UK Politics
General Discussion for politics in the UK.
Please don't post to both [email protected] and [email protected] .
Pick the most appropriate, and put it there.
Posts should be related to UK-centric politics, and should be either a link to a reputable news source for news, or a text post on this community.
Opinion pieces are also allowed, provided they are not misleading/misrepresented/drivel, and have proper sources.
If you think "reputable news source" needs some definition, by all means start a meta thread. (These things should be publicly discussed)
Posts should be manually submitted, not by bot. Link titles should not be editorialised.
Disappointing comments will generally be left to fester in ratio, outright horrible comments will be removed.
Message the mods if you feel something really should be removed, or if a user seems to have a pattern of awful comments.
[email protected] appears to have vanished! We can still see cached content from this link, but goodbye I guess! :'(
view the rest of the comments
We used to just call these "paper candidates". All parties field them in seats where they don't really have a chance.
I didn't hear anything from the Lib Dems or Greens in my constituency, because they have no chance of winning. But I know they're definitely real people.
Right, but it's unusual to have masses of candidates that have no online presence, no address, no email address, don't even show up to the count, etc.
Think of every seat declaration you saw on election night: the Lib Dem candidate was standing right there on stage, even in Leave-voting Red Wall seats where centrist moderate liberalism is a deposit-losing proposition.
It's not all that bizarre, and it's more common amongst smaller and newer parties.
I know the Reform candidate for Ilford North through another forum, and he didn't attend any hustings (because he wasn't made aware of them), he didn't attend the Ilford North count because he was helping out at Hornchurch and Upminster, and he didn't upload his info to Reform's site because he was too busy leafletting and doing his regular political job in the London Assembly.
The lowest Lib Dem vote share in the country was recorded in Ynys Mon, where Leena Farhat got 439 votes or 1.4% - the most 'paper' of paper candidates the Lib Dems will have put up. I typed her name into Google and it took me seconds to find her Twitter, her LinkedIn, her local campaign page, and many photos of her.
It's a bit unusual for any adult in 2024 to have no online presence, but especially when a party that appears to have won the third largest vote in a UK-wide election appears to have multiple people among their purported candidates who all have no online presence...
The article says that's what reform is claiming they were.
The concern is that they were not even that. If they've just put names down without actually finding a real people to go behind them then it's open and shut electoral fraud.