Reform UK launches Blackpool by-election campaign
Former street preacher Mark Butcher says he aims to give Labour and the Tories a ‘bloody nose’.
A former street preacher and charity founder has launched his election campaign for the Reform UK party in the by-election in Blackpool.
Father-of-four Mark Butcher, 55, was accompanied by Lee Anderson, who defected to Reform UK from the Conservative Party earlier this month, for the party’s launch in the Blackpool South constituency.
The by-election has been prompted by the resignation of Scott Benton in the wake of a lobbying scandal.
“I’m sick to death of people in this country apologising for our history, our heritage, our culture. I’m sick to death of people ripping flags down, statues down.
“We’re fed up of our capital city being taken over by Islamists on a regular basis.
“I’m not going to apologise to Sadiq Khan while I’ve got breath in my body.”
Mr Anderson and the candidate got on a Reform election battle bus for a tour around the town, passing miles of shuttered shops and closed and dilapidated hotels and B&Bs.
Blackpool is one of the poorest towns in England, with eight wards being in the 10 most deprived neighbourhoods in the country, according to 2019 indices of multiple deprivation produced by the Government.
“Not just homeless people. People who are living in poverty get treated terribly bad.
“There’s no dignity for them.
“We’ve helped thousands and thousands of people at Amazing Grace, some local, some from out of town. But it’s time we started to look after our own.
“I’ve got homeless people outside a four-star hotel that’s full of foreign immigrants. And those homeless people were told by Housing Options (the local council homeless service) that they couldn’t be helped because they’ve got no local connections.
“Why do the same rules not apply to them as to our own people that we are refusing to assist?
“It’s the reality of it.
“The councils, both councils, the Conservative Party and the Labour Party are to blame for the absolute neglect that Blackpool South has endured.
“I’m in this to win it. I think we are definitely going to give them a bloody nose.”
Mr Butcher said Blackpool has some wards with the lowest life expectancy in England, 10 years lower than the average, and claimed that despite 18 million tourist visitors annually, £2 billion of public sector investment had been wasted on “vanity projects”.
He added: “We need change. We cannot keep putting these same parties in. It’s time to stand up and be counted. That’s why I’m here today.”
Voters will head to the polls on May 2.