Farage
rejects local Reform UK-Tory coalitions
5 hours ago
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c07883y07nko
Nigel Farage
has dismissed a suggestion from Kemi Badenoch that Reform UK and Tory
councillors could enter into coalitions after next month's local elections.
Speaking
earlier, Tory leader Badenoch told the BBC her party's local leaders would be
free to share power with Reform if it was required to keep councils running.
But Farage
later appeared to brush off the idea, saying Reform UK had "no intention
in forming coalitions with the Tories at any level".
He has
however left the door open to more informal co-operation, telling the BBC on
Wednesday there could be "working relationships" with other parties.
It is not
uncommon for different parties to share power locally, with the number of
councils not controlled by a single party rising in recent years.
Reform
currently holds around 100 council seats, mainly as a result of defections from
other parties, but is looking to boost its representation in elections for a
clutch of largely rural and suburban council seats in England on 1 May.
The party
stood in only 12% of available council seats in local elections last year, but
is contesting nearly all the 1,600 council seats up for re-election next month.
Farage has
previously said his party is aiming to win hundreds of seats, in a bid to boost
its national election chances by gaining a bigger foothold in town halls.
Badenoch has
ruled out an electoral pact with Reform on a national level, arguing that
Farage is trying to destroy the Conservatives as a party.
But she has
faced increasing questions in recent days about whether her party's councillors
would be allowed to do deals with Reform UK to govern locally.
'Broke
Britain'
Asked
earlier whether she could rule out local deals, Badenoch told BBC Breakfast
Tory councillors would have to "make the choice about what is right for
their councils" after the elections next month.
She pointed
out that Tories were already governing locally as part of "various
coalitions" with other parties, including Labour and the Liberal
Democrats, as well as independent councillors.
"Local
leaders need to decide what to do to run their councils," she said,
adding: "People expect their local leaders to deliver."
She did not
specify whether this applied only to formal arrangements for sharing power, or
more informal deals where parties could agree to co-operate on particular
policy areas or budget-setting.
But Farage
later said Reform had "no intention in forming coalitions with the
Tories" as they "broke Britain nationally for 14 years".
'Pragmatic
and sensible'
However, the
Reform UK leader has not ruled out more informal routes to share power with
other parties.
Speaking to
BBC East Midlands on Wednesday, he said Reform had a "responsibility to
work with the most pragmatic and sensible people to get things done".
"We're
not saying that at a local level, there are not groups of independents, for
argument's sake, that we might be able to work with."
Asked
whether his party could enter into formal coalitions with Tories, he replied:
"There'll be no formal coalitions with anybody, there will be working
relationships.
"We'll
maintain our independence, but of course, in the interests of local people
we'll do deals."
Deals
between Reform UK and the Conservatives to share power locally would not be
without precedent.
Under its
former name of The Brexit Party, it formed a coalition with Tory and
independent councillors to take over the running of Hartlepool Council in 2019.
National
parties exercise various levels of control over groups of local councillors who
wish to do deals to govern locally.
According to
the party's rulebook, Labour councillors require the approval of its ruling
National Executive Committee before entering into local tie-ups.
By contrast,
the Green Party of England and Wales says local groups are able to make the
"final decision" on where and whether to share power.
The BBC has
asked Reform UK and the Conservatives to clarify how they would authorise
agreements to share power after the local elections.
The Liberal
Democrats, who are in coalitions with other parties in councils around the
country, say they advise local parties on deals, but there is no formal process
of approval.
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