John Rees-Evans (born April 1978) is a British politician and founder of The Direct Democracy Movement, established in 2018.
John Rees-Evans | |
---|---|
Founder of the The Direct Democracy Movement | |
Assumed office 9 February 2018 | |
Preceded by | Position established |
Personal details | |
Born | April 1978 (age 46) Hampshire, England |
Political party | Reform UK (since 2024) |
Other political affiliations | UK Independence Party (pre 2017) |
Website | johnreesevans |
Personal life
editRees-Evans was born in Hampshire and educated both in the UK and overseas, including at the Jeppe High School for Boys in Johannesburg. He is retired, with a professional background in business, particularly in mining and adventure tourism[1] and currently operates philanthropical projects throughout Africa, travelling there often.
Family
editRees-Evans claims his family have been pro-equality campaigners for several centuries, citing the life of William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield (the younger brother of Rees-Evans' great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather) who, controversially in the 18th century, adopted Dido Elizabeth Belle, the illegitimate daughter of an African slave, educating her, raising her as his own daughter, having her live with the family for thirty years at Kenwood House and making her an heiress; and Hugh Lewin, the nephew of Rees-Evans' great-grandfather and an anti-apartheid activist campaigner and friend of Nelson Mandela. Lewin was imprisoned for seven years, convicted on similar charges to Mandela.
Controversy
editControversially, Rees-Evans once responded to the question posed by a self-professing "anarchist" in Merthyr Tydfil as to whether he defended the claim made by a Christian political activist standing for the United Kingdom Independence Party, Julia Gasper, that homosexuals enjoyed physical congress with animals, by claiming that he had seen evidence of this. The evidence that he cited was of a "homosexual donkey" trying to rape his horse. He subsequently explained these remarks as being, while true, nothing more than "playful banter" with a mischievous campaigner.
Since it is sometimes said in South Wales that a donkey would be elected to Parliament at a General Election if it wore a red rosette (a reference to the concept of tribal voting), and since the incumbent Member of Parliament in the seat he was contesting is homosexual, Rees-Evans was accused of "dog whistle politics" by giving this response. However, Rees-Evans denied that he was referencing any individual.
Political career
editHe contested the seat of Cardiff South and Penarth in the 2015 general election, receiving 13.8% of the vote.
Rees-Evans has pledged to fight to ensure that the government is reduced in size and function. He believes that the current political class in Westminster is out of touch with citizens, and pledged to make politics more transparent and open if elected.
Rees-Evans advocates the introduction of direct democracy with intention to cause massive reform of the entire UK political system. He also supports capital punishment for child killers and sexual abusers of children.
Rees-Evans once announced a proposal to offer £9,000 and health insurance to Britons with dual nationality, in return for them moving to countries where they have the right, or could obtain the right, to settle. They would be required to start a business and trade with the UK, exporting products that the UK did not manufacture. This would be to help achieve "negative net immigration towards one million a year" and would reduce UK living costs. He was condemned by Liberal Democrat MP Tom Brake who compared the proposal to the BNP's manifesto, however, when interviewed by Asian Voice, Rees-Evans explained that the initiative was inspired by the decision of his father in the late 1970's to leave the UK to start a business in Africa, that there was nothing in his original comments that in any way alluded to the race of prospective candidates, and that this inference was deliberately manufactured without justification by his political opponents to discredit his views.
In 2017 with Robert Ainsworth, Rees-Evans helped form a direct democracy advocacy group called "Affinity" and later the same year founded The Direct Democracy Movement.
References
edit- ^ "About John Rees-Evans". John Rees-Evans for Leader. Retrieved 22 November 2016.