Reform’s first year running councils: ‘The atmosphere in the chamber has changed’
Reform’s first year running councils seems to have been defined by a focus on ‘culture war’ issues

Daniel Devaney, one of Reform’s candidates in Bradford said he wanted to “blast [Muslims] all of the face of the earth [sic]”.

‘Their supposed policies for working people are fake, they spin stories that are fake and now we know even their campaigners are fake.’

Over the past week alone, the party suffered some of its worst polling in recent times.

Not what the Mail expected…

“Richard Tice’s credibility is in tatters and Nigel Farage needs to urgently explain why he remains Reform’s deputy leader.”

It’s a familiar editorial pattern in the right-wing media, isolate a dissenting voice, amplify it, and present it as emblematic of a larger cultural shift under siege.

No wonder the Murdoch empire is terrified.

The development follows a similar scheme in Manchester amid growing efforts to tackle homelessness through community-based, supported housing.

The aim is to bring those already embedded in Spanish society into the formal economy, ensuring they can work legally, contribute taxes, and access protections.

Beyond Hungary, the result may point to something broader. Across Europe, parts of the populist right appear to be encountering limits and have, dare we say it, peaked.