Conservative group leader defects to Reform

Councillor Stephen Thompson with red hair and beard wearing a brown suit with white shirt and tie. He is smiling.Image source, Reform UK, Preston Rural North, Preston City Council
Image caption,

Councillor Stephen Thompson rejected any suggestion he had joined Reform because of its current opinion poll lead

  • Published

The leader of the Conservative group on Preston City Council has defected to Reform UK.

Stephen Thompson made the switch on Monday after becoming "frustrated" with his former party at national level, the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) has revealed.

He will become the authority's first Reform member, 18 years after he was elected to the town hall as a Tory.

The Preston Rural North representative had led the smaller of the two opposition parties on the Labour-run city council since May last year.

Deputy Conservative leader Harry Landless will take over as the group's interim chief.

He said he would be happy to continue in the role permanently if asked to do so by his four remaining Tory colleagues.

Thompson told the LDRS he had been "thinking about" making the move to Reform "for a while".

"I just felt the Conservative Party had 14 years [in government] to do a lot of things and they didn't do some of the things that they should have done.

"There was talk of the bonfire of the quangos but that never came off – and immigration, both legal and illegal, got a lot worse under them.

"People I talk to are just more in tune with Reform than any of the other parties – and I can very well understand why. I'm no different to them – I'm just a man on the street.

"I think the political system needs a serious reset and I just don't think that the established parties have got any idea of how to do it or even the will to do it," said Thompson.

He rejected any suggestion he had joined Reform because of its current opinion poll lead and a desire to "preserve" his career in local politics.

Thompson said he has yet to decide whether to stand for re-election under the Reform banner next May.

Exterior view of Preston City Council's town hall on Lancaster Road.Image source, Google
Image caption,

The Conservative group on Preston City Council lost their status as the official opposition to the Liberal Democrats after the last poll in May 2024

Landless said he was "disappointed" by his former leader's decision to defect.

"It didn't come as a great shock in terms of him going, but the timing was a surprise.

"But he's made his choice – and he's got to do what he feels best for him," Landless added.

He said he remained "optimistic" about the Conservatives' chances of regaining ground in the local elections in Preston next year.

"A lot can happen between now and then – we will see how Reform do [in] running Lancashire County Council for one thing."

The Conservative group on Preston City Council lost their status as the official opposition after the last poll in May 2024, in which they came in third behind the Liberal Democrats, who enjoyed a resurgence.

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