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UK Local Elections 2026
6MAY

BNP-list disclosures expel three Reform names

3 min read
17:39UTC

HOPE not hate published a report on Saturday 25 April naming three Reform UK 2026 candidates as appearing on a leaked 2007-2008 BNP membership and contacts list. Reform confirmed all three were expelled. Their names remain on ballot papers.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Three Reform candidates were expelled; their names remain on ballots and their votes still count for Reform.

HOPE not hate published a report on Saturday 25 April naming three Reform UK 2026 election candidates who appear on a leaked British National Party membership and contacts list from 2007-2008 1. The three are David Prior (Gateshead Saltwell), George Parnell (Hampshire Fleet Town and Fleet Central), and John Black (Blackburn with Darwen Little Harwood and Whitebirk). Reform confirmed to the Mirror that all three have been expelled. Nigel Farage addressed Prior at a Reform rally the day before the expulsion was announced. The names remain on ballot papers because expulsion does not strip nominations 12 days before the vote.

Farage stated in October 2025 that Reform's vetting was "the best" in the country and that 4,000 candidates had been vetted. The HOPE not hate disclosure follows the resignation of six Senedd candidates including former UKIP MS Caroline Jones , and the 65-of-677 Reform 2025 councillor attrition figure . Cross-referencing party candidate lists against a 19-year-old leaked database is a routine open-source intelligence exercise. That three Reform 2026 candidates passed vetting despite appearing on it suggests either the cross-check was not part of the vetting protocol or the result was disregarded.

HOPE not hate told its readers on 25 April that the cross-referencing exercise will continue through the 7 May vote. Additional names may surface in the 12 days remaining, with no mechanism to amend ballot papers. Voters in Gateshead Saltwell, Hampshire Fleet and Blackburn with Darwen face a choice between voting for an expelled candidate whose votes still count toward Reform's seat tally or voting elsewhere.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The British National Party (BNP) was a far-right political party active in the 2000s that advocated for the exclusion of non-white people from Britain. It had around 13,000 members at its peak. In 2008 and 2009, its membership list was leaked online, and has since been used by researchers to identify former members. HOPE not hate is a UK anti-racism organisation that monitors far-right movements. On 25 April, 12 days before the 7 May elections, it published a report naming three Reform UK local election candidates who appeared on that BNP membership list from 2007-2008. Reform UK expelled all three immediately. But because ballot papers had already been printed with their names on them, voters in those wards will still see those names on 7 May. A vote for any of them goes to a candidate who is no longer part of any party. The day before the expulsions, Nigel Farage (Reform's leader) had been at a rally where he addressed one of the three , David Prior in Gateshead.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Reform UK grew from fewer than 10,000 members in 2021 to a national candidate slate by 2026 without building a professional vetting infrastructure. The party's internal structure is highly centralised around Nigel Farage's office, with no permanent HR or candidate compliance function capable of running background checks against historical political membership databases at the scale required.

The BNP membership list has been publicly available in various forms since it was leaked online in 2008 and 2009. A basic cross-reference against Reform's candidate slate is a day's work for a party with a digital compliance team; HOPE not hate performing it instead of Reform indicates the party did not conduct that check before nominations closed.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Votes cast for Prior, Parnell, and Black on 7 May go to independent candidates rather than Reform UK, potentially costing the party seats in close contests in Gateshead, Hampshire, and Blackburn.

  • Risk

    With 12 days to polling, HOPE not hate's continuing research into Reform's 2026 candidate slate may produce further disclosures before 7 May, given that the party has already confirmed 'nil' vetting (ID:2318).

First Reported In

Update #5 · 11 Days to Go: Six-of-six, RPA dies, Welsh lead flips

HOPE not hate· 26 Apr 2026
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