Guernsey Press

Reform UK leader warns candidates not to post on social media after drinking

The party has ditched seven candidates for the upcoming election following complaints about their social media posts.

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Reform UK leader Richard Tice has warned his candidates not to use social media after drinking alcohol, to avoid posting “inappropriate” comments.

The party has ditched 10 candidates for the forthcoming election following complaints about their social media posts.

Mr Tice said every party has its share of “morons” but added that he is committed to kicking them out quickly.

“It’s not sensible, if someone lets us down hereafter, then, frankly, if it is inappropriate, if it is unacceptable, then we’re going to part company.

“So you can have your freedom of speech, your freedom of expression, that doesn’t mean you have the right to represent Reform UK as a parliamentary candidate, because that’s our choice.”

Campaign group Hope Not Hate found tweets by candidates Jonathan Kay and Mick Greenhough in which they made derogatory comments about Muslims and black people.

Mr Kay, who was standing for election in South Ribble, tweeted in 2019 that Muslims “never coexist with others” and should be deported, and claimed Africans have IQs “among the lowest in the world”.

Mr Greenhough, who was the Reform candidate in Orpington, tweeted in 2023 that “the only solution” is to “remove the Muslims from our territory” and in 2019 said Ashkenazi Jews are a “problem” and have “caused the world massive misery”.

Reform UK press conference
Reform UK has ditched seven candidates for the forthcoming election following complaints about their comments on social media (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

Both men were removed as Reform candidates, following the publication of Hope Not Hate’s findings last week.

Mr Tice told the PA news agency: “We’re not happy for candidates to hold these views, but it’s when they get expressed is obviously when you know about it.

“And that’s how we find out about it. So, look, I’m being slightly cheeky in using that as an analogy but the reality is if someone holds and expresses inappropriate views we’re not going to tolerate it and we’re going to make the fastest decisions of anyone.”

Mr Tice said any organisation of more than 600 people is going to lose 1% or 2% for doing “something daft”.

He said: “Every party has their share, frankly, of muppets and morons – you’ve seen it with the sexual weirdos going on in the Tory Party, we’ve seen it with the antisemitism in the Labour Party and George Galloway’s party.”

Reform UK press conference
Reform UK leader Richard Tice said he will not tolerate inappropriate views from his candidates (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

“But the following Friday night, someone has a glass or two too much and puts something out on social media that they then permanently regret, so in a sense it never stops.

“When someone does something that is completely wrong and inappropriate, we’re the fastest to sort it out and, frankly, kick them out.”

Benjamin “Beau” Dade was dropped as candidate for Swindon South following a similar investigation by Hope Not Hate, while Ginny Ball in Rutland and Stamford, Nick Davies in North East Bedfordshire, David Carpin in Henley and Thame, and Roger Hoe in Beverley and Holderness have all been sacked for comments made on social media.

The party has also drawn criticism over some of its other candidates, including a convicted animal abuser and a fortune-teller who sold spells for £200 on the OnlyFans website.

During the conference, Mr Tice announced the party’s proposal to get rid of NHS waiting lists within the next two years.

He told reporters this would be paid for by scrapping plans to reach net zero by 2050, adding: “Some of you might say that’s impossible; I say stop being so weak and pathetic.”

Mr Tice also targeted Labour in a pitch for voters in the so-called Red Wall.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer hopes to win back seats in his party’s former northern heartlands, which were lost to the Tories in Boris Johnson’s 2019 landslide.

But Mr Tice hopes Brexit-voting constituents could be persuaded to switch from the Conservatives to Reform, rather than backing Labour.

Reform’s plans for 2024
Reform UK leader Richard Tice targeted Labour voters (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

He said the country is “completely and utterly broken” after 14 years of Tory rule.

But he accused Labour of betraying working-class voters in favour of a “woke” agenda, adding: “That’s the reality of what they’re doing. They no longer care, they have no plans, they have no solutions.

“All they’re focused on, frankly, are the woke, managerial middle class who happen to be eco-zealots.”

Asked how his party intends to target young people, the 59-year-old told PA: “We’re the largest political party on TikTok… I’m being shown videos of me saying all sorts of strange things that people on TikTok are enjoying piecing together.”

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