News
Reform UK Senedd candidate 'pushed crazy conspiracy theories and said the late Queen should be overthrown'
Martin Shipton
A Reform UK candidate has been exposed as a peddler of bizarre conspiracy theories by the anti-fascist group Hope Not Hate.
Emma Clatworthy, the partyâs number four candidate in Pen-y-bont Bro Morgannwg, used the Telegram messaging app to call the late Queen âa fraudâ who needed to be overthrown, claimed that âthe government are actorsâ, and suggested people only took the Covid vaccine as they were âbrainwashed and programmedâ.
In what Hope Not Hate described as a particularly peculiar post on February 5 2021, after declaring that âthe government are actorsâ and âthe whole system needs to be taken down and rebuiltâ, Clatworthy wrote: âThe Monarch needs to go sheâs not our Queen never has been sheâs a fraud, theyâre all German decent [sic]⌠sheâs not swearing to represent us the people, sheâs swearing to trade off of us.â
Later in the same Telegram message, she wrote that: âWe need to learn the correct processes to overthrow the monarchâ and explained that what âneeds to happen is a coordinated approach, putting the right people in the right places, such as our own Judgeâs [sic], Lawyers, Sheriff, Media platforms, Doctors, Experts, and people to back them upâ.
In another post, just over an hour later, Clatworthy detailed: âThe problem we have is people have been brainwashed and programmed since they started school, every thing around us is programming us, so we accept this as norm, people are even rushing to get a vaccine that can kill them just to go back to the ânormâ.â
Later that month, she also suggested creating communities outside of mainstream society in order to escape the lives of vaccinated âslavesâ living in cities.
In other posts, she has called for people to âgrow our own empire against the evil controlling globalistsâ, said that âwe need to take the head off of their main weapon⌠the corrupt main mediaâ, and shared the text of a friendâs Facebook post which declared that âwe live in a slave system, trying to earn money to support a ponzi schemeâ.
Clatworthy has also promoted medical conspiracy theories: in one Telegram message she claimed that âyou canât catch a virusâ and declared that âFlu shots donât prevent flu, they give you the flu⌠itâs all big pharma lies and businessâ.
Hope Not Hate said that those standing for Reform in other Welsh constituencies had shared far-right content and conspiracy theories on social media. Chris Brooke, for instance, one of the partyâs candidates in Carmarthenshire, has responded enthusiastically to posts by the anti-Muslim extremist who calls himself Tommy Robinson, while Richard Pendry, standing in Gwynedd Maldwyn, has said Robinson âwas right all alongâ and questioned why âthe establishmentâ are âso frightenedâ by him.
Carbon
Meanwhile, Glenda Davies â up for election in Blaenau Gwent, Caerphilli Rhymni â has declared thereâs âno link between CO2 and temperaturesâ and claimed the âobsession with Carbon has little to do with the environment and more a tool used by the left to impoverish and destroy developed countries.â
At the end of its investigation into Reformâs candidates in Wales and elsewhere, Hope Not Hate states: âAfter the 2024 general election, in which Reform stood candidates who praised Hitler, Putin and Jimmy Savile, Farage admitted the publicity did his party âenormous harmâ. "Afterwards, he said Reform âwasnât professionalisedâ and filled with âat best loopy and at worst extremely racist candidatesâ.
"Whatâs new?â
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