Reform UK suspends Scotland candidate over financial allegations

5 hours ago 1

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Reform's candidates were revealed on Thursday at the party's Holyrood manifesto launch

Reform UK has suspended one of its candidates for May's Holyrood election less than a day after they were announced.

Questions had been raised about Dundee City West candidate Stuart Niven, after newspaper reports that he was disqualified as a company director.

The party said had been suspended pending an investigation into allegations around his financial conduct.

Niven is understood to have been a director at Britannia Maritime Security - a Glasgow-based firm providing security to the shipping industry.

A Reform UK spokesperson said: "We take allegations like this very seriously, and a full investigation is underway."

Reform's candidates were revealed on Thursday at the party's Holyrood manifesto launch.

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Malcolm Offord launched his party's manifesto for Holyrood

Offord also told BBC Radio Scotland that he was aware of controversial comments made on social media by some candidates.

He said: "We are not stopping people from standing for Reform just because they might have said something fruity in the past".

The Daily Record reported that Senga Beresford, Reform candidate for Galloway and West Dumfries, supported a Tommy Robinson in rally in 2024 and called for Muslims to be deported.

Lord Offord said it was "done in a former life before she was a member of Reform.

"We have to not take offence at every moment in time."

The Courier reported that Stirling candidate Rachael Wright, from Auchterarder, spread rumours about asylum seekers moving into a former school in Perthshire.

It also said Fife North East Linda Holt called former First Minister Humza Yousaf a "grandstanding Islamist moron" and said "he's not British".

Offord said: "We have brought in 80% of candidates who are not politicians, they are real people with real lives who said real things in a past life.

"This was said before she was a candidate and she wasn't even a member of the party at this time.

"We have all made comments in the past but the problem with this modern world is everything is written down and remembered.

"We need to be more realistic about the fact real people say real things. Now she is a candidate she will be held to higher standards."

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Reform UK MP Sarah Pochin said she wanted to come on stage in a Reform tartan burqa

Offord promised that if his party won the Holyrood election in May, the "first thing" to do would be to "cut income tax"

The former Conservative peer said it would take 10 years - the equivalent of two parliamentary terms - to implement manifesto pledges designed to "turbocharge the economy in Scotland."

Voters will go to the polls on 7 May to elect 129 members of the Scottish Parliament.

Current polling has Reform UK on around 20% of the vote ahead of the election in May, which could see it become the second-largest party at the Scottish Parliament.


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