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Pensioners like Dorothy, 93, pen must-read open letter for anyone considering voting for Nigel Farage’s Reform

News RoomBy News RoomMay 4, 2026
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In a heartfelt and deeply personal appeal, a group of care home residents in Lancashire have stepped far beyond their quiet routines to issue a stark warning to the nation. Their open letter, a poignant document signed by individuals aged from 83 to 100, is not merely a political statement but a raw testament to human vulnerability. These elders, who have spent lifetimes in roles of service as nurses, teachers, and parents, now find themselves fighting for the stability and dignity of their final years. Their plea is simple yet profound: they urge the public to vote in the local elections to prevent the Reform party from gaining more council seats. This extraordinary intervention stems from a terrifying experience last year, when the Reform-controlled Lancashire County Council earmarked their beloved home, Woodlands, for closure in a cost-cutting drive. For people whose world has narrowed to the familiar corridors and compassionate staff of their residence, the threat of eviction was not a bureaucratic adjustment but an earthquake that shattered their fundamental sense of safety.

The emotional core of this story is embodied by individuals like 93-year-old Dorothy Devereux. Having once worked as a nurse caring for the home’s residents, she chose Woodlands as her own retirement haven, a place where all her possessions and memories reside. The council’s closure proposal left her and her fellow residents “devastated” and “terrified.” For Dorothy, the episode transformed abstract political debates into a visceral reality. As she poignantly states, “We are not lines on a spreadsheet.” The stress took a measurable toll; her daughter, Frances Duxbury, notes her health declined, while the family of 88-year-old Joyce Porter observed her dementia advance under the strain. This underscores a critical truth: for the elderly, especially those with complex needs, environmental consistency is not a luxury but a medical and psychological necessity. The warm, supportive atmosphere of Woodlands had, in Joyce’s case, brought her “alive again.” The threat to dismantle this was, in effect, a threat to their well-being.

The residents’ victory in forcing a council U-turn through public outcry offered only fragile relief. While the closure plans were officially shelved and replaced with promises of “investment,” a cloud of uncertainty remains. Dorothy voices the anxiety shared by many: will promises be kept, or will the home be privatised or fees raised to unaffordable levels? This uncertainty is a lingering trauma. Furthermore, the context suggests their experience is not an isolated incident but part of a troubling pattern under Reform governance. In neighbouring Derbyshire, a Reform-run council is proceeding with plans to close eight care homes. The Lancashire case also raised ethical questions when it emerged that a Reform councillor co-owned a private care company, highlighting potential conflicts of interest between public service austerity and private sector gain.

In their carefully worded letter, the residents make a powerful, non-partisan appeal to universal values. They acknowledge that many view local elections as inconsequential, but argue that these votes shape the very fabric of community care. “For many of us, they could be our last chance to be heard,” they write, framing the ballot as a final act of civic participation. Their message transcends their immediate crisis, speaking directly to the conscience of every voter: “What’s happening to us today could just as easily happen to you, or to the people you love most.” They reframe the political choice from one of abstract ideology to one of basic humanity and intergenerational solidarity, asking the public to “vote to protect the care and dignity of older people, who’ve contributed so much to this country.”

The reaction from unions and campaign groups frames the residents’ ordeal as a cautionary tale. A spokesperson for Avaaz calls it a “stark warning of what Reform in power could mean,” while Unison’s Jon Richards accuses the party of “peddling easy answers” rather than engaging with the complex, humane work of sustaining public services. The council’s formal response, stating that a report is pending and that residents’ contributions are valued, stands in sterile contrast to the emotional narrative of betrayal and fear shared by the elders and their families. This disconnect highlights a central tension in modern governance: the clash between spreadsheets seeking efficiencies and the human need for security, continuity, and respect.

Ultimately, the letter from the residents of Woodlands is more than a campaign tactic; it is a profound human document. It gives a face and a voice to those often rendered invisible in political discourse. Their brave decision to break their silence serves as a powerful reminder that the quality of a society is judged by how it treats its most vulnerable members. As they conclude, “The choices we make now will decide the kind of country we all grow old in.” Their plea is not for special treatment, but for the honouring of a simple social contract: that those who have spent a lifetime contributing deserve to spend their final years in peace and security, not in fear of being uprooted by a line in a budget report. Their collective voice, forged in vulnerability, resonates as a call for compassion to echo in every voting booth.

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