if elected.
Voters in Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone will go to the polls on April 11 to vote for a successor on North Yorkshire Council to Liberal Democrat Pat Marsh, who resigned after making anti-semitic posts on social media.
Labour and Reform UK were the last two parties to reveal who they had selected after the Conservatives, Liberal Democrats and Greens previously announced candidates.
In a press release, Harrogate and Knaresborough Labour Party described its candidate, Geoff Foxall, as “a tireless community campaigner in Harrogate, where he has lived all his life, working as a teacher at Harrogate High School then school governor at Harrogate High, Harrogate College, the grammar school, and Starbeck school in retirement”.
It added he was an advocate for public libraries, a community archaeologist, and keen walker.
Mr Foxall said:
“If elected, I will work passionately to deliver a fresh start for the area that I love and for the town where I was born and have lived in my entire life.
“My eight years as a Labour councillor on Harrogate District Council including four years as group leader, have given me the experience to hold the Conservative council to account for poor quality roads, unreliable public transport, and cuts to our public services. The North Yorkshire Labour Group is influential and growing and if elected I would join their ranks to advocate for a fairer and stronger North Yorkshire.
“As chair of Starbeck Residents Association I was active in opposing a relief road through the Nidd Gorge and creating a community woodland in the green belt between Harrogate and Knaresborough. I have also opposed overdevelopment in the Starbeck and Kingsley Road areas of Harrogate.
“My priorities if elected would be to bring together politicians and community groups from all walks of life to deliver improved roads, better and more reliable public transport, and investment in our care services and local schools.”
Reform candidate focused on station gateway
Harrogate-born Jonathan Swales, whose family were the original owners of Yorkshire Farmers Limited and Swales (Harrogate) Wholesale Fruit and Veg businesses, will attempt to become Reform UK’s second North Yorkshire councillor after Cllr Mike Jordan’s defected to the party.
A press release announcing his candidacy said he was married to fine artist Helen, with whom he has two children, and has “extensive management and business experience, having held a number of senior level management, and director roles in the construction industry”.
Mr Swales said:
“I am very proud of my Harrogate roots, and Yorkshire heritage.
“As a local resident I am well aware of the local issues that people are concerned about and how national issues feed into local issues. I share the frustration when people’s views are just ignored.”
Mr Swales cited the Harrogate Gateway Project as one of his priorities. He said:
“A failing of the process around that project was that local councillors didn’t engage with council cabinet members and council officers. There was an opportunity to influence, and get a better outcome, that opportunity was lost.
“Everyone wants a better town centre, and this project could have been part of that overall improvement, but we now have a scheme that doesn’t really deliver anything for anyone — and that includes the cyclists, people on foot or people arriving by bus or train.
“In the Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone division, there are also planning matters, such as the racket courts near to Hookstone Woods. Then there are the ongoing concerns of potholes, roads being used for click-throughs, and the area being used for parking by the schools and the hospital.”
Read more:
- Five candidates to contest Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election
- Green Party names candidate for Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election
- Tories name candidate for Harrogate by-election
- Lib Dems announce candidate for Stray, Woodlands, and Hookstone by-election
Reform UK leader Richard Tice said the party was building a base in North Yorkshire and the by-election would give an indication of how people may vote in the general election, when Richard Brown will contest Harrogate and Knaresborough for Reform UK. Mr Tice added:
“No longer will Harrogate be a Conservative vs Lib Dem, it will be ‘vote Reform UK, get Reform UK’.”
The full list of by-election candidates is:
- Gilly Charters (Green Party)
- John Radcliffe Ennis (Conservative Party)
- Geoff Foxall (Labour Party)
- Jonathan Mark Swales (Reform UK)
- Andrew David Timothy (Liberal Democrats)
Voting will take place from 7am to 10pm with the election count taking place in the evening after the close of polling.
Residents of the Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone division have until midnight on Friday, March 22, to register to vote and until 5pm on Monday, March 25, to apply for a postal vote.
If someone is unable to vote in person or by post they have until 5pm on Wednesday, April 3, to apply for a proxy vote.
Five candidates to contest Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election
Five candidates will contest a North Yorkshire Council by-election in Harrogate next month.
Nominations for the Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone division seat have closed with voters going to the polls on Thursday, April 11.
The by-election is being held following the resignation of Liberal Democrat Pat Marsh, who posted anti-semitic comments on social media.
The candidates are:
- Gilly Charters (Green Party)
- John Radcliffe Ennis (Conservative Party)
- Geoff Foxall (Labour Party)
- Jonathan Mark Swales (Reform UK)
- Andrew David Timothy (Liberal Democrats)
Voting will take place from 7am to 10pm with the election count taking place in the evening after the close of polling.
Residents of the Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone division have until midnight on Friday, March 22, to register to vote and until 5pm on Monday, March 25, to apply for a postal vote.
If someone is unable to vote in person or by post they have until 5pm on Wednesday, April 3, to apply for a proxy vote.
Voters attending the polling station will need to bring photo ID to be able to vote.
This could include a UK or Northern Ireland photocard driving licence, full or provisional; a UK passport or a passport issued by the EU, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein, the Isle of Man, or any of the Channel Islands; and some concessionary travel passes, such as an older person’s bus pass or blue badge.
Voters will be able to use expired ID if they are still recognisable from the photo.
Anyone without an accepted form of ID should apply for a free voter authority certificate by 5pm on Wednesday, April 3.
You can register to vote here and apply for a postal vote here. You can apply for voter ID here.
More information on the by-election is available here.
Read more:
- Business case approved for £12.1m Harrogate Station Gateway
- Harrogate councillor Pat Marsh resigns after anti-semitism row
Tories win by-election to strengthen grip on North Yorkshire Council
The Conservatives have strengthened their grip on North Yorkshire Council with a by-election win.
Egg farmer David Hugill took the Hutton Rudby and Osmotherley division yesterday with 48 per cent of the vote.
Liberal Democrat Duncan Russell, a former army major, was second with 38 per cent and Green Party candidate Allan Mortimer received 12 per cent of the votes.
Yorkshire Party candidate Lee Derrick got about one per cent in the by-election, in which 39 per cent of the 5,077 electorate turned out.

Last night’s official results.
The result, which appeared to come as a huge relief to party members attending the count at Northallerton Civic Centre, means the decades-long Conservative control of County Hall, with half of the 90 elected members, is re-established.
The Tories have shored up support this year by entering into an agreement with three independent councillors, including Ripon Minster and Moorside Cllr Andrew Williams.
Mr Hugill had been a Tory councillor for part of the division for many years, but lost out in a party selection to fellow Conservative Hambleton District councillor Bridget Fortune ahead of the May 2022 election, which saw him lose by 249 votes to Mrs Fortune.
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The by-election was triggered by the resignation of Cllr Fortune, amid allegations over her treatment by some members of the party.
Senior council officers are still considering a complaint over an incident in the council chamber in May, in which Lower Wensleydale councillor and Conservative whip Tom Jones was said to have tried to prevent Cllr Fortune from voting.
Leading North Yorkshire Conservatives, including North Yorkshire Council leader Carl Les and the party’s mayoral candidate Cllr Keane Duncan warmly congratulated Mr Hugill on his victory after the late-night count.
In his acceptance speech, Cllr Hugill said the campaign had “been dominated by so-called Tory in-fighting” and called for it to be ended.
Labour overturns huge Tory majority to win Selby and Ainsty by-election
Labour has overturned the largest ever Conservative majority to win the Selby and Ainsty by-election.
In a historic night, Keir Mather defeated Conservative Claire Holmes to become the youngest MP in parliament.
Mr Mather also becomes the first ever Labour MP to be elected in a constituency that includes part of the Harrogate district.
The result was announced shortly after 4am this morning. The turnout was 45%.
Mr Mather received 16,456 votes while Ms Holmes polled 12,295 votes. Green Party candidate Arnold Warneken was third, ahead of Liberal Democrat Matt Walker.
Mr Mather said:
“I want to begin my time as your MP by being very clear: I understand the enormity of what has just happened, I know what an honour this is, and I am humbled by this opportunity to serve.
“We have re-written the rules on where Labour can win.”
The by-election was caused by the resignation of Nigel Adams.
The full results are:
- Andrew Gray, Independent: 99 votes
- Claire Holmes, Conservative Party: 12,295 votes
- Mike Jordan, Yorkshire Party: 1,503 votes
- Dave Kent, Reform UK: 1,332 votes
- Keir Mather, Labour Party: 16,456 votes
- Nick Palmer, Independent: 342 votes
- Guy Phoenix, Heritage Party: 162 votes
- Sir Archibald Stanton, Official Monster Raving Loony Party: 172 votes
- Matthew Walker, Liberal Democrats: 1,188 votes
- Arnold Warneken, Green Party: 1,838 votes
- John William Waterston, Social Democratic Party: 314 votes
- Luke Wellock, Climate Party: 39 votes
- Tyler Callum Wilson-Kerr, Independent: 67 votes
Read more:
- By-election could give Harrogate district its first ever Labour MP
- Tory accuses Lib Dems of being ‘anti-cycling’ in Harrogate Station Gateway row
Harrogate heavyweights out in force at Selby by-election
The by-election may have been in Selby and Ainsty, but the battleground at the count extended to Harrogate and Knaresborough.
Several local political heavyweights were at Selby Leisure Centre in the early hours of this morning, whispering to colleagues in huddles while circling their political enemies.
With Labour expected to win, the political chat was as much about the race to become the first mayor of York and North Yorkshire next year and the Conservatives’ efforts to maintain control of North Yorkshire Council.
Shortly before 1am BBC News interviewed Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, who said Rishi Sunak’s five pledges had chimed with people in his constituency despite these being tough times.
Asked whether the Tories could hold the seat won by Nigel Adams with a 20,000 majority in 2019, he said he travelled hopefully, deftly avoiding a prediction.

The count in full swing at Selby Leisure Centre.
Shortly afterwards Tom Gordon, the Liberal Democrat who will try to stop Mr Jones making it five in a row at the next general election made an appearance on Sky News.
Kirk Hammerton’s Nick Palmer, one of three Independent candidates standing yesterday, cursed the ‘London media’ for failing to reply to any of their requests for coverage. He told the Stray Ferret:
“They give us wall to wall coverage of Nigel Farage and Huw Edwards and nobody up here gives a damn about that.”
Fellow independent Andrew Gray, from Harrogate, was too unwell to attend. Pateley Bridge man Keith Tordoff, who is standing as an independent at next year’s mayoral election, represented him.

Acting returning officer Richard Flinton announces the turnout was 45%.
The Official Monster Raving Loony party contingent included a dummy but even their humour was beginning to wear thin as the night wore on.
Finally, at just after 4am, Clare Granger, the Birstwith-based North Yorkshire high sheriff rose to announce the result. Neither Labour candidate Keir Mather nor Conservative hopeful Claire Holmes made an appearance until just before that moment.

Clare Granger
Ms Granger had half-joked earlier that she couldn’t fluff her lines because any error announcing the results could only be remedied through the courts.
The unexpected Tory triumph in Uxbridge and South Ruislip led to speculation that the Tories could pull off a second win. But in the end Mr Mather, 25, won comfortably with 16,456 votes compared with Ms Holmes’ 12,295.
Green candidate Arnold Warneken, looking dapper with flowers grown in Little Ouseburn on his jacket, was third, overcoming Lib Dem Matt Walker.
By the time it was all over, the sun was coming up but the shadows had lengthened over the Conservatives in the run-up to the next general election.

Matt Walker
Voters will head to the polls this morning as a by-election is held in Selby and Ainsty.
The election was called after former Conservative cabinet minister, Nigel Adams, resigned with immediate effect in June.
The constituency’s northern border includes Harrogate district areas such as Huby, Follifoot, Spofforth and some of the villages in the Vale of York, such as Tockwith, Green Hammerton and Long Marston.
A total of 13 candidates have been confirmed for the contest. The full list is below:
- Andrew Philip Gray, Independent
- Claire Holmes, The Conservative Party
- Mike Jordan, Yorkshire Party
- Dave Kent, Reform UK
- Keir Alexander Mather, Labour Party
- Nick Palmer, Independent
- Guy Phoenix, Heritage Party
- Sir Archibald Stanton, The Official Monster Raving Loony Party
- Matt Walker, Liberal Democrats
- Arnold Francis Ignatius Warneken, The Green Party
- John William Waterston, Social Democratic Party
- Luke John Wellock, Climate Party
- Tyler Callum Wilson-Kerr, Independent
Voters are reminded that the by-election is the first to be held in North Yorkshire where ID will be required at the voting booth.
Acceptable forms of ID include photocard driving licences, UK passports, and bus passes for older or disabled people.
Polls for the by-election will open at 7am and close at 10pm.
You can find your nearest polling station by entering your postcode on the North Yorkshire Council website here.
Read more:
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 6
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 5
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 4
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 3
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 2
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 1
Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 6
This is the sixth and final article of a series of six.
Voters across parts of the district will be heading to the polls on Thursday (July 20), when Selby and Ainsty holds a by-election triggered by the dramatic resignation last month of MP Nigel Adams.
Most of the Selby and Ainsty constituency lies beyond our district’s borders – it stretches almost as far as Goole and Doncaster – but its northern end does encompass Huby, Follifoot, Spofforth and some of the villages in the Vale of York, such as Tockwith, Green Hammerton and Long Marston.
There’s a broad field to choose from – there are 13 candidates – but who are they, and what do they believe?
In the lead-up to the by-election, we’ve been spotlighting two or three each day, giving constituents the opportunity to read about the people who wish to represent them at Westminster – in their own words.
So far, we’ve featured Andrew Gray (independent), Claire Holmes (Conservative), Mike Jordan (Yorkshire Party), Dave Kent (Reform UK), Keir Mather (Labour), Nick Palmer (independent), Guy Phoenix (Heritage Party), Sir Archibald Stanton (Official Monster Raving Loony Party), and Matt Walker (Liberal Democrats), Arnold Warneken (Green Party), and John Waterston (Social Democratic Party).
Continuing to take their surnames in alphabetical order, our final candidates are Luke Wellock of the Climate Party, and Tyler Callum Wilson-Kerr, independent.
Luke Wellock, Climate Party
A centre-right party founded in 2022 that is “100% focused on climate change”.
“The Climate Party is Britain’s only single-issue party focused solely on solving the climate and biodiversity crisis. We will do so by mobilising businesses, both big and small, to seize the zero-carbon economic opportunity.
“The Met Office has just confirmed that June 2023 was the hottest June ever recorded in the UK. Climate change is no longer something we can deal with in the future, it is here now.
“The current government’s target to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050 is simply not soon enough. They’re choosing to kick the can down the road, risking our futures, and leaving Britain behind in the low-carbon industrial revolution race.
“The Climate Party has an alternative vision: we want Britain to become a sustainable economic powerhouse, leading the world when it comes to tackling climate change.
“Firstly, we will introduce a target to reduce carbon emissions to zero by 2030. Yes, that’s a mere seven years from now, but when it came to the Covid pandemic or the banking crisis, which threatened all our futures, we worked at pace to find solutions. We need the same resolve when it comes to climate change.
“We will drive unprecedented investment in renewable energy. This will make us energy-independent and bring an end to our reliance on expensive fossil fuels which have been at the heart of the cost-of-living crisis. We will work with the construction industry to rapidly roll out a retrofit programme, helping millions of people living in poorly insulated homes to cut their energy use and lower their bills.
“We will incentivise businesses to innovate and create jobs in exciting new industries like energy storage, and encourage and support our farmers to embrace regenerative agriculture practices to ensure our food security and restore our countryside.
“We will halt greenbelt development, and empower local communities to protect and re-wild their natural spaces. We will electrify our local, regional and national public transport networks, and make them affordable and accessible to everyone.
“A zero-carbon Britain is a Britain we will all benefit from, so on July 20 please vote for me to choose a better future.”
Tyler Callum Wilson-Kerr, Independent
The youngest candidate standing, this proud 24-year-old Yorkshireman from Garforth works for an aerospace engineering firm in Leeds and is a councillor for Aberford & District Parish.
“I may be a young Tyke at 24, but I’m a grafter, working as an aerospace engineer and formerly as a Tesco keyworker in lockdown. I also am devoted to public service, being a Parish Councillor for Aberford & District Parish Council, and I wish to see better lives for everyone who lives not just in this constituency, but across Britain.
“By my campaigning for a One Yorkshire Devolution over the last two years, I have created a network of influence in Westminster. By speaking with MPs of all parties, talking to journalists, appearing on national radio, writing articles in The Yorkshire Post and other regional newspapers, I have played a part in getting Yorkshire noticed down in Whitehall, and helped create a new energy in Yorkshire politics.
“The facts speak for themselves – people in Yorkshire have fewer job opportunities, lower wages, higher bills, worse NHS outcomes, more potholes, fewer buses, worse trains, and less self-confidence than other regions of Britain which have home rule on a Devolved Assembly basis,
like in London, Wales, and Scotland.“Yorkshire is Bigger than London and more populous than Wales and Scotland, yet we have no similar powers over ourselves nor a strong say in where our taxes are spent. For example, I’m certain the people of Selby would rather see their tax money spent on re-opening 24-hour service at Selby War Memorial Hospital rather than it being wasted on Rwanda deportation flights or paying for Rishi Sunak’s jet fuel as he waltzes around the world.
“I shall use the office of MP to put together the Yorkshire Act (2024), a Parliamentary Bill to create a form of Yorkshire Home Rule. Yorkshire is big enough, clever enough, and happy enough to rule itself. This is the way to create a stronger, richer, more united Britain, and stop the secessionist movements in Scotland and Wales, by taking the wind out of the sails of independence parties who seek to divide Britain.
“I am in this election for Yorkshire. A vote for Cllr Tyler Callum Wilson-Kerr is a vote of confidence for the future of Yorkshire.”
Read more:
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 5
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 4
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 3
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 2
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 1
Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 5
This article is the fifth of a series of six.
Voters across parts of the district will be heading to the polls on Thursday (July 20), when Selby and Ainsty holds a by-election triggered by the dramatic resignation last month of MP Nigel Adams.
Most of the Selby and Ainsty constituency lies beyond our district’s borders – it stretches almost as far as Goole and Doncaster – but its northern end does encompass Huby, Follifoot, Spofforth and some of the villages in the Vale of York, such as Tockwith, Green Hammerton and Long Marston.
There’s a broad field to choose from – there are 13 candidates – but who are they, and what do they believe?
In the lead-up to the by-election, we’re spotlighting two or three each day, giving constituents the opportunity to read about the people who wish to represent them at Westminster – in their own words.
So far, we’ve featured Andrew Gray (independent), Claire Holmes (Conservative), Mike Jordan (Yorkshire Party), Dave Kent (Reform UK), Keir Mather (Labour), Nick Palmer (independent), Guy Phoenix (Heritage Party), Sir Archibald Stanton (Official Monster Raving Loony Party), and Matt Walker (Liberal Democrats).
Continuing to take their surnames in alphabetical order, today’s candidates are Arnold Warneken of the Green Party, and John Waterston of the Social Democratic Party.
Tomorrow: Luke Wellock (Climate Party), and Tyler Callum Wilson-Kerr (independent).
Arnold Warneken, Green Party
A progressive, left-wing environmentalist party that has been campaigning for environmental approach to legislation since it was founded in 1990.
“I’ve lived and worked in the Ainsty area for nearly 40 years. Back in the 1990s I was branded ‘Harrogate council’s conscience’ by the then chief executive. I still have a reputation for getting things done, and I work hard for residents all year round, not just at election time.
“I currently sit on Selby planning committee, Ainsty drainage board, and North Yorkshire Moors National Park Authority, so I have considerable experience of decision-making in local government.
“I am already campaigning on 20’s Plenty to cut speed limits, and on river quality at North Yorkshire Council.
“I am free to speak up in Westminster for this constituency, because I’m not told how to vote by Green Party bosses.
“But being a candidate for a small party does not mean that I am a lone force. I lead a skilled team with wide expertise, and I could not be an effective MP without this team.
“If you are usually a Labour vote, by voting Green you are telling Labour to put proportional representation in their manifesto, re-instate their green funding, and cancel new oil.
“If you are usually a Conservative voter, by voting Green you are telling the Tories to allow onshore wind, fund the NHS, and stop dumping sewage.
“The Green Party already has a well-respected MP, two members of the House of Lords, over 750 elected councillors, and four local parish/town councillors.
“Greens have solutions which marry environmental and social justice, enabling lower energy bills AND saving the planet, by investment in renewables and home insulation. We believe in universal basic income, renationalising public utilities, a minimum wage of £15/hour, and ending NHS privatisation.
“Drax must move from ‘burning stuff’ to become a genuinely renewable energy supplier, with long-term employment prospects. Drax’s current subsidy of £1.7m/day could power a resilient carbon-neutral future.
“Farming payments need switching to nature-friendly systems to reduce reliance on fossil fuels, encourage wildlife, and end factory farming.
“Voting Labour or Conservative won’t change this government yet, but another Green MP will make a huge difference in Parliament, so please give me that opportunity.”
John Waterston, Social Democratic Party
A Eurosceptic, socially conservative party that espouses centre-left economic policy and supports a social market economy.
“I have lived here for 31 years and raised two children alongside my wife, Ruth, and we have both worked in the area all of that time.
“I believe the role of a constituency MP is exactly that – a representative for constituents and an influencer on their behalf.
“Crime and Justice: I want to help address the inefficiencies in local policing who deal with public nuisance and anti-social behaviour. I live in the centre of Selby and witness how it strangles the activity and economic success of the town.
“Youth: There is very little to interest, stimulate or engage them. I grew up in a community that had similar challenges and have a range of ideas that could meet this challenge, which directly links with the public nuisance concerns.
“Transport: The bus services post-lockdown have essentially collapsed, from a position that was already inadequate.
“Communities are left with one or two routes per week, restricting movement to daytime hours. It restricts the economy, and crucially, employment opportunities are lost, because without a car, it is impossible to get to work for most shifts. I want to address this urgently.
“Failure to support our economy: There has been no effort and no imagination in how to stimulate a new economy for the 21st century. Tourism could be a key asset. Making connections in Asia and elsewhere, if coordinated with more quality hotel accommodation, would pay great dividends.
“We are a hub for the boating community and that needs to be supported and encouraged. We are geographically blessed by way of transport links to Manchester, Edinburgh and London, all within two hours. The A1(M) is 10 minutes away, providing access to the M62 and the M18. We are the gateway to the North Yorkshire coast. It is a tremendous place to set up a business or set up a home, as I discovered 31 years ago, and the people here deserve better support than they are getting.
“This is why the people of Selby and Ainsty should vote for me.”
Read more:
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 4
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 3
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 2
- Selby and Ainsty by-election candidates have their say – Part 1