Nigel Farage in Sunderland to launch Reform election campaign
The Reform leader has held a series of election rallies across the country in recent weeks, but will formally begin his partyβs campaign for the May 7 polls at an event in the North East this evening (Thursday, March 26) where he will promise to deliver βa breath of fresh air in English councils up and down the UKβ.
He is expected to use the event to list a series of achievements in the local authorities already run by Reform, saying voters were βalready seeing a difference on the groundβ.
Ahead of the rally, Mr Farage said Reform was βdelivering a total culture shift in local government, sweeping away the establishment consensus and finally putting residents firstβ.
He added: βWhere the old parties have failed and left behind a trail of ruined councils in their wake, Reform will deliver a breath of fresh air in English councils up and down the UK.β
Central to his pitch will be Reformβs claim to have identified Β£700 million in savings across its 12 councils, which Mr Farage claimed had been delivered βwithout touching frontline servicesβ.
In November last year, Reform said its councils had saved Β£331 million.
Reform continues to lead in the polls and is expected to do well in May, adding to the 677 councillors it won in last yearβs local elections.
But its claims to have achieved significant savings have been disputed by opposition councillors, while Labour has pointed to care homes and adult education services closing in Reform-run Derbyshire.
Labour has also criticised Reform for increasing council tax despite promising to cut the levy before last yearβs local elections.
Reform now says council tax rises in authorities where it has majority control have averaged less than those run by Labour, the Conservatives or the Lib Dems, while describing below-inflation increases in some councils as a βreal-terms tax cutβ.
But this does not include Worcestershire, where Reform runs a minority administration and increased council tax this year by nine per cent.
Labour Party chairwoman Anna Turley said: βReformβs promises fall apart the moment they take power.
βThey said they would cut taxes and waste, but in council after council theyβre hiking council tax and slashing services.β