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Home»United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The Reform councillors who face calls to resign in furious racism row

News RoomBy News RoomMay 10, 2026
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The recent local elections in the United Kingdom delivered significant gains for the Reform UK party, marking a notable shift in the political landscape. However, this success has been immediately overshadowed by a series of deeply troubling controversies, as several of its newly elected councillors have faced intense scrutiny over past racist and extremist remarks. These incidents have ignited a fierce public debate about the party’s vetting procedures, its core values, and the responsibilities of elected officials, casting a long shadow over their electoral achievements. The swift emergence of these allegations suggests a systemic failure to properly assess candidates before they were put forward to represent communities, raising urgent questions about the party’s commitment to inclusive and respectful politics.

Among the most prominent cases is that of Daniel Devaney, who topped the poll in his Bradford ward. It was revealed that in a social media post, he described Muslims as “pure scum.” When confronted, the 70-year-old former naval canteen assistant offered a defence that many found woefully inadequate, stating he made the comments “while I was in a bad mood and watching TV” and was merely “letting off steam.” Although he later expressed regret, called the remark “a bad thing to say,” and even offered to step down, the damage was done. His attempt to soften the impact by noting he “helps his Asian neighbours” and his stated defence of the historically controversial figure Enoch Powell only deepened concerns. The episode left constituents and observers alike wrestling with how someone holding such views could earn their trust and their votes, and whether a casual apology could ever suffice for language of such outright bigotry.

The pattern of disturbing rhetoric extended across the country. In Essex, Stuart Prior was elected to both county and district councils despite allegedly referring to white people as “the master race” in online posts, language described by the anti-racism group HOPE not hate as “some of the most horrifically racist” they had encountered. On Merseyside, Jay Leslie Cooper won a seat in Sefton after allegedly writing on Facebook that the Holocaust was a “hoax” and “propaganda,” grotesquely misrepresenting one of history’s most documented atrocities. Perhaps most shockingly, in Sunderland, councillor Glenn Gibbins was suspended after allegedly suggesting the local Nigerian community should be “melted… down and fill in the potholes.” These are not minor slips of the tongue but expressions of profound hatred and dehumanisation, which, now brought to light, understandably cause anguish and fear within the communities they were directed against.

Faced with this mounting scandal, the response from Reform UK’s leadership has appeared defensive and disjointed, focusing more on political positioning than on unequivocal moral accountability. While Deputy Leader Darren Grimes admitted to a “failure of the vetting process,” the party’s initial actions seemed reactive, with investigations and suspensions announced only after media exposure. Leader Richard Tice, when questioned on the BBC, offered a qualified condemnation before pivoting to accuse critics of “smearing and sneering,” framing the controversy as a political attack rather than a serious ethical breach. This response has been perceived by many as attempting to deflect from the severity of the candidates’ own words. The situation was further complicated by the election of David Laing, who claimed he “could not remember” having stood as a candidate for the explicitly racist British National Party twice in the mid-2000s, directly contradicting party leader Nigel Farage’s “golden rule” of barring former BNP activists.

For the communities these individuals are now tasked with serving, the revelations are not abstract political stories but sources of genuine distress and insecurity. The idea that a representative could harbor such vitriolic prejudices creates a chilling atmosphere of alienation and mistrust. It fundamentally undermines the basic contract of representation, which requires a councillor to serve all constituents fairly and with respect. The apologies, when offered, have often rung hollow, appearing as damage control rather than genuine repentance. This leaves minority communities, already often facing prejudice, to wonder if their local government sees them as equal citizens or as targets of contempt, making a mockery of the very concept of community cohesion and shared public life.

Ultimately, these elections have presented Reform UK with a defining test of its character and governance. The party’s significant electoral breakthrough is now inextricably linked to a crisis of credibility concerning racism within its ranks. Moving forward, the party faces a clear choice: it can engage in a rigorous, transparent, and immediate root-and-branch review of its candidate selection and vetting processes, holding those who express hateful views fully accountable regardless of electoral value. Or, it can continue with a strategy of minimization and deflection, which would signal that such views are tolerable within its culture. The outcome will determine whether Reform UK is seen as a serious, broad-based political movement or one that is willing to overlook bigotry for the sake of electoral gain, with profound implications for Britain’s social fabric and political discourse.

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