Reform fixing â630 potholes a dayâ in taxpayer waste crackdown

Reform was celebrating more than ÂŁ330million in cost reductions throughout its councils
Reform UK councils have repaired nearly 115,000 potholes following the May elections, the party has celebrated.
This impressive tally equates to approximately 630 repairs daily across their authorities, alongside their crackdown on wasteful local spending.
To that end, Reform figures say the party has achieved more than ÂŁ330million in cost reductions throughout its councils.
These savings form part of initiatives led by the partyâs Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) unit, established to mirror Donald Trumpâs Doge unit in America.
Reformâs Deputy Leader and Doge Chief, Richard Tice, celebrated the success.
âSince May, Reform UK councillors have been getting on with the job of cleaning up the mess of past Tory administrations,â he told GB News.
âThis is only the start of our plans at local government level.
âReform will fix broken Britain,â Mr Tice assured The Peopleâs Channel.
Reform UK has celebrated a major milestone in the local councils it won earlier this year
The Telegraphâs findings on Reformâs pothole claims come after it was revealed the party had made ÂŁ330million in savings spread across authorities where Nigel Farageâs party swept to power earlier this year.
Kent achieved ÂŁ32million in savings after reversing its climate emergency declaration.
An additional ÂŁ7.5million is projected to be saved by 2030 through abandoning plans to convert its vehicle fleet to electric.
Durham secured ÂŁ23 million through similar climate policy reversals.
Among their achievements was the repairing of 630 potholes a day
Leicestershire redirected ÂŁ2million from net zero commitments towards flood defence measures, whilst allocating ÂŁ30million for educational infrastructure to accommodate 850 additional secondary pupils.
Staffordshire prevented the sale of 63 agricultural properties and halted the conversion of productive farmland for environmental schemes.
The recent successes follow a promise made by Reform leader Nigel Farage that his party would get to grips with Britainâs poor roads ahead of the local elections earlier this year.
In a humorous social media video, he âdeclared warâ on potholes while putting a gold ball into one while appearing in Malmesbury, north Wiltshire.
âReform will fix broken Britain,â the partyâs Deputy Leader, Richard Tice, promised
Mr Farage noted that one of the biggest issues for motorists is roads strewn with potholes, as the politician noted that it was getting worse âall across the countryâ.
The video was accompanied by the caption: âThere are 827,000 potholes across the councils up for election on Thursday.â
Last year, the Asphalt Industry Alliance laid out the truly parlous state that Britainâs roads were in.
Just 36 per cent barely scraped an adequate rating, while a shocking 17 per cent were rated poor.