Political parties are ramping up efforts to attract mothers and other voters in London, where many council seats hinge on razor-thin margins ahead of local elections.
Mumsnet Founder’s Stark Warning
Justine Roberts, founder of Mumsnet, calls on the major parties to improve their performance. “The big two parties need to get their act together or perhaps there will be a protest vote at the next election,” she states. “But it’s not really out of any great enthusiasm for the Reform candidates.”
Roberts notes a rise in Reform support on the forum over the past 12 to 18 months. However, she attributes this shift primarily to dissatisfaction with the current government, escalating cost-of-living pressures, and strains on public services. “It’s more of a drop in support for Labour than a surge of support for Reform,” she explains. “In fact, people are not really that big fans of Nigel Farage when it comes down to it.”
Reform’s Appeal to London Mothers
Nigel Farage, Reform leader, highlights his party’s London mayoral candidate Layla Cunningham as a strong advocate for mothers. He describes her as a “very powerful” voice, adding: “There’s an element, of course, of Layla that is the vigilante mum who’s been out to try and sort of citizens arrest people who’ve threatened her children. But, I mean, there’s somebody who’s brought up seven kids in central London. London, of course, has problems, huge problems. She certainly believes that law and order, a lack of feeling safe is now in London at the top of the list.”
Conservative Pitch and Labour Rebuttal
A Conservative representative urges London mothers to back the party. “I don’t think that they are going to Reform,” she says. “London mums should vote Conservative because we care about children, we care about families. I’m a mother of three young children myself, and you know, we have been forcing Labour to do more for children’s safety.”
She emphasizes the Tories’ role in pressuring the government to ban social media for under-16s and restrict phones in schools.
Dawn Butler, chair of London Labour MPs, criticizes Farage sharply. “Nigel Farage doesn’t speak for London mums and never will. He represents division, hatred and dog whistle politics, everything that London rejects,” the Brent East MP declares.
Butler points to Labour’s initiatives: expanding free childcare to 30 hours from nine months old, alongside universal provision that saves families up to £7,500 annually, creating 100,000 new nursery places, and rolling out Best Start Family Hubs.
A Green Party spokesperson dismisses Farage as “a snake oil salesman offering fake solutions to the very real problems people are facing.”

