Whether the newly appointed leader of Reform Ltd in
Wales actually lives in Wales or not appears to be an open question at present.
It’s a question which Martin Shipton, at Nation.Cymru,
is doggedly pursuing. If it’s really true that he doesn’t, then both he and
Farage have been more than a little foolish in putting forward a story which
falls apart after one day of scrutiny. Maybe they really are that stupid, but
it’s more likely that they believe that they can game the system.
The requirement that candidates for May’s Senedd
election should live in Wales, and be registered to vote in Wales, is entirely
reasonable, especially after the experience of a predecessor party to Reform
having had a resident of Wiltshire as its leader in the Senedd. It’s something
of a departure for UK electoral politics, though: there is no requirement, for
instance, for any candidate for Westminster to reside in the UK. They merely
have to state
that “they are at least 18 years old and be either: a British citizen, or a
citizen of the Republic of Ireland, or a citizen of a commonwealth country who
does not require leave to enter or remain in the UK, or has indefinite leave to
remain in the UK”. They also need to provide an address where they can be
contacted. But as far as I’m aware, there is no requirement for the returning
officer to verify the information provided. Verifying the veracity of the information
provided by candidates has never been part of their role; they merely verify
that the relevant boxes on the form have been completed properly. It seems
probable that the same approach will apply in the case of Senedd elections: if
the candidate provides a valid Welsh electoral roll number, and gives an
address where (s)he claims to live, is it any part of the responsibility of the
Returning Officer to check that those details are true?
It is perfectly legal to be registered to vote at two
different addresses (it’s not usually legal to vote at both, although there is
no check on that), and the definition of ‘main residence’ is not as
straightforward as it might sound. Reform Ltd may be about to ‘test the system’
by putting forward as a candidate an individual who may not meet the legal
requirements. It’s not at all clear that there is any process in place to
challenge the information provided by candidates, let alone pro-actively verify
its veracity, other than by a court process after the election. Relying on ‘the
law says’ amounts to assuming that all candidates are honest people of good
faith. It’s just possible that some might not be.
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