The Reform UK parliamentary candidate for Harrogate and Knaresborough has been included in a list of ‘unsavoury rogues’ selected by the party.
Richard Brown was one of eight candidates named in a Mail on Sunday investigation.
The article said the right wing party “has surged in the polls but the party harbours some unsavoury rogues – from a candidate who supports Tommy Robinson to a covid conspiracy theorist who likened Boris Johnson to Hitler and even another who’s a convicted animal abuser”.
Referring specifically to Mr Brown, it said he “made misogynistic remarks about Labour MP Jess Phillips, calling her a ‘bitch’ in 2022”, adding:
“Last year, Brown also shared the false claim that doctors refused to treat Boris Johnson on the basis that he didn’t have covid, and claimed the pandemic was an ‘illusion’ that had been ‘planned’ by the government ‘since 2016’.”
Reform UK polled 16% — just 4% behind the Conservatives — in a YouGov survey last week.
The party announced former chartered accountant Mr Brown as its parliamentary candidate in August last year.
He describes himself as a “passionate believer in the United Kingdom as an independent agent on the world stage, self reliance, small state, lower taxes for corporations and individuals, control of immigration and cancelling net zero” on Reform UK’s website.
The Stray Ferret has contacted Mr Brown for a response to the article but not yet had a response.
A Reform spokesman told the Mail on Sunday the article was “pathetic nit-picking”, adding:
“Reform UK’s candidates are real people living real lives. Like all parties, Reform UK has had a small number of candidates who have said or written something unacceptable.
“We are proud that, when made aware of unacceptable behaviour, we act, and if necessary immediately remove candidates that have gone beyond the pale. Again, this is not something you will often see from our political opponents.
“Richard Brown was rude about a politician. He also shared claims that at the time were reported as fact.”
Read more:
- Reform UK announces local parliamentary candidates
- Exclusive: Council spent £1.9m on consultants for scrapped Harrogate Convention Centre plans
Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election preview: John Swales, Reform UK
Reform UK wants to shake up British politics this year and John Swales believes he can become the party’s first North Yorkshire councillor.
Mr Swales describes himself as one of Thatcher’s children but says that nationally and locally the Conservatives have lost their way.
He says Reform is winning over disenfranchised Tory voters “like there’s no tomorrow”.
He added:
“They are not Conservatives, they are following a globalist agenda around United Nations development goals. We’ve been bombarded with covid lockdowns and massive state control. Something is very wrong at the heart of British politics.”
Reform UK was previously known as the Brexit Party when it was led by Nigel Farage.
Mr Swales says the party has evolved from when it was largely a single-issue proposition for voters.
Locally, he said parking around Harrogate District Hospital is a big problem in the division, with hospital parking fees forcing people to park on nearby residential streets instead.
Mr Swales said:
“I’ve had elderly relatives down at the hospital and paying for parking is a regressive thing to do. I know they say it’s to fund the NHS but how much does it need, what are its priorities?”
He also questions active travel schemes in the town and was against previous council proposals such as the one-way system on Oatlands Drive that aimed to make the area more friendly for cyclists.
He says he’s also against the town’s £12.1m Station Gateway scheme, which he calls a “dog’s breakfast”. He added:
“It will please nobody. I don’t know why they are pushing ahead with it.”
When the division was last contested in 2022, independent Anna McIntee came last with just 167 votes. She ran a campaign that was not too dissimilar to Reform’s platform, voicing concerns about active travel and how the Conservatives had taken locals for granted.
However, Mr Swales says Reform has a raft of policies that are resonating with voters on issues from energy to the cost-of-living crisis. He said:
“We’re a major political party that has pragmatic and common sense solutions for the problems facing the country.”
He added:
“There’s a hubris with the Conservatives who are so disengaged from what’s going on in town. It feels like a change is coming, it’s exciting.”
The by-election will take place on Thursday, April 11. For more information, visit the council’s website.
A full list of candidates is below:
- Conservative – John Ennis.
- Green – Gilly Charters.
- Labour – Geoff Foxall.
- Liberal Democrat – Andrew Timothy.
- Reform UK – John Swales.
Read more:
- Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone by-election preview: Andrew Timothy, Liberal Democrats
- Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone by-election preview: Geoff Foxall, Labour
- Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone by-election preview: Gilly Charters, Green Party
- Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone by-election preview: John Ennis, Conservative
Reform UK announces Wetherby and Easingwold parliamentary candidate
Reform UK has announced Mike Jordan will stand as its candidate in Wetherby and Easingwold at the next general election.
The new constituency was created as part of parliamentary boundary changes announced by government and will include locations including Boroughbridge, Spofforth and Bishop Monkton in the Harrogate district.
The next general election, which has to be held no later than January 28, 2025, will be the first time the seat will be contested.
Mr Jordan, who has been a North Yorkshire councillor for 15 years, resigned from both the Conservative Party and Yorkshire Party before joining Reform UK.
He said:
“I am delighted to be chosen to contest Wetherby and Easingwold in the forthcoming general election.”

The Wetherby and Easingwold seat.
Meanwhile, the Conservative Party has chosen current Elmet and Rothwell MP, Alec Shelbrooke, to stand for the constituency.
Mr Jordan becomes the latest Reform UK candidate to stand for election in the Harrogate district.
The party announced Richard Brown as its candidate in Harrogate and Knaresborough and Simon Garvey will stand in Skipton and Ripon.
The right-wing party was founded as the Brexit Party with support from Nigel Farage in 2018.
It was renamed in 2021 and is now led by Richard Tice.
The party announced last year that it would field candidates in every UK parliament constituency at a general election.
Read more:
- Reform UK announces local parliamentary candidates
- Reform UK sets out Harrogate and Knaresborough priorities
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.