Readers’ Letters is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
The following three letters are in response to the extreme flooding in Knaresborough earlier this week. Roads were under water, homes were flooded and residents evacuated. The council denied the conditions of the drains played a part, but some residents feel otherwise.
Does North Yorkshire Council not know what a drain is and how they work?
I think the Stray Ferret should take a stand on behalf of all Knaresborough folk and demand that they do something about it.
I live up Ripley Road and can tell you that the drains on High and Low Bond End and Ripley Road haven’t been cleaned out properly for at least 30 years.
Steve Newbould, Knaresborough
Here on Hambleton Close we had a near miss – although both our neighbours took on water.
I have consistently notified North Yorkshire County Council (that was) about the state of drainage in Knaresborough. Each time I receive hollow words of acknowledgement, but nothing is done.
The autumn leaf-fall and the failure to sweep the roads only added to this catastrophe.
What do we pay our council tax for?
Ralph Thrower, Knaresborough
We have reported the blocked drains for years and no works seems to have been done.
Last week we were down to one working drain on our street and we directly reported it to the council.
We have issues with Waterside becoming a river even with normal levels of rainfall.
We warned the council numerous times it would flood, as the water has nowhere else to go other than through the houses.
Mark Johnson, Knaresborough
Maybe Keane Duncan’s defeat means he will ‘finally fix our roads’
This story follows the York and North Yorkshire mayoral election last week. Labour’s David Skaith took home the crown, leaving Tory councillor Keane Duncan defeated.
Thank goodness for the mayoral result, which hopefully now means we are also done with Mr Keane’s tedious photo opportunities (hopefully!).
For months he’s courted the camera and delivered on little else. Even the well-hyped ‘100 days in Peggy’ went suspiciously quiet.
Maybe now he can finally concentrate on the job he has, including fixing our roads for starters.
He might want to take Peggy for a drive down Pannal Ash Road and sample the disgraceful state of a public highway.
Simon Ewing, Harrogate
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
Read more:
- Readers’ Letters: Harrogate’s cycleway extension is an ‘extraordinary waste of public funds’
- Readers’ Letters: ‘Harrogate’s roads are deteriorating before our eyes’
- Readers’ Letters: Of course the Lib Dems won the Harrogate by-election – the candidate wore a tie!
Could Labour target Harrogate and Knaresborough at the next election?
Shortly after his victory speech, newly elected Labour Mayor of York and North Yorkshire David Skaith acknowledged how unusual it was for the party to win in a traditional Conservative heartland.
“North Yorkshire is not an area we normally do well in,” he told reporters huddled around him in Harrogate Convention Centre last week.
Labour leader Keir Starmer hailed it a “historic victory” for his party.
It was certainly a notable success given the traditionally Conservative voting nature of North Yorkshire, in particular in Harrogate and Knaresborough.
But does this mean Labour will begin to target the seat at the next general election?
Could Labour target Harrogate?
When the Stray Ferret spoke to Mr Skaith prior to his election win, we asked him about the fact that Labour does not perform well in Harrogate.
Mr Skaith, who was born in Harrogate, acknowledged that the town was traditionally Liberal Democrat and Conservative, but said it was a target area for his mayoral campaign.
“Certainly it is a key area for me personally because it is where I’m from and it is my hometown. It is a place that I love and I want to see it succeed and thrive.”
While the mayoral campaign may have proved successful for Labour, the party’s prospect of winning a seat in the House of Commons in the area remains difficult.
In general elections, the party’s highest vote share in Harrogate and Knaresborough came in 2017 when it managed 20% — but still finished third, well behind the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives.
Every election since and before then has seen Labour record 10% or below for vote share as the party barely managed to reach 10,000 votes in all but one poll since 1997.
But the victory in the mayoral election appears to have galvanised the party and raises questions over whether it will commit more campaign resources to Harrogate and Knaresborough.
Read more:
- Glum Tories in Harrogate see blue wall crumble in Rishi Sunak’s backyard
- Tense day ends in clear victory for Labour’s Harrogate-born mayor
Andrew Williamson, treasurer of Harrogate and Knaresborough Labour Party, said the victory for Mr Skaith proved people locally had switched from Conservative to Labour.
Mr Williamson added that the win also showed there were no “no go” areas for the party.
He said:
“Labour winning in Harrogate and Knaresborough and in Rishi Sunak’s backyard is a seismic result. Even the local Tory MP acknowledged that Labour did incredibly well in the area.
“So many people told us they voted Labour, many for the first time and including many former Tory voters.
“They said they were impressed by Labour’s positive vision for our area and were pleased to see our new mayor, David Skaith, campaigning in Harrogate with shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves, demonstrating that there are no ‘no go’ areas for Keir Starmer’s changed Labour Party.
“It’s clear that people want change for our area. It’s time that we got the chance to elect a new Labour government and Harrogate and Knaresborough Labour Party will be working hard to deliver that fresh start.”
‘A two horse race’
However, if you ask other political parties in contention for the constituency – Labour do not factor into the equation.
The Stray Ferret reported in December 2023 that the national Labour Party designated Harrogate and Knaresborough a “non-battleground” seat.
The party published a list online of 211 seats which it considers to be non-target constituencies.

Andrew Jones and Tom Gordon.
Tom Gordon, the Liberal Democrat candidate for the constituency, claimed the move proved that the contest is a “two-horse race”.
Mr Gordon’s latest newsletter, delivered after the mayoral election., reinforced the claim that “no other result is possible here” besides a Tory or Lib Dem win.
Labour has also yet to confirm a candidate for Harrogate and Knaresborough despite the fact that a general election must take place before January 2025. By contrast, the Lib Dems confirmed Mr Gordon as its candidate in February 2023.
The opinion polls in recent months have swayed in the Lib Dems favour and painted a glum picture for the Tories.
However, Andrew Jones, the current Conservative MP, has his sights set on five election wins in a row.
Mr Jones has a 9,675 majority to defend and told the Stray Ferret in May last year that he had “no hesitation” in putting his name forward again.
“The election is about who offers the best future – will it be Rishi or Keir Starmer. The answer is Rishi. Who will be the best local champion? Me.”
Perversely, a resurgent Labour Party may help Mr Jones if it takes votes off the Lib Dems. But how hard Starmer’s party will contest Harrogate and Knaresborough remains unclear.
Whatever it chooses, the election in Harrogate and Knaresborough is shaping up to be the closest for years.
How Labour defeated the Tories in North Yorkshire’s first mayor election“We have not been doing the basics,” said David Skaith to reporters huddled around him after becoming the first Mayor of York and North Yorkshire.
It was a seismic victory for Labour over the Conservatives, with a 14,794 majority.
The result at Harrogate Convention Centre on Friday afternoon was the culmination of two competing campaigns.
On the one side, Keane Duncan, for the Conservatives, led an ambitious campaign which included pledges such as buying Scarborough’s Grand Hotel for regeneration.
He also promised free car parking in towns and cities across the county.
Much of Mr Duncan’s campaign was focussed on utilising social media to promote his pledges. He published high-production videos and pictures to push his message.
He also went on a tour around the county in his van, which notably did not include anything which mentioned that he was a Conservative.
The 29-year-old emphasised the fact that he was out meeting people and published photographs of himself with residents in North Yorkshire’s towns and villages on his social media pages. His campaign appeared to focus on himself as an individual, rather than his political background.
During the campaign trail, Mr Duncan told the Stray Ferret that he had “bold ambition” for York and North Yorkshire. However, on the day, that did not help his election prospects.

Keane Duncan, with Prime Minister RIshi Sunak in Ripon in April.
In fact, Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, the Liberal Democrat candidate, said she felt making pledges which “no-one believes” did not help the public’s trust in democracy.
She said:
“If you don’t take elections seriously that reflects badly on politicians. If you pledge to do things that no-one believes, it can and should backfire on you. It devalues politics. The feedback I get is that ‘you’re just another politician’.”
Specifically on the Grand Hotel, she said:
“That’s just one of them. There have been a series of headlines nobody believes. It was just grabbing headlines without anything behind them.”
In the end, Mr Duncan fell to a clear defeat. When speaking to the press afterwards, he defended his campaign, including the pledge on the Grand Hotel, and said he felt focussing on the coast was “important”.
Regardless of the majority involved, Mr Duncan was magnanimous in defeat and was seen applauding Mr Skaith after the declaration.
A traditional campaign
By comparison, Mr Skaith’s campaign offered little in terms of marquee pledges.
When speaking to the Stray Ferret two weeks ago, the Labour candidate focussed on matters such as transport, a High Street fund and a cost of living fund.
While the policies will resonate with some of the electorate, they were not headline grabbing pledges.
Rather, Mr Skaith appeared to take a traditional campaign route. He was seen canvassing with senior Labour politicians such as Rachel Reeves, shadow chancellor of the exchequer, and Mayor of West Yorkshire, Tracy Brabin.

Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves and North Yorkshire mayoral candidate David Skaith campaigning with Labour Party workers in Harrogate.
After his victory on Friday, he told reporters that he would focus on building affordable housing and improving transport links. However, how that looks in practice remains to be seen.
The campaign has had the desired affect and now Labour has metro mayors in West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, North Yorkshire and further west in Greater Manchester and Liverpool.
Much of Mr Skaith’s 15,000 majority could be attributed to the city of York which includes students and a Labour-controlled city council.
The national picture cannot be overlooked either, with the Tories lagging behind in the polls. One of the candidates, Paul Haslam, was also a former Conservative who threw his hat in the ring as an independent.
However, Labour will not see it that way and will spin it as a blow to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in his own back yard.
The party has parked its tanks on traditional Conservative ground in a year which promises more elections to come.
Read more:
- Labour’s David Skaith pledges to ‘get basics right’ as mayor
- Tense day ends in clear victory for Labour’s Harrogate-born mayor
Keane Duncan defends campaign as Conservatives lose North Yorkshire mayor election
Keane Duncan has defended his campaign for Mayor of York and North Yorkshire after the Conservatives lost the election to Labour.
Mr Duncan admitted that the national political picture “inevitably” affected his race to be mayor, but said Rishi Sunak should stay on as Prime Minister.
Labour’s David Skaith won the election by 14,794 votes on a disappointing day for the Tories.
Speaking after the result at Harrogate Convention Centre, Mr Duncan was magnanimous in defeat and defended his campaign, which included ambitious pledges such as buying the Grand Hotel in Scarborough.
He said:
“I am proud that I got to stand in this election. I am proud of my campaign. I thank everyone who has supported me in every corner of York and North Yorkshire.”
When asked whether he felt he overpromised on the Grand Hotel and if he regretted the pledge, he said:
“No, I’ve focussed on the coast. I think the coast is very important.
“I’m not going to have the opportunity now to deliver on my pledges and my promises. But I feel proud of the campaign that I have been able to run.”
Mr Duncan added that he did not feel that he could have done anymore with his campaign. When asked if the national political picture affected his race to be mayor, he said:
“I think the national picture has inevitably affected this campaign.”
He added that he would stay on as a North Yorkshire councillor and said he felt Mr Sunak should remain as Prime Minister, despite the election defeat.
Read more:
- Labour’s David Skaith pledges to ‘get basics right’ as mayor
- Tense day ends in clear victory for Labour’s Harrogate-born mayor
Labour’s David Skaith won the inaugural mayoral election with 66,761 votes.
Tory candidate, Keane Duncan, came second with 51,967 votes and Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, Liberal Democrat, finished third with 30,867.
Meanwhile, Green Party candidate, Kevin Foster, won 15,188 votes and Keith Tordoff, independent, finished fifth with 13,250 votes.
Harrogate independent, Paul Haslam, won 12,370 votes.
The turnout for the York and North Yorkshire mayoral election was 30%.
Labour’s David Skaith pledges to ‘get basics right’ as mayorNewly elected Mayor of York and North Yorkshire, David Skaith, has pledged to “get the basics right” as the first mayor of the county.
The Labour Party candidate won the inaugural mayoral election with 66,761 votes.
Speaking after the result, Mr Skaith, who is originally from Harrogate, said he felt the region had not done the basics, such as building affordable homes and improving transport.
He added that doing so would help to retain people to live and work in the area.
Mr Skaith said:
“We have an opportunity to bring York and North Yorkshire together. North Yorkshire is not an area that we normally do well in, but people want change.
“We have not been doing the basics. That will be my priority. We have a lot of people who are leaving the area.”
Mr Skaith pledged to work with fellow metro mayors in West Yorkshire, but also towards the west in Greater Manchester and Liverpool to help improve issues such as transport.
The election was a disappointing day for the Conservatives in North Yorkshire as they lost the election by 14,794 votes.
Tory candidate, Keane Duncan, came second with 51,967 votes and Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, Liberal Democrat, finished third with 30,867.
Meanwhile, Green Party candidate, Kevin Foster, won 15,188 votes and Keith Tordoff, independent, finished fifth with 13,250 votes.
Harrogate independent, Paul Haslam, won 12,370 votes.
The turnout for the York and North Yorkshire mayoral election was 30%.
Read more:
- Mayoral candidates make final pitches to voters
- Three arrested in fraud investigation at well-known Harrogate firm
Tense day ends in clear victory for Labour’s Harrogate-born mayor
Labour’s David Skaith emerged as the clear winner today in the race to become York and North Yorkshire’s first directly elected mayor.
Mr Skaith beat Conservative rival Keane Duncan by almost 15,000 votes, in a result announced at Harrogate Convention Centre at about 2.30pm this afternoon.
The margin of victory was wider than many people expected at the count, where tension was high.
Conservative Ben Houchen’s mayoral victory in Tees Valley raised hopes that Mr Duncan could pull off a similar victory. But it was not to be.
Mr Duncan narrowly won the vote in North Yorkshire by 44,794 votes to Mr Skaith’s 41,122 but the Labour man’s strong York base saw him cruise home.
Liberal Democrat Felicity Cunliffe- Lister was a distant third, ahead of Green Kevin Foster,
Independents Keith Tordoff and Paul Haslam trailed home but both passed 10,000 votes.

Harrogate-born Mr Skaith, who runs a business in York, will now oversee the new York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority, which has devolved powers from Westminster and an annual budget of about £18 million.
It means there are now Labour mayors in North Yorkshire, West Yorkshire and South Yorkshire.
You can relive our live blog from the convention centre here.
FINAL RESULT
- David Skaith (Labour) 66,761
- Keane Duncan (Conservative) 51,967
- Felicity Cunliffe-Lister (Liberal Democrat) 30,867
- Kevin Foster (Green) 15,188
- Keith Tordoff (Independent) 13,250
- Paul Haslam (Independent) 12,370
Read more:
- LIVE: Labour’s David Skaith wins North Yorkshire mayoral election
- Bomb disposal called after WWII bullet found near Harrogate
MPs Watch: Rwanda, housing and the mayoral election
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.
In April, Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda Bill looked set to reach royal ascent, while MPs threw their weight behind their party’s candidates in the race to be the first York and North Yorkshire mayor on May 2.
Here’s what we know after analysing their online presence.

Andrew Jones, Harrogate and Knaresborough MP.
In Harrogate and Knaresborough, here is what found on Conservative Andrew Jones:
- Mr Jones made two spoken contributions in the House of Commons this month. One was about the standards of new build housing in his constituency, and the other was during a Health and Disability Reform debate.
- On April 12, Mr Jones opened Disability Action Yorkshire’s new assisted living flats in Harrogate.
- Mr Jones welcomed a new bus service for Wedderburn Road, in Harrogate, on April 22.
- He joined Harrogate Pumping Marvellous, a heart failure group, for its first birthday on April 29.
- Mr Jones also voted in favour of the draft Economic Growth Order, and against the Renters Reform Bill (report stage) amendment 28.
When we contacted Mr Jones for comment, his office sent details of April engagements.
These included attending Horticap’s 40th anniversary event and presenting awards at the first Lego League Final at Harrogate Convention Centre.
Mr Jones went to the opening of the Knaresborough Heritage Centre and hosted a reception for the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Transport across the north.
He also voted in favour of the motion to disagree with the Lords on amendment 3J of the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill.
Mr Jones also saw the new electric 36 bus at the Harrogate Bus Company.

Julian Smith, MP for Ripon and Skipton.
In Ripon, here is what we found on Conservative Julian Smith:
- Mr Smith made no spoken contributions in the Houses of Parliament in the month of April.
- On April 16, he voted in favour of the second reading of the Tobacco and Vapes Bill.
- Mr Smith also voted against the report stage of the Renters Reform Bill amendment 28.
- He also welcomed the news of the new childcare rollout in England, which grants working parents of two-year-olds access to 15 hours of free childcare per week.
- Mr Smith also said he was “really pleased” after North Yorkshire Council was awarded £7.8 million of additional funding to help those with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) with alternative provisions.
Mr Smith visited Glasshouses Community Primary School to talk about the role of an MP.
He also welcomed news of five local primary schools receiving funding, which will go towards improving the grounds and buildings.
Mr Smith also voted in favour of the motion to disagree with the lords on amendment 3J of the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill.
We contacted Julian Smith for comment, but did not receive a response.

Keir Mather, Selby and Ainsty MP.
In Selby and Ainsty, which includes parts of south Harrogate, here is what we found on Labour MP Keir Mather:
- Mr Mather was listed among the Sunday Times’ top 25 most inspiring people under 30 in April for overturning a large Tory majority at such a young age.
- He updated his social media several times throughout the month. None of the updates related to areas of his constituency which fall in Harrogate.
- On April 22, Mr Mather spoke in the House of Commons about the upcoming election for the mayor of York and North Yorkshire. He raised concern about one candidate’s spending commitments.
- He voted against the motion to disagree with the lords on amendment 3J of the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill.
Mr Mather posted repeatedly online to encourage people to vote for David Skaith (a fellow Labour MP) as York and North Yorkshire’s inaugural mayor.
He also plugged Labour’s plans for failing bus services.
We did not receive a response from Mr Mather’s office after approaching him for comment.
Read more:
- MPs Watch: Spring Budget, Kex Gill and Rwanda Bill updates
- MPs Watch: Antisemitism, £380m transport fund and road safety
- MPs Watch: Rwanda bill, Post Office scandal and rough sleeping in Harrogate