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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Tories and Greens name candidates as local by-election looms
The Conservative and Greens have named their candidates to fight a local by-election following the resignation of Nigel Adams MP.
Many villages close to Harrogate, Knaresborough and Boroughbridge, including Spofforth, Follifoot, Kirkby Overblow, Goldsborough, Little Ouseburn, Nun Monkton, Green Hammerton and Kirk Hammerton are set to go to the polls to elect a new Westminster representative.
The by-election was triggered by the decision by Boris Johnson loyalist Nigel Adams to relinquish his Selby and Ainsty seat with immediate effect.
The Tories were quick to announce Michael Naughton as their candidate to succeed Mr Adams yesterday.
Mr Naughton, who has twice stood unsuccessfully for Parliament, said it would be a tough task replacing Mr Adams, adding:
“People working and living in Selby want an MP who can help deliver on the people’s priorities and I will work with the government to halve inflation, grow the economy, reduce debt, cut waiting lists and stop the boats.
“Selby needs a Conservative MP to work alongside a Conservative government and help us improve everybody’s lives.”
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- Selby and Ainsty MP resigns with immediate effect
- FoI reveals Harrogate council spent nearly £3,000 on booze for staff party
Selby and District Green Party quickly followed yesterday by announcing Arnold Warneken, who represents Ouseburn on North Yorkshire Council, as its prospective parliamentary candidate.
Mr Warneken became the first Green Party councillor in the north of England in 1991 when he was elected to Harrogate Borough Council. He stood unsuccessfully for the Greens against Robert Banks in Harrogate in 1992 and Nigel Adams in Selby and Ainsty in 2019.
He said:
Prime Minister’s Harrogate agent urged to apologise over ‘distressing’ leaflet“I am an experienced hands-on politician. I have a proven track record and I work tirelessly for the people I represent.
“My ability to engage with people at all levels, and to negotiate compromises, leads to positive results and the best outcome for everyone, and the environment.”
A Green councillor has called on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Harrogate agent to apologise for sending a “misleading and distressing” letter to voters.
Sam Gibbs is the Conservative councillor for Valley Gardens and Central Harrogate on North Yorkshire Council. He is also the political agent for Richmond — the seat held by Mr Sunak.
The Mirror revealed voters in Stockton-on-Tees received letters in the run-up to this month’s local elections with Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council‘s name and address at the top alongside the words ‘your council tax bill 2023 is up 38% since 2016’.
Labour is the largest party on the council.
Some of the wording was in red to appear similar to a final payment demand. But it was actually a Conservative campaign leaflet produced at Richmond constituency office.
The bottom of the letter says ‘this is not a bill and no payment is required’.
The Mirror wrote:
“Sam Gibbs was responsible for the scam leaflet that scared people into thinking they owed money.”
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Arnold Warneken, a Green councillor who represents Ouseburn on North Yorkshire Council, described the letter as “misleading and distressing”. Cllr Warneken said:
“It makes people think they owe money. Without doubt, it’s made to appear like an official document.
“The people of Stockton-on-Tees are due an apology for this misleading leaflet. It’s disgraceful behaviour by the Conservatives.”
Cllr Pat Marsh, who represents Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone on North Yorkshire Council and is leader of the Harrogate and Knaresborough Liberal Democrats, said it was “outrageous behaviour from the Conservatives”. She added:
“Sending out literature which would have been very frightening for many is so, so wrong. You have to ask the question ‘why?’
“To frighten people into voting against the opposition councillors on Stockton council in this way is totally unacceptable and should be investigated.”
The Stray Ferret contacted Cllr Gibbs and the Conservative Party but has not had a response.
The Lib Dem aiming to become Harrogate and Knaresborough’s next MPAfter a process lasting eight months, the Liberal Democrats have finally named Tom Gordon as their candidate to wrestle Harrogate and Knaresborough off the Conservatives at the next general election.
Mr Gordon, who turns 29 today, is less than half the age of Andrew Jones, the current MP, but has already packed a lot into his short political career. He has stood twice for Parliament, led the Liberal Democrats on Wakefield Council and supported Judith Rogerson in her campaign to unseat Mr Jones at the last election in 2019.
But does he have the experience and nous to defeat a seasoned politician like Mr Jones, who will be going for his fifth success in a row? Mr Jones has achieved more than 50% of the vote at the last three elections, turning a constituency held by Liberal Democrat Phil Willis from 1997 to 2010 back into a safe Conservative seat.
With Paul Ko Ferrigno named as the Green Party candidate, and Labour yet to declare, there is the possibility of all the main parties selecting white men. Mr Gordon’s youth gives him some point of difference, which he acknowledges could be advantageous but he says the main reason people should vote for him is because he would stand for “fairness and equality” while Mr Jones, he claims, is a party stooge with a “record of shame”.
But what kind of candidate are local people getting — and how well does he know Harrogate and Knaresborough?
Mr Gordon, who is from Knottingley in West Yorkshire and is the Lib Dem leader on Wakefield Council, was chosen by party members ahead of Knaresborough campaigner Matt Walker.
Mr Jones was quick to express surprise, telling the Harrogate Advertiser (he does not speak to the Stray Ferret) he felt Mr Walker’s local roots made him a “shoo-in”.
Mr Gordon, who is moving to a flat in Harrogate next month, says it was a “lazy attack line” and points out Mr Jones is also originally from West Yorkshire having been born in Ilkley and educated in Bradford and Leeds.
Mr Gordon is keen to highlight his familiarity with Harrogate and Knaresborough, having helped Ms Rogerson in 2019, and at pains to explain he is only from “20 miles down the M1”. But he did not answer when asked to name the manager of Harrogate Town, although he talked enthusiastically about Knaresborough Bed Race.
From disengaged student to Lib Dem activist
His introduction to politics began by chance as a student in 2014 when he was on a train to London and got talking to the woman opposite, who happened to be the Lib Dem peer Baroness Harris of Richmond.
“She gave me her business card and said ‘if there is anything I can ever do, just get in touch’. At that point it’s fair to say I was slightly disengaged with politics.”
He dropped her a line and ended up becoming a parliamentary intern at the House of Lords aged 20.
But his mother’s diagnosis with breast cancer, the day before he started a masters degree in 2016, was the key moment.
“My mum is a single parent and my little sister was five. I dropped down to part-time study to go home and help.
“Mum arranged to have chemo on Friday nights so she could be ill over the weekend because she couldn’t afford to live off statutory sick pay.
“Seeing mum work a minimum wage job, trying to cover the mortgage and bills, and trying to deal with fighting cancer was an eye-opener. When people have to schedule their chemo around work, that’s not the country I want to live in.”

Mr Gordon in Knaresborough
He says Labour politicians, utterly dominant in his area, had taken local people for granted, safe in the knowledge of re-election. By contrast he says the Lib Dems empower people by giving them the tools to build a better future.
He joined the party in 2017 and stood in Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford at the 2019 general election, finishing fourth behind Labour big beast Yvette Cooper with 6.5% of the vote. The Lib Dems polled 5.1% at the previous election. In 2021 he polled 3.3% in the Batley and Spen by-election to finish fourth behind Labour. George Galloway was third.
Harrogate and Knaresborough is his first serious chance of victory. The Lib Dems increased their share by 12% in 2019 to almost halve Mr Jones’s majority. Mr Gordon says it “was one of the few success stories we had on the night” and “put us in a place where we can think about winning” at the next election, which is likely to be next year.
Why does he think Mr Jones has been so successful?
“We are not under any illusion that as an area there are a lot of demographics in favour of the Conservative Party. But what we do know is there is a route to winning here. We have held the seat before under Phil Willis and feel we can do again.”
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Mr Gordon cites NHS funding, apprenticeships and championing small- and medium-sized businesses as priorities. Brexit, he says, has “eaten up the oxygen in the room” and won’t feature prominently in campaigning.
But what about local issues — does he think nearly £50 million should be spent refurbishing Harrogate Convention Centre?
He says the long-term future of the convention centre needs to be secured but is less sure about the £11.2 million Harrogate Station Gateway scheme that has divided the town:
“There are strong views for and against it. I haven’t made up my mind yet.”
Pavement politics
Mr Gordon says his political heroes are mainly Americans, particularly Hillary Clinton, but also singles out former Lib Dem leader Tim Farron, explaining:
“Pavement politics and grassroots activism upwards is the best of the Lib Dems and Tim epitomises that.”
It’s a style he intends to copy:
“People should expect to see someone who will be on their doorsteps, who will be at community events and leading from the front and championing Harrogate and Knaresborough and demanding better than what we’ve got from the Tories. I am energetic and dynamic and very happy to roll up my sleeves and get stuck in.”

Mr Gordon’s varied professional career includes spells as an estate agent and in recruitment. He’s currently a part-time policy and external affairs officer for the Carers Trust charity and the office manager for Helen Morgan, the Lib Dem MP for North Shropshire — a role he will soon relinquish.
He also plans to stand down as a Wakefield councillor in May, having been elected at the age of 25.
Away from work, he has run several marathons for charity and enjoys swimming and badminton. He has a degree in biochemistry and a masters in public health.
He has certainly not been idle in his 20s. He says:
“I’m an ambitious person. I’m very driven. If I set my mind to something, I tend to achieve it.”
As for Mr Jones, the politicking has begun.
“I met him once briefly in passing at a media event. One of the things local people have said is that Andrew does like to turn up to have his photo taken where possible. They don’t tend to say much else.”
If elected, what difference would it make to local people?
“The key point will be that I’m not going to endlessly trudge through the lobbies as the government says, I’m going to be a strong voice for what local people want.
“He has a record of shame quite frankly, whether it be voting to let water companies get away with discharging sewage into rivers or voting for all sorts of horrendous policies this government has concocted over the last few years — he’s got one of the highest records of following that government whip.
“I will put the people of Harrogate and Knaresborough first — not the Tory Party.”
The first shots have been fired as the election countdown draws near.
Ouseburn councillor opens Green Party conference in HarrogateThe Green Party autumn conference was opened this afternoon by Harrogate man Arnold Warneken, North Yorkshire County Council councillor for Ouseburn.
Cllr Warneken was elected in May with 69% of the vote and he gave a passionate speech to delegates at Harrogate Convention Centre.
He recalled how he was first elected as a councillor 32 years ago to the then-Harrogate District Council.
In those days, he was the only Green Party councillor in the north of England.
After his recent return to local politics, he said the five Greens elected to the county council in May were “already starting to make a difference”. He accused the Tory-led council of “procrastinating” on the climate emergency.
Cllr Warneken also had some sharp words for Harrogate Spring Water and its plan to fell trees in Rotary Wood to expand its bottling plant.
He said:
“At the pump rooms, people came from all over the country to have our foul-tasting and smelly water heal them. It was dispensed in a ladle by Betty Lupton.
“However, 100 years later Betty Lupton has been replaced by Danone. Her ladle has been replaced by millions of plastic bottles produced by Harrogate Spring Water and Danone before being sent all over the world. Shame on them.”
He was followed by a speech from Green Party co-leaders Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay.
The three-day conference ends on Sunday.
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The Stray Ferret spoke to Cllr Warneken beforehand where he said he was “proud and honoured” to open the event.
Cllr Warneken added:
Green Party chooses man to fight Andrew Jones in Harrogate and Knaresborough“We are at a turning point in Green politics. In 2018, we had 150 councillors, now in 2022 we have over 500. We are hoping we can get somebody to help Caroline Lucas MP in Parliament.
“We have Liberal Democrat councillor Pat Marsh speaking here on Sunday. That’s the way politics has to move forward. We’re hoping for a hung parliament so we can introduce PR. The future’s bright, the future’s green.”
Harrogate and District Green Party is set to name Paul Ko Ferrigno as its prospective parliamentary candidate for the next general election.
Mr Ko Ferrigno was one of two people nominated but the other contender, Arnold Warneken, withdrew.
The party is holding an election hustings event tonight when Mr Ko Ferrigno will outline his vision.
Members will have the opportunity to ask questions before deciding whether to ratify his selection as PPC.
Tonight’s hustings, which is open to everyone, will take place at the Friends Meeting House on Queen Parade at 7.30pm.

The Friends Meeting House
It is hoped the process to select a candidate will be finalised before the Green Party autumn conference begins in Harrogate on September 30.
Mr Ko Ferrigno, 59, a scientist, told the Stray Ferret he had been a “passive supporter of the Green Party” for many years and a party member for two years.
Born in London, he lived in France for a decade from the age of 10 and has lived in Harrogate since 2007.
Mr Ko Ferrigno is a football referee, and has widespread volunteering experience as a coach for Pannal Ash Junior Football Club, a welfare officer on Harrogate and District Junior Football League and a governor at Oatlands Junior School in Harrogate.
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He said he wanted to see more taxis and fewer cars and greater support for cycling, including measures to encourage cycling couriers to replace vans. He said:
“Harrogate is seen as being the Bettys of the country. Let’s live up to that reputation by doing everything well.”
The Green Party did not field a candidate in Harrogate and Knaresborough in the 2019 general election, when Conservative Andrew Jones retained the seat with 53% of the vote.
Asked whether the Greens would consider stepping aside as part of a pact with other parties, Mr Ko Ferrigno said “it’s a conversation to be had” but added:
“I’m not one of those who think we need to get the Conservatives out at all costs. We need to elect the right candidate
“Having a Green in any conversation makes a difference. Recycling started as a Green Party conversation.
“What we will do by standing is shift the conversation. Even if I don’t get elected — and I hope I will — we will move the conversation.”
Harrogate to host Green Party conference this month
Over 1,000 Green Party members will be coming to Harrogate this month for the party’s autumn conference.
It will take place at Harrogate Convention Centre from September 30 to October 2.
The conference theme is ‘The pathway to a fairer, greener country’ and topics will include the climate emergency and the cost of living crisis.
The Greens last came to Harrogate for their autumn conference in 2017.
The party had a successful local elections in May, winning five seats on North Yorkshire County Council, including Arnold Warneken in Ouseburn.
Co-leaders Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay will be delivering a keynote speech at 2pm on the first day of the conference.
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County council set to reject climate change action appeal
North Yorkshire County Council looks poised to dismiss moves by Green and Liberal Democrat councillors to accelerate the response to thr climate change and biodiversity crises, claiming they could be counter-productive.
The council’s Conservative-run executive will consider two environmental notices of motion that councillors were prevented from debating at a full council meeting in July, with the authority’s chairman instead opting to refer the proposals to its cabinet members.
Both motions propose the establishment of a new committee specifically to scrutinise the council’s progress and leadership in tackling climate change and establishing biodiversity plans to ensure oversight of the collective ambition of the council.
Since losing its overwhelming majority at the May elections, the Tory-led council has been facing mounting pressure, particularly from the Liberal Democrat and Green groups, to redouble its climate change and biodiversity efforts and allow opposition councillors to play a greater role in shaping such policies.
An officers’ report to the executive states the creation of a new scrutiny committee would take the number of such forums at the council to seven.
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It adds the council’s scrutiny function is under review as part of the establishment of a new unitary authority and recommendations would be brought before all elected members later this year.
One of the motions also calls for the creation of a new executive member to reflect the scale of the job, but the officers’ report highlights the executive already has the maximum number of members allowed under the county council’s constitution.
Liberal Democrat group leader Cllr Bryn Griffiths, who represents Stokesley, said the officers’ report failed to fully address the high priority and action needed to effectively deal with climate change and the ecological emergency in North Yorkshire.
He said:
“I think the points we put forward to deal with that are still valid and worthwhile objectives that the council should be taking on board and should be fully debated by the full council.”
The council’s Conservative leader, Cllr Carl Les said the executive’s debate and recommendations to the next full meeting of the authority in November would focus on how the authority could best manage the impacts of climate change.
He said:
“It is a hugely important issue to us. It seems to me that the Greens and Lib Dems are suggesting we have to have a special executive member and a special scrutiny committee, but we believe the climate change and biodiversity issues cut across everything that we do.
“The approach that we are taking by embedding it into everything we are doing, so every report we produce now examines the climate change impact, is better.”
When asked if the decision to reject specialist climate change roles and groups at the council was politically-fuelled, Cllr Les said:
“Not at all. All our scrutiny committees have the ability to look at climate change implications.
“If anything they have more influence and control over what we are doing than what is being proposed.”