Andrew Timothy says his victory in the Stray, Hookstone and Woodlands council by-election is a sign that Harrogate and Knaresborough are ready for a Liberal Democrat MP.
Earlier this month, Cllr Timothy beat his Conservative rival John Ennis by 326 votes — and with a general election around the corner, he believes the result is a shape of things to come.
Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, Cllr Timothy said:
“The result does show that in terms of a general election if people don’t want to have a Tory MP the best way is to vote Lib Dem. The Greens and Labour were far behind.”
He described the first few days as a councillor as a lot like starting any new job. He’s been given a laptop for casework, has Zoom meetings scheduled with the different executive members and will undertake training on things like planning.
He’s only been in position for less than two weeks but he said he’s been busy dealing with nuts and bolts local issues like potholes and grass verges.
Cllr Timothy said:
“I’ve already sent out emails to the council. One was talking about drainage off the Stray and its impact on nearby roads like St James’ Drive and St Winifred’s Road.”

Andrew Timothy (left) pictured at the by-election count.
At 25, Cllr Timothy is now the youngest councillor on North Yorkshire Council.
He moved to Harrogate from the West Midlands a few years ago and the Local Democracy Reporting Service understands he works at Labcorp, formerly Covance, which is a science lab off Otley Road that is controversial due to its use of animal testing for medicines.
Cllr Timothy would not confirm that he works at Labcorp but did offer a comment on animal testing. He emphasised that the MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency) asks that all medicines be tested on animals before they are used on humans.
Read more:
- Lib Dems win Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election
- Andrew Jones MP urges Lib Dem leader to intervene against ‘rogue’ local party
At the by-election count at Woodlands Methodist Church, it was evident that the Lib Dem’s prospective parliamentary candidate Tom Gordon was now in charge of the local party, buzzing around with a notebook and liaising with different party members.
Cllr Timothy believes Mr Gordon’s background in the charitable sector means he understands the struggles that people go through day-to-day.
However, Cllr Timothy’s campaign was criticised for a leaflet that incorrectly said the Green Party weren’t standing in the by-election. The matter has been referred to North Yorkshire Police.
Cllr Timothy did not want to go into detail about the leaflet due to the investigation but said it was due to a “clerical error”.
Andrew Jones MP, who will face Mr Gordon for his fifth general election, wrote to Lib Dem leader Ed Davey about the leaflet and he repeated a previously made claim that the local party was now a “rogue political operation.”
Cllr Timothy said Mr Jones’ reaction “shows he’s worried about how the general election is going to go”.
He added:
“He’s focusing on tarnishing us when really he should be making Harrogate and Knaresborough better”.
Cllr Timothy has big boots to fill, replacing veteran Lib Dem councillor Pat Marsh who resigned following controversial comments she made on social media platform X. He said he’s not in contact with her but hopes she’s doing OK.
He said:
Readers’ Letters: Of course the Lib Dems won the Harrogate by-election – the candidate wore a tie!“I’m honoured and slightly surprised so many people have put their trust in me. I’m thrilled to get the opportunity. Thanks again to the people of Stray, Hookstone and Woodlands, I won’t let them down.”
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.
This letter followed news of the Liberal Democrats winning the Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone by-election in Harrogate earlier this month.
It is not surprising that the Lib Dems won the local by-election.
Their candidate was the only person dressed smartly, despite being a bit inarticulate when thanking everyone. The shock I suppose.
The Conservative candidate looked very sour. Who would want to vote for someone like that?
Let the lesson be learnt by everyone: dress smartly with a tie if you want to be seen as a good candidate, no matter which party you represent.
Who wants to vote for someone who looks as if they are just going down to the pub?
Valerie Cooke, Harrogate
Could Harrogate’s Conference Centre house spa facilities instead?
This letter responds to uncertainty over the future of Harrogate’s Convention Centre. In an exclusive, the Stray Ferret recently revealed North Yorkshire Council spent £1.9 million on consultants for now-scrapped plans for the site.
The fate of the conference centre is too important for there to be any discord.
What do you think of the idea of Harrogate having spa facilities based in the conference centre? We were once so important as a spa town.
In 2024 we are losing our way – what are we now? What do we have to offer visitors?
In 1984 I set up Friends of the Valley Gardens to save the Sun Pavilion and Colonnade from being demolished. I knew Geoffrey Smith, James Herriot and David Bellamy and asked them to be presidents, to which they agreed.
We have the Valley Gardens and all it contains, as well as the Royal Hall, the Turkish Baths and the Royal Baths. Could the conference centre be used to house spa facilities, plus hairdressers, beauticians, physiotherapists, chiropractors and osteopaths etc? Essentially, everything to do with wellbeing all under the one roof, with easy parking too.
I am a golfer and walker and have often heard ladies saying it would be nice to have somewhere easy to park to go and be “pampered”. Not forgetting the gentlemen and all their needs.
It could also have a nice tea rooms with staff in uniform. I have lived here 60 years and can remember how genteel Harrogate was. As I said, now what is it?
It has really lost its way with thousands of houses being built – it seems that’s all the “powers that be” can think of. They may as well hand it over to the developers and just build with no infrastructure.
Please no one give them the idea of turning the conference centre into flats – they would love that.
Anne Smith, Pannal
It’s ‘potluck’ if a Knaresborough bus actually turns up
This letter is in response to a story about North Yorkshire Council accepting £3.5 million of additional funding from the Department of Transport. The money, which is being used to support a one-year pilot scheme, will go towards expanding timetables, £1 bus fares for young people and improvements to bus shelters.
I read with interest your article about money to improve bus services in the Harrogate district, especially about the number 1 service from Harrogate to Knaresborough via Starbeck.
You mentioned buses to Aspin, Carmires and the Pastures, but there was no mention of the 1B to Aldi and Eastfield.
Sadly, since the X1B Connections bus ceased running, it is now potluck if – and when – a bus turns up at the Eastfield stop.
Are there any plans to improve the 1B service?
Paul Smith, Knaresborough
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: Bins weren’t overflowing when Harrogate Borough Council existed
- Readers’ Letters: Harrogate ‘feels like Narnia’ compared to where I’m from
- Readers’ Letters: The ‘scruffy’ state of Harrogate makes me ashamed of my town
The Masham businesswoman aiming to be North Yorkshire’s first mayor
Felciity Cunliffe-Lister has not been in the political arena for long — but she feels she is the strongest candidate to become the first Mayor of York and North Yorkshire.
The co-owner of the Swinton Estate in Masham is the Liberal Democrat candidate on polling day on May 2.
However, despite being the official party candidate, she believes the role should be decided on who has the best business skillset.
She told the Stray Ferret that her two decades experience of running Swinton coupled with her years as a commercial property lawyer in London put her in a good position for the role.
Ms Cunliffe-Lister said:
“The reason why I’m doing it personally is because I think you need somebody with the right skillset to do it.
“I think you need somebody with a really strong proven track record in business. I don’t think you should be appointing someone with a strong political career.”
Ms Cunliffe-Lister worked in property law in London during her 20s. One of the major projects she was involved with was London Eye.
She moved to Masham with husband Mark following the family buy-back of Swinton Park. The couple converted the castle into a hotel and opened it in 2001.

Felicity Cunliffe-Lister
The Swinton estate as a whole now has a £6 million turnover and employs 150 people.
It’s this that Ms Cunliffe-Lister points to when pressed on what qualifies her to to run for mayor:
“I know how to run an organisation and I know how to be a leader. I know how to give people a clear vision. But I also have the experience of knowing what it is like to run a business and I understand what the challenges are.”
Manifesto pledges
But the role does come with an element of politics.
Ms Cunliffe-Lister, who is also North Yorkshire councillor for Mashams and Fountains division, launched her manifesto at the start of April.
Her pledges included a campaign for better services on the Harrogate to York line, a single ticket integrated bus services and converting empty premises above shops into flats.
She also pledged support for a new rail station at Flaxby Parkway, which has its roots in the long running debate over whether it should have hosted a new 3,000-home settlement in the Harrogate district.
Read more:
- York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority launches
- What will the new combined authority mean for Harrogate?
- North Yorkshire mayor to be paid £81,300
When asked if she had any specific priorities for Harrogate, she pointed to the town’s convention centre which she said has had a “shadow of doubt” hanging over it.
North Yorkshire Council revealed in March it had abandoned plans for a £57 million refurbishment of the ageing events and exhibitions venue, citing complexities and cost.
Ms Cunliffe-Lister said the centre was still viable and there were “easy wins” which could help it to be operated successfully:
“I would like to see the Harrogate Convention Centre up and running successfully without this shadow of doubt hanging over it any longer.
“There are some really easy wins there. It’s just not been run commercially and it could easily do so. I would like to enable that to happen for it to be able to function properly. I think it is viable as a site.”
Aside from specific pledges, Ms Cunliffe-Lister also ruled out levying a mayoral precept on council tax and said she would consider appointing a deputy to oversee the police and fire service functions.
When asked whether she was confident going into election day, she said she felt she was the candidate with the strongest skillset:
“If you consider the skills of the person, and I do strongly believe that you need to elect a mayor based on that point alone, in my view I’ve got the best set of skills to do that.
“I think in mayoral elections, people do not necessarily vote according to the party that they normally support. I think it’s down to the personality of the candidate.”
The York and North Yorkshire mayor will be chosen by residents of the region in an election on Thursday, May 2, 2024.
The deadline to register to vote is 11:59pm, Tuesday, April 16, 2024.
The candidates are:
- Keith Tordoff, independent
- Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, Liberal Democrats
- Keane Duncan, Conservative Party
- David Skaith, Labour Party
- Kevin Foster, Green Party
- Paul Haslam, independent
Friends of former Harrogate councillor Pat Marsh have paid tribute to a “hard-working, warm and conscientious” councillor and said her decades of public service should not be forgotten.
Ms Marsh resigned under a cloud in February following alleged antisemitic comments made on social media platform X related to the war in Gaza.
She was under suspension from the Liberal Democrats when she quit.
In a by-election on Thursday, April 11.
Lib Dem Andrew Timothy won her former North Yorkshire Council seat in the Stray, Hookstone and Woodlands division.
It marked the final chapter of Ms Marsh’s political career, which dates back to 1990 when she was first elected to Harrogate Borough Council as an independent for the Starbeck ward.
She became politicised during a battle to build a new Tesco supermarket near Stonefall cemetery in the late 1980s. It was one she was particularly proud of winning.
Long-time friend Cllr Philip Broadbank (Liberal Democrat, Fairfax and Starbeck) was three years below Ms Marsh at Woodlands Primary School and said she was always on the side of her residents.

Cllr Broadbank with Pat Marsh
He remembers evenings spent around the dinner table at the Marsh household plotting the campaign against the supermarket alongside her husband Reg Marsh, the Lib Dem councillor for Wedderburn who died in 2014.
Before they were both councillors, Reg was in the army and the family lived in Malaysia before returning to Harrogate.
Cllr Broadbank said:
“She was a fighter and was absolutely determined. She had strong opinions, was a very hard worker and was always prepared to advise.
“She wasn’t always successful but she never did anything for personal gain. There was nothing like that with Pat, she was straightforward and honest but was always pleasant to people.”
In the early 1990s, Ms Marsh allied with Cllr Arnold Warneken (Green, Ouseburn) in a coalition along with another Cllr David Rimmington.
Cllr Warneken said he looked up to her as a role model. He said:
“Pat Marsh showed us what a good councillor was. I got the benefit of that from following her for 30 years.
“She’s been a hard-working, warm and contentious councillor. People always spoke highly of her and she did a lot for the Harrogate district.”
Since 1990, Ms Marsh sat on the council’s planning committee and played a key role in how the Harrogate district has changed over the years.
She was sometimes on the end of criticism about the scale of housebuilding but as a non-car driver, she often tried to ensure that developments were served with proper bus routes.
The coalition helped the Lib Dems take control of the council in 1994 and ultimately led to council leader Phil Willis becoming the party’s first Harrogate and Knaresborough MP in 1997.
Ms Marsh joined her husband in the Lib Dems in 1996 and took charge of the leisure committee. She was instrumental in the move from Coppice Pool to the Hydro, which opened in 1999.
She was also involved in the battle to save the Sun Pavilion in Valley Gardens, worked to refurbish the Turkish baths, helped get Starbeck In Bloom off the ground and fought to improve safety outside schools in her ward.
Cllr Broadbank said Reg’s unexpected death in 2014 was a huge blow to the community as the couple were a popular double act on the doorstep.
He said:
“The pair of them were very hard-working. That’s partly why they kept getting re-elected. They were prepared to get stuck in.”
Ms Marsh became the leader of Harrogate Borough Council’s Lib Dem group in 2015 and regularly butted heads with Conservative council leader Richard Cooper.
With the demise of Harrogate Borough Council in 2022, Ms Marsh became an honorary alderwoman for the borough, a title bestowed on councillors with more than 20 years of service.
But she was almost blocked from receiving it due to disparaging comments she made about Andrew Jones MP and Mr Cooper while being secretly recorded. She eventually apologised.
Following Ms Marsh’s resignation, Cllr Warneken said she has been “hung out to dry” by her former colleagues in the Liberal Democrats.
She received no mention from her successor Andrew Timothy in his speech after winning the by-election.
However, both Ms Marsh’s friends hope she’s remembered more for her long tenure in Harrogate public life than how her political career ended.
Cllr Broadbank said:
“This isn’t how her life in local government was supposed to have finished.”
Read more:
- Lib Dems win Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election
- By-election suggests tactical voting may topple Tories in Harrogate and Knaresborough
Mayoral candidates to take part in climate hustings in Harrogate
Some of the York and North Yorkshire mayoral candidates will take part in a climate change-focussed hustings next week.
The event, which is being held by climate action charity Zero Carbon Harrogate, will invite the candidates to put forward their environmental policies and discuss the actions they propose to take.
Felicity Cunliffe-Lister (Liberal Democrat), Keith Tordoff (Independent) and Paul Haslam (Independent) have agreed to speak at the event, and later take questions from the audience.
Zero Carbon Harrogate told the Stray Ferret Green Party candidate Kevin Foster was unable to attend due to a “personal commitment”, but Arnold Warneken , the Green councillor for Ouseburn, would represent him.
Tory candidate Keane Duncan and Labour candidate David Skaith both have “other campaigning commitments”, the charity said, but added they have been invited to send a representative in their place.
Zero Carbon Harrogate today said in a press release:
“The hope is that the hustings will provide mayoral candidates with a constructive opportunity to engage with local residents and business people around the climate agenda.
“This is a new departure in electoral terms, placing new powers in the hands of single successful candidate. It’s a great opportunity to hear the views of those who wish to serve the public good in this way.”
The organisation, which is part of the North Yorkshire Climate Coalition, hopes to work with elected representatives and campaign for effective climate change policies.
It works towards transitioning to a net zero economy, cleaner travel and warmer homes.
The hustings will take place on Wednesday, April 17, at 7.30pm.
It will be held at the Wesley Chapel in Harrogate and the charity said anyone is welcome.
People must register to attend and can submit any questions to candidates here.
The mayoral election will take place on Thursday May 2.
Read more:
- Exclusive: Council spend £1.9m on consultants for scrapped Harrogate Convention Centre plans
- 12 local council staff named in Town Hall Rich List