H
politics
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Reform UK councillors face allegations of sharing far-right and Islamophobic content

about 20 hours ago
A picture


Up to 12 newly elected Reform UK councillors are facing allegations of sharing social media content ranging from support for the far right to explicitly Islamophobic comments.They include councillors at three different county councils who have shared social media content from Britain First, a far-right party known for staging provocative marches and stunts.A week after Reform’s local elections breakthrough, in which it won 677 of more than 1,600 seats contested, the backgrounds of its winning councillors are under scrutiny after the party largely sought to deflect allegations during the campaign.The councillors accused of retweeting Britain First content include Paul Harrison, who was elected to Leicestershire county council.He retweeted and said “yes” to a question posed on X by Britain First’s chair who asked if followers supported mass deportations and posted an AI-generated picture of Muslim men with Pakistani flags.

Russell Cherry, elected as a councillor in Thurrock, allegedly retweeted Paul Golding, who is Britain First’s leader and has a conviction for religiously aggravated harassment.Ivan Dabbs, a Reform councillor in West Northamptonshire, also allegedly shared a Britain First tweet and material by Golding calling for a street demonstration.The off-the-shelf vetting software used by Reform UK before the elections was from Ferretly, a US social media startup founded in 2019, the Guardian has learned.The platform assesses digital red flags, including hate speech, disparaging or bullying behaviour and inflammatory rhetoric, along with connections to extremist groups or individuals.However, Reform has drawn criticism for its reliance on the platform after its leadership claimed to have the “most in-depth vetting procedure” of any party.

In an interview with Times Radio on 30 April, Nigel Farage said vetting was done internally using “AI techniques and other things” to “give us a bit of a shortcut”.Neither the Conservatives nor Labour rely on AI software to the same degree.In the case of the Tories, a 30-strong group was involved in vetting each of its general election candidates.By Thursday, Reform was known to have lost at least three of its elected councillors.They included Donna Edmunds, a councillor in Shropshire who was suspended on Wednesday after she said that she planned to defect from the party.

Edmunds, a supporter of Rupert Lowe who was kicked out of Reform and has been engaged in a bitter row with Farage, accused the Reform leader of treating members with contempt and described the party as a cult,Luke Shingler, who was elected in Warwickshire, said he would be an independent councillor for the “next 18 months” because his work meant he was unable to serve under a political organisation,Shingler is understood to work for the RAF,A third councillor, Desmond Clarke, has resigned from Nottinghamshire county council, triggering a byelection,Many of the alleged social media posts by Reform councillors were unearthed by the counter-extremism campaign group Hope Not Hate.

Georgie Laming, Hope Not Hate’s director of campaigns, said: “Nigel Farage has claimed that Reform UK have the ‘most in-depth vetting procedure’ of any party.Our investigation shows that their processes leave much to be desired.“Not only have they admitted using ‘AI techniques and other things’ to do the vetting, but Reform UK continue to shirk responsibility for their candidates’ online behaviour.They have yet to drop any of the candidates that have been exposed,” she said.Hope Not Hate uncovered Reform candidates – some now elected – who posted anti-Muslim hate, pushed far-right conspiracies including calling the climate crisis a “globalist hysterical climate hoax”, praising extremists such as Tommy Robinson and sharing content from David Irving, the UK’s best known Holocaust denier.

Reform has been approached for comment.
trendingSee all
A picture

Britons increasingly swapping Med’s busy hotspots for ‘destination dupes’

It will take more than a TikTok trend to break Britons’ love affair with Mediterranean beaches. But latest figures show travellers are increasingly swapping Málaga for North Macedonia and Benidorm for the Balkans as part of a social media craze for “destination dupes”.Flights from the UK to Bosnia and Herzegovina soared by 284% in 2024 compared with the previous year, while trips to Montenegro increased by 164%. Getaways to Albania – billed by some as “the new Croatia” – rose by 61%, according to an analysis of Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) data.Experts say the appetite for lesser-known destinations is being driven by influencers promoting holiday “dupes” – locations that offer the same Insta-friendly scenery for a smaller budget

about 20 hours ago
A picture

US-UK trade deal imposes conditions on ownership of British steel plants

The US deal on steel tariffs imposes conditions on the “nature of ownership” of British plants as part of its efforts to freeze out Chinese steel, it has emerged.It is understood Donald Trump’s administration pushed for requirements to be attached to the steel deal to ensure that the Chinese-owned British Steel plant in Scunthorpe was not used by Beijing as a backdoor to circumvent US tariffs.Government sources say Washington is understood to be reassured that Scunthorpe is now in effect controlled by Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, and is likely not to come back under the direction of Jingye Group, its Chinese owners.However, before the UK government took steps to seize control of British Steel last month the US had been concerned that the Scunthorpe plant could have been used as a base for processing Chinese steel to take advantage of lower tariffs.The US-UK deal, agreed on Thursday, has come as a relief to the car and steel industries, which had been worried about job losses, although some of the terms are still unclear

1 day ago
A picture

‘Tone deaf’: US tech company responsible for global IT outage to cut jobs and use AI

The cybersecurity company that became a household name after causing a massive global IT outage last year has announced it will cut 5% of its workforce in part due to “AI efficiency”.In a note to staff earlier this week, released in stock market filings in the US, CrowdStrike’s chief executive, George Kurtz, announced that 500 positions, or 5% of its workforce, would be cut globally, citing AI efficiencies created in the business.“We’re operating in a market and technology inflection point, with AI reshaping every industry, accelerating threats, and evolving customer needs,” he said.Kurtz said AI “flattens our hiring curve, and helps us innovate from idea to product faster”, adding it “drives efficiencies across both the front and back office”.“AI is a force multiplier throughout the business,” he said

2 days ago
A picture

Leave them hanging on the telephone | Brief letters

Regarding dealing with cold callers (Adrian Chiles, 7 May), it’s irritating I know, but if you don’t mind your phone being inaccessible for a few minutes, why not say: “Hang on, I’ll go and get him/her”, and then leave your phone until the caller rings off? At least you will have wasted some of their day.Robert WalkerPerrancoombe, Cornwall Re fostering a love of reading in children (Letters, 6 May), one of my fondest memories of my teaching career was story time in the infant class in a local village school. Most of the children came quite a distance on buses. They adored Michael Rosen’s poetry. There were many afternoons when it was home time and they would shout: “Please read another Michael Rosen one, Mrs Mansfield, the driver won’t mind waiting

2 days ago
A picture

Cadan Murley hat-trick lifts Harlequins and shatters Gloucester’s playoff dream

They call it bouncebackability. And it works both ways.Harlequins went down by 40 points in the last round at Welford Road, barely playing a shot. So it was inevitable they would burst into this one in front of a big house at the big stadium across the road for their now traditional “Big Summer Kick-Off”. Likewise, Gloucester played the rugby of the gods last time out, one shy of 80 points against Exeter, so it stood to reason they would flop painfully here

about 6 hours ago
A picture

Bristol enjoy Cardiff takeover and boost playoff hopes with win over Bath

It took a trip across the border and an opponent with other things on their mind but Bristol stopped the rot with a bonus-point victory that keeps their playoff hopes alive. Their performance did not quite live up to all the pyrotechnics that adorned their Big Day Out at the Principality Stadium and as they tend to, they made things difficult for themselves but six tries and a win over a second-string Bath side was enough to satisfy their supporters.Indeed, 51,095 fans – plenty from Bath too – showed up to watch a West Country derby that was keenly fought if lacking in quality. Bristol survived an early bout of stage fright, a Premiership record-equalling four yellow cards and withstood a second-half comeback to seal the win with late tries from Will Capon and Bill Mata.For Bath – who were already guaranteed top spot – it is a first defeat in 11 in all competitions but Johan van Graan will be mightily pleased with how his callow charges acquitted themselves

about 9 hours ago
societySee all
A picture

Plaque and memorial garden to mark scandal of Britain’s forced adoptions

1 day ago
A picture

Hospitals in England reducing staff and services as part of NHS ‘financial reset’

2 days ago
A picture

Eve Thompson obituary

2 days ago
A picture

A cocktail that’s too much of a good thing | Letters

2 days ago
A picture

UK woman who took pills during lockdown cleared of illegal abortion

2 days ago
A picture

At least 216 children died in first high severity US flu season in seven years, CDC says

2 days ago