Jewish News identified David Robert Prior, the Reform UK candidate in Gateshead's Saltwell ward, as appearing on a leaked 2007 to 2008 British National Party membership list 1. Reform UK expelled him the day after Nigel Farage personally addressed him at a rally. Prior is the fourth Reform candidate to be removed for the same reason in a fortnight, extending HOPE not hate's original three-name disclosure on 25 April . All four names remain on printed ballot papers tomorrow, which means voters who tick those boxes elect candidates the party has already disowned.
The Jewish News investigation described Reform UK's vetting as a 'systemic failure'. The mechanism is straightforward: HOPE not hate and Jewish News reporters cross-referenced the public-record BNP membership list, which has circulated online since the 2008 leak, against Reform's 2026 candidate slate published by Democracy Club. The first run produced three names; Prior makes four. Reform's stated vetting process did not catch any of them.
Election law gives the party no mechanism to amend ballot papers between candidate withdrawal and polling day. The relevant deadline under the Local Elections (Principal Areas) (England and Wales) Rules 2006 is the close of nominations, which closed weeks ago. Voters in Saltwell, Hart District Council, Hampshire County Council and Blackburn will see the expelled names on their ballots on Thursday morning. Any tick recorded against an expelled candidate counts as cast for that name; under FPTP it can carry the seat. The four expelled candidates can in principle win seats they cannot legally take.
The pattern matters because the disclosure mechanism is a public-record cross-reference, not an investigative discovery. Any party fielding several thousand candidates against an indexed historical membership list of a few thousand names produces the same arithmetic. Reform's 4,237 English candidates this cycle, the largest non-major-party slate at any local election, produces the largest exposure to that arithmetic.
