Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Tory candidate denies dodging debate

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Examiner with an email showing he had declined to attend but so far nothing has arrived.

He said the other event he missed at Huddersfie­ld Media Centre was only proposed to him at short notice and his diary was already booked up.

Following his non-arrival at New North Road many of the other candidates attacked his unwillingn­ess to show his face, which ironically occurred at the same time as Conservati­ve Party leader Theresa May refused to take part in a debate on the BBC.

Labour veteran Barry Sheerman described it as “shameful” while Green Party candidate, Clr Andrew Cooper, also said it was unfortu- nate Clr Benton wasn’t prepared to defend Conservati­ve policy.

After the event was over, Clr Cooper, took to Twitter to challenge his rival’s commitment to the democratic process.

In a tweet referencin­g other Twitter posts that questioned Clr Benton’s claims to be campaignin­g in Huddersfie­ld, Clr Cooper wrote: “Is Huddersfie­ld Tory Candidate Scott Benton pretending to be in Huddersfie­ld when in fact he’s spending his time in Calder Valley?”

It comes after Clr Benton (inset) posted on Twitter: “Another great day on the campaign trail across Huddersfie­ld...” but the post included no picture evidence of his efforts.

People responding to the tweet cast doubt on his claim.

Rob Holden, an independen­t candidate for Calder Valley, replied: “Unless you’ve invented time travel you were in Ripponden yesterday leafleting with [sic] cllr blagbrough.”.

Another put: “Strange that is not what I’m hearing in Huddersfie­ld.”

A third said: “Disappoint­ed you didn’t make the hustings in Huddersfie­ld. Many issues raised on care, education, asylum etc but no Tory response!”

While the majority of candidates have posted photos of their door knocking efforts on the streets around town, Clr Benton has only done so on Mr Whittaker’s campaign trail in Elland, Rastrick and Fixby.

Clr Benton told the Examiner he was not a “big believer in social media”, adding it was “not the case” that he was not campaignin­g.

“I’ve been in Huddersfie­ld very regularly campaignin­g,” he said. “My personal preference is not to put things on social media. “I prefer more traditiona­l methods and we’ve knocked on 2,500 doors in the last week alone.”

He added: “I’m quietly confident of a good performanc­e on June 8.”

At the hustings on Wednesday evening, the remaining candidates, Zulfiqar Ali of the Liberal Democrats, Bikatshi Katenga of the Yorkshire Party and Marteen Suneel Reddy Thokkudubi­yyapu – an Independen­t – were all present.

They were asked questions including; how they would improve Huddersfie­ld now the football club is in the Premier League, their views on asylum seekers, what should be done about school funding, how to solve the social care crisis and the NHS and what they thought about the state of politics.

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