Elections 2026: the far-right’s runners and riders

Nominations have now closed for local council and mayoral elections in England, as well as the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Senedd elections. Yet again they show that Britain’s fascists are divided between a handful of very weak registered parties each hoping to be the next BNP, and a much larger number who have either given…

British Democrats candidate Kai Stephens

Nominations have now closed for local council and mayoral elections in England, as well as the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Senedd elections.

Yet again they show that Britain’s fascists are divided between a handful of very weak registered parties each hoping to be the next BNP, and a much larger number who have either given up their charade of democratic politics, or are pinning their hopes on one of the two Great White Hopes of dog whistle racism, Nigel Farage and Rupert Lowe.

Talking a good fight

Searchlight’s initial analysis of this week’s nominations shows that UKIP has shrunk so far that (for the first time) it has been overtaken by two rivals on the racist right’s reactionary wing.

Nick Tenconi talks a good fight at demonstrations across the country, while Ben Walker rakes in the money from those few who remember UKIP’s glory days, but when it comes to real politics, they are now down among the minnows.

Ben Walker and Nick Tenconi on Bristol demonstration
Talking a good fight – UKIP’s Nick Tenconi and Ben Walker

We understand that UKIP has just nine candidates for English councils this year, while the English Democrats have nine and the Heritage Party has seventeen. (In an earlier report we said we believed that UKIP was not fielding any candidates in England. Our apologies, this was incorrect).

Party owner

The party’s effective owner Ben Walker heads a UKIP list in the West Scotland region for the Scottish Parliament, and the party is fighting three other Scottish Parliamentary regions (Glasgow, South Scotland, and Central Scotland & Lothians West) though eleven of its fifteen candidates actually live in England.

Nick Tenconi at Holyrood
Nick Tenconi announces UKIP’s Scottish Parliament ‘campaign’

UKIP has nine council candidates scattered across England: two each in East Sussex and Hillingdon; one each in Bradford, Brent, Leeds, Sheffield and Tamworth.

Though its leader David Kurten is of part-Jamaican ancestry, the Heritage Party has attracted some of the most extreme and cranky elements of the old UKIP since breaking away in 2020. Those who still rant about Covid conspiracies find a natural home in Kurten’s party, and he seems to have retained the loyalty of a handful of old UKIP branches, notably in Woking and Southend.

UKIP survivor

The only other surviving UKIP splinter party, the Alliance for Democracy and Freedom, is fighting two Scottish Parliamentary regions (South Scotland and West Scotland) and three constituencies, but seems to have disappeared in England.

A former UKIP member of the Greater London Assembly, Kurten will be very happy to see Heritage overtake his old party, but no one seriously imagines there is much potential for further growth.

David Kurten
Heritage Party leader, David Kurten

As well as their seventeen English council candidates (including four in Southend and three in Woking), they have a full slate of sixteen candidates for the Welsh Senedd, where they are the only far right challengers to Reform this year apart from William Jeffreys, an independent candidate in the Pen-y-bont Bro Morgannwg constituency that covers a large part of South Wales including Bridgend.

Jeffreys is a fanatical antisemite whose election website should be examined closely by police and prosecutors.

Single issue obsessives

Most of the English Democrats are single-issue obsessives campaigning for an English Parliament.

Yet ED leader Robin Tilbrook has a long history of recruiting dissident fascists and oddball conspiracy theorists. For several years during the 2010s he formed alliances with two separate groups of ex-BNP refugees.

Robin Tilbrook
Robin Tilbrook, leader of English Democrats

The larger of these was led by Eddy Butler, who took several prominent BNP organisers including former councillors into Tilbrook’s party.

None of these Butlerite fascists are still in the EDs, but more recently (especially during the pandemic) Tilbrook worked closely with conspiracy theorist circles of the far right. This doesn’t seem to have brought in much new blood.

Familiar names

The nine ED candidates this year are mostly familiar names, including Tilbrook himself standing in both his Ongar & Rural division of Essex, and the equivalent Rural East ward of Epping Forest.

The English Democrats are now part of a grandly titled “Belmont Accord” with even smaller crank parties who share an obsession with anti-vaccination campaigns.

Pandemic-related issues

These include the Freedom Alliance for whom pandemic-related issues are their main raison d’être, and the National Housing Party which has roots in Islamophobic street politics and is backed by some former Tommy Robinson and BNP supporters.

Paul Rimmer
Paul Rimmer, National Housing Party

The NHP’s most articulate activist Paul Rimmer, a Cambridge graduate from Liverpool who has passed through several parties including the BNP and EDs, has been very active online and spoke at a Heritage & Destiny conference in Lancashire.

This seems to show that NHP is no longer the fringe of the fringe, and is starting to be taken seriously by people who regard themselves as the “elite” of British fascism, including Rimmer’s fellow speakers from the British Democrats, British Movement, and Patriotic Alternative.

Rimmer often boosts Reform UK online and is part of the faction among some old-school fascists who think that Farage and Lowe will make electoral breakthroughs from which harder line racists can eventually profit.

Surprising growth

But his own party is in the meantime showing
surprising signs of growth and has eight candidates this year.

Six of these are in central London, in Clerkenwell (Islington) and four Camden wards. With London boroughs having all-out elections, the NHP has two candidates in one of these Camden wards, Holborn & Covent Garden.

Overshadowed

Elsewhere NHP have candidates in Grimsby and Oldham. For years they were overshadowed by factional splits inside Britain’s largest nazi group Patriotic Alternative, and other attempts to create a party out of BNP wreckage, but very surprisingly NHP now has more election candidates than all these BNP successor parties combined.

Collett dismisses elections
Mark Collett dismisses election efforts of his rivals

Patriotic Alternative continues to avoid registering as a political party.

Most of those within Mark Collett’s movement who favoured electoral strategies broke away in 2023 to form the Homeland Party led by Kenny Smith, one of Collett’s old rivals from BNP days who made a show of burying the hatchet inside PA but was soon eager to stick a knife in Collett’s back.

Swanning around

After a couple of years swanning round far right conferences in Europe claiming that Homeland was the natural party for the “sensible right” advocating “remigration” (a new racist buzzword for what used to be called repatriation), Smith and his party have rapidly declined and have no candidates this year in either the English council or devolved Scottish and Welsh elections.

There are rumours among fellow fascists (gleefully encouraged by his main enemy Collett) that Smith might either resign Homeland’s leadership or close down the party.

Alek Yerbury
Alek Yerbury – National Rebirth Party stands a single candidate

The only candidate this year from that splintered ex-PA scene is in Hull, where Alek Yerbury’s National Rebirth Party, fresh from the humiliation of their cancelled national conference in Coventry last month, are fighting their first election.

Barry McGrath is Yerbury’s standard bearer in the St Andrew’s & Docklands ward.

Well known defector

Kai Stephens, one of the most well-known defectors who quit first PA and then Homeland, is now with the British Democrats and is among their five candidates this year.

Stephens (standing in Crome, Norwich) is unusual among Brit Dems who are mostly elderly or well into middle-age.

Kai Stephens BDs 2
Kai Stephens, defector from Homeland, now British Democrats candidate in Norwich

Their other candidates this year include party chairman Jim Lewthwaite (an ex-BNP councillor who is yet again contesting Wyke ward, Bradford), and fellow grey-haired fascists in Wakefield, Aldershot, and Basildon.

Andrew Emerson
Andrew Emerson – one man party

As usual there are a handful of hangovers from long dead fascist parties who have caught the election bug and are still standing as independents or one-man parties.

Former BNP branch organiser Andrew Emerson still registers his party Patria and is again its sole candidate in Chichester South, West Sussex.

Dave Durant is a veteran of the Harrington faction of the NF, who followed his master into Third Way and later the National Liberal Party.

He is standing as an independent in Harold Wood, Havering.

Holocaust denier

Holocaust denier Alistair McConnachie is an even stranger political oddball.

He was once in UKIP and was aligned with one of two rival far-right discussion groups calling themselves Swinton Circle. The one he supported and spoke at was run by the now-deceased Monday Clubber Allan Robertson.

McConnachie is founder and leader of “Independent Green Voice”, a party that has no connection to Green issues but has existed since 2003 and whose politics are a form of far-right Unionism. McConnachie is among the six slates of IGV candidates on regional lists for the Scottish Parliament this year.

Alistair McConnachie
Alistair McConnachie – Holocaust denier standing for Scottish Parliament

Most other non-aligned online nazis are now supporting Rupert Lowe’s new party Restore Britain. Lowe has chosen not to fight any of this year’s elections outside his own constituency Great Yarmouth, where Restore will be fighting under the label “Great Yarmouth First” in nine county council divisions and one borough by-election.

Elsewhere there are several known members of Restore standing as independents, including a slate of seven city council candidates in Sheffield.

Strange politics

Post-UKIP politics in South Yorkshire are especially strange. The party now using the name SDP, which combines a version of “big state” economic policies with social authoritarianism and whose members have recently consorted with a range of far right groups, also has a large slate of 21 candidates in Sheffield.

Rupert Lowe campaigns in Great Yarmouth
Rupert Lowe campaigns in Great Yarmouth

Though there were once hopes on the right that they might unite as fellow anti-Farage Brexiteers, Rupert Lowe and Restore have now made clear they have absolutely no interest in merging with the slightly older ex-Reform splinter party Advance UK, led by Ben Habib.

Journey rightwards

Advance have eighteen candidates this year, with especially strong branches in Trafford and Walsall. They have also recruited an ex-Labour councillor Eva Jedut, in Dalgarno ward, Kensington, who will be standing for re-election this year as an Advance UK candidate.

Well, we say, ex-Labour but in fact her journey rightwards after she was expelled from the Labour Party in 2023 was via George Galloway’s Workers’ Party, whose candidate she was last year, and from which she slid seamlessly into Advance UK.

Eva Jedut
Eva Jedut – rightwards journey

While Reform is likely to make big gains next month, it will important to observe factional moves after the elections when Lowe will continue his attempts to win over the more openly racist elements from Farage’s party.

He will come under pressure to exclude the most obvious nazis in his ranks, but as we have explained in several recent articles, this is likely to prove difficult because of the grip that young extremists have over Restore’s backroom operations and social media accounts.

Most of Britain’s nazis are standing aside from electoral politics for now: in some cases this is a strategic move though also due to their present weakness and division.

Far right candidates in 2026 (aside from Reform UK who are standing almost everywhere):

Welsh Senedd:

Heritage Party candidates in all sixteen seats.

Far right independent William Jeffreys in Pen-y-bont Bro Morgannwg.

Scottish Parliament:
Advance UK candidates for five regions (Central Scotland & Lothians West; Edinburgh & Lothians East; Highlands & Islands; Mid Scotland & Fife; NE Scotland;) and two constituencies (Caithness, Sutherland & Ross; Inverness & Nairn)

UKIP candidates on four regional lists

ADF candidates for two regional lists and three constituencies (Renfrewshire West & Levern Valley; Hamilton, Larkhall & Stonehouse; and Cunninghame North)

“Independent Green Voice” candidates for six regions (Central Scotland & Lothians West; Glasgow; Highlands & Islands; Mid Scotland & Fife; NE Scotland; and West Scotland).

London Boroughs:

Brent: UKIP in Welsh Harp

Camden: National Housing Party in Holborn & St Pancras (x2); King’s Cross; Regent’s Park; and St Pancras & Somers Town

Hillingdon: UKIP in Charville, and Colham & Cowley

Havering: David Durant (ex-NF independent) in Harold Wood

Islington: National Housing Party in Clerkenwell

Kensington & Chelsea: Advance UK in Dalgarno

Kingston upon Thames: Heritage Party in Old Malden

East of England:

Basildon: British Democrats in Castledon & Crouch
Great Yarmouth: Great Yarmouth First [i.e. Restore] in Caister South by-election

Epping Forest: English Democrats in Rural East

Essex: Advance UK in Clacton North, and Clacton West & St Osyth; English Democrats in Ongar & Rural

Norfolk: Heritage Party in Feltwell; Great Yarmouth First [i.e. Restore] in all nine Great Yarmouth divisions
Norwich: British Democrats in Crome

Rochford: Heritage Party in Hawkwell East

Southend: Heritage Party in Blenheim Park, Kursaal, Milton, and Thorpe

South East England:

East Surrey: Heritage Party in Oxted

East Sussex: UKIP in Langney, and Pevensey & Stone Cross; Heritage Party in Old Town

Milton Keynes: Heritage Party in Broughton & Moulsoe

Portsmouth: Heritage Party in Eastney & Craneswater

Rushmoor: British Democrats in Rowhill

Tunbridge Wells: English Democrats in Southborough & Bidborough

Watford: Heritage Party in Leggatts

Welwyn Hatfield: Heritage Party in Brookman’s Park & Little Heath

West Surrey: Heritage Party in Woking North, Woking South, and Woking South West

West Sussex: English Democrats in Rustington; Patria in Chichester South

South West England:

Cheltenham: Heritage Party in College

West Midlands:

Sandwell: Advance UK in Princes End

Tamworth: UKIP in Stonydelph

Walsall: Advance UK in Brownhills (x2), Pelsall, Pheasey, Streetly

East Midlands:
this region has hardly any elections this time

Yorkshire & Humber:

Barnsley: English Democrats (x3) in Dearne North
Bradford: British Democrats in Wyke; Heritage Party in Thornton & Allerton; UKIP in Airedale

Hull: National Rebirth Party in St Andrew’s & Docklands

Leeds: UKIP in Gipton & Harehills

NE Lincolnshire: National Housing Party in West Marsh

Sheffield: UKIP in Richmond

Wakefield: British Democrats in Wakefield North

North West England:

Bolton: Advance UK in Kearsley

Bury: English Democrats in Besses, Holyrood

Oldham: National Housing Party in Hollinwood

Rochdale: Advance UK in Hopwood Hall

Salford: Advance UK in Walkden South

Trafford: Advance UK in Bowdon, Bucklow St Martin’s, Davyhulme, Flixton, Timperley North, and Urmston.

North East England seems to be the only region where the far right (who once had big slates of candidates) has rallied solidly behind Reform UK and abandoned all the smaller parties, though how many eventually join the rival Restore Britain remains to be seen.

Reform UK has a full slate of candidates almost everywhere apart from several inner London boroughs. Proportionally their weakest borough seems to be Hackney, but even there they have 24 candidates for the 57 seats.


Professor Colin Holmes

Professor Colin Holmes
Everyone who wants to understand contemporary racism and its historical background needs to read Searchlight.
Professor Colin Holmes
University of Sheffield

Peter Hain

Peter Hain, founder of the ANL and friend of Searchlight

British Jews have been persecuted over the centuries; British blacks since the Windrush generation of the 1950s; British Muslims, especially after the Islamist 9/11 and then 7/7 terrorist attacks in New York 2001 and London 2005. But until the last few years there has not been a simultaneous threat against all three British communities of Jewish, Black and Muslim Britons – meaning the need for Searchlight has never been greater.

Peter Hain
Labour peer, former MP and Cabinet Minster

Alf Dubs

Lord Alf Dubs

Searchlight’s voice is more important than ever, and I am delighted that it will now be available to a wider audience than ever before in its new incarnation online. Searchlight has been extremely helpful over the years in exposing the far right, corruption, criminality and the murky links between organised crime and powerful interests in the UK and abroad. I wish Searchlight the very best.

Alf Dubs
Labour peer, former MP and Cabinet Minister, and Kindertransport child

Paul Nowak

Paul Nowak

The essence of trade unionism is solidarity, fairness and equality – for all workers – from all backgrounds. That’s why our fight against the far-right has always been part of our movement’s DNA. Searchlight is an incredibly important resource for trade unions and members to understand the contemporary tactics of far-right activity. Their work and intelligence gathering over the years have been incredibly insightful for the work we do, and how we fight the scourge of fascism.

Paul Nowak
TUC General Secretary

Nick Davies

Nick Davies

To investigate fascists takes real courage and unusual commitment. The government, police, mainstream media occasionally take a look, but in the UK only Searchlight have kept at it, relentlessly and admirably, regardless of threat or obstacle. It’s journalism that matters. A rare thing.

Nick Davies
Multi-award-winning investigative journalist and writer

Paul Holborow

Paul Holborow

In the campaign against the National Front, Searchlight provided a rich and utterly reliable basis for much ANL propaganda – particularly with reference to the two leading NF figures, John Tyndall and Martin Webster. The appearance of Tyndall in full nazi uniform, drawn from the archives of Searchlight, was a key part of ANL propaganda, coupled with deeply damaging nazi quotes from Webster.

Paul Holborow
Founding member of the ANL and National Organiser 1977-81

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