Rachel Reeves, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, made a quick visit to Harrogate at the weekend to support the mayoral campaign of Labour candidate David Skaith.
The Leeds West MP, who was formerly an economist at the Bank of England, met local party workers and joined Mr Skaith to canvass in the town centre.
Mr Skaith, who now lives in Wheldrake near York, grew up in Harrogate and his family still live there.
Also chair of the York High Street Forum, he has focused many of his pledges on helping people and businesses. He has promised to introduce a cost-of-living support fund to help those who are struggling financially, and launch a high-street fund to support businesses financially and strategically.
He said:
“We started the day with the dedicated and hard-working Harrogate & Knaresborough Labour Party. Showing Rachel Reeves around the town I grew up in and still have so much love for was a real pleasure.
“I can’t wait to put in place my Mayor’s High Street Fund and the Labour plans for our high streets to really boost investment into towns right across our region.”

Rachel Reeves MP and David Skaith with Labour Party workers in Harrogate.
Although Harrogate is not usually considered natural campaigning territory for Labour, the party has said it is the only one that can defeat the Conservatives across York and North Yorkshire as a whole.
The mayoral region includes Conservative-controlled North Yorkshire, where Labour has just 11 of the 90 county council seats, and Labour-controlled York, where the Conservatives have just three of the 47 city council seats. The region stretches from the outskirts of Darlington in the north to within five miles of Doncaster in the south, and from the east coast to within 10 miles of the west coast.
Voting in the mayoral election will take place across the region from 7am to 10pm on Thursday, May 2.
The candidates for mayor are:
- Keith Tordoff, independent
- Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, Liberal Democrats
- Keane Duncan, Conservative Party
- David Skaith, Labour Party
- Kevin Foster, Green Party
- Paul Haslam, independent
Read more:
- North Yorkshire mayoral election: Where do the candidates differ?
- The businessman tasked with winning Labour the North Yorkshire mayoral election
- By-election suggests tactical voting may topple Tories in Harrogate and Knaresborough
Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves visits Knaresborough banking hub
Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves visited Knaresborough banking hub on Friday.
Ms Reeves joined shadow Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds and shadow Economic Secretary Tulip Siddiq at Kirkgate.
Reeves hailed the hub, which opened on November 17, as an example of what the Labour Party would like to see across the country if it wins the next general election, which is expected to take place in 2024.
Labour has committed to setting up at least 350 banking hubs following a 64 per cent drop in the number of banks in Yorkshire since 2015.
Ms Reeves said:
“There’s now 20 banking hubs around the country.
“Banking hubs are there to replace bank branches because Knaresborough was without a bank for three years.
“[There’s] not a single bank branch in this town and banking hubs are an alternative to banks.
“When there are no banks left in the town the idea is that the banks come together to open a hub that you can use whichever bank you’re with, but there’s only 20 of them and we know that there are many more high streets in towns and villages that don’t have banks at all.
“Labour is making a commitment today that in the first term of a Labour government, we would open at least 350 banking hubs so that more people have access to banking facilities and to cash, which is something that unfortunately today too many people don’t have access to.”
Ms Siddiq added:
“When a local community no longer has access to a bank branch, we know it is the poorest in society along with high street businesses who lose out the most from the loss of vital in-person services.”
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Knaresborough photographer Charlotte Gale came to get cash from the banking hub and speak to the three members of Sir Keir Starmer’s shadow cabinet about why she needs cash for her business.
Ms Gale said:
“I always run out of 5ps.
“That’s the way my stuff is priced – it’s 95p.
“There’s always a struggle to get a 5p.”
Alongside its plans to bring back banking to communities, Labour also pledged to give councils the power to tackle shuttered-up shops, tackle antisocial behaviour and shoplifting through dedicated police patrols, replace business rates with a fairer system and end late payments to support small businesses.
Mr Reynolds said:
“Under the Conservatives, our high streets have been allowed to fall into decline, with more and more high street anchors like banks closing.
“Labour will put an end to boarded-up premises and ghost high streets with our plan to bring banks back to the high street, fix business rates, tackle empty properties and get police back on the beat on your high street.”
In Yorkshire and the Humber 464 banks – or 64 per cent – have closed since 2015 and just 264 remain open.
This is the second biggest percentage of bank closures in the country, with 66 per cent of banks being closed in the south-west.
In the whole of England, there are 3,208 bank branches.