Police investigate candidate's election leaflet

Esme Kenney
Local Democracy Reporting Service
Sophie Law
BBC Radio Oxford
Getty Images A blurry shot of a man wearing a blue hoodie and jeans walks past an in focus photo of a polling station fabric sign which has been attached to a green fence, there is a green hedge to the right hand side.Getty Images
Nikita Haddington-Milner has reported the election leaflet to her local council and Electoral Commission

A council election candidate's leaflet is being investigated by police after a complaint about language used in it.

David Roy Cox, who is standing as an independent in Burford and Carterton West in Oxfordshire County Council's election on 1 May, referred to "mentally-ill LBTQ [sic] fanatics and their pride flags".

Oxfordshire County Council said the language used was not a matter for it and the Electoral Commission said it does not regulate candidates' conduct.

A Thames Valley Police (TVP) spokesperson said officers are assessing if Mr Cox's leaflet constitutes a hate crime and their investigation is ongoing.

Resident Nikita Haddington-Milner, who lives in Burford, said she was "shocked" to find the leaflet delivered to her home, which has a pride flag hanging outside it.

"I feel violated that they have knowingly put this through the door. It speaks volumes," she said.

"Everyone is entitled to their own religious beliefs, but this is the deliberate stirring of hatred."

She reported Mr Cox's leaflet to police on Sunday.

Mr Cox told the BBC he "stood by everything" in it and said while it was "unfortunate" Ms Haddington-Milner was offended by its content, that is "not my problem" but hers.

Getty Images/Joe Daniel Price A general view picture of High Street in Burford, a small town in the Cotswolds.Getty Images/Joe Daniel Price
Voters in Burford - pictured here - and Carterton West will go to the polls, like the rest of Oxfordshire, on 1 May

The leaflet also calls for "no more migrants" and says the "right to speak freely is under severe and continued attack".

Prof Ian McLean, a senior research fellow in politics at Nuffield College, Oxford, said concerns raised by Ms Haddington-Milner were "powerful" but they should not prevent Mr Cox from standing as a candidate.

"I don't think it would serve anybody's interests if candidates were pulled before the election," he said.

"I think it's really up to the electors to read all the leaflets and decide who to vote for."

Also standing in Burford and Carterton West are: Anthony Barrett (Green), Sarah Evans (Reform UK), Nick Field-Johnson (Conservative), Kathy Godwin (Lib Dem) and Dave Wesson (Labour).

You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X, or Instagram.