Receipt card with claim, source, context and consequence ready to save or share.
Receipts-first political accountability
Make Reform’s record impossible to ignore.
Reform Receipts helps citizens track claims, contradictions, conduct, and consequences — with sources attached — so voters can judge candidates by the record, not the slogan.
Full public list
Search the elected record by name, seat, council or level.
Browse the public-record index of Reform office-holders currently recorded in the dataset. Each entry shows the role, seat or ward, time in office, the next scheduled contest and the linked source.
- Total records
- 2,410
- Local councillors
- 2,346
- Parliament and assemblies
- 61
Download
Get the app before the record gets buried.
Available for iPhone, iPad and Macs with Apple Silicon. Save receipts, follow local candidates and share source-backed proof.
Why it matters before election day
Candidates rely on voters forgetting.
A promise can be made in one town, contradicted in another place, clipped into a feed and forgotten by polling day. Receipts make the record easy to remember, verify and share.
Don’t argue from vibes. Bring the receipts.
What you can do in 60 seconds
Turn a claim into something voters can check.
Check a claim
Search a candidate, policy, quote or local issue.
Save a receipt
Keep the source, context and status together.
Share the proof
Send a calm, source-backed card to people who need it.
Submit evidence
Add public links, clips, documents, votes or leaflets.
Follow locally
Build a record around a ward, council or candidate.
The receipt format
Claim → Source → Context → Consequence → Share
The format is deliberately simple. It keeps the record clear enough for doorstep conversations, local groups, share cards and source-checking.
What was said, promised, voted for or published.
The public record voters can inspect for themselves.
What is confirmed, disputed, corrected or still unclear.
Why the record matters to people in a real place.
A clean receipt card or local pack people can pass on.
Built for concerned citizens
A useful role for everyone who cares about the record.
Voters
Check what a candidate said against what the public record shows.
Local organisers
Build a short local pack before claims get buried in the feed.
Researchers
Collect sources, timelines, corrections and right-of-reply notes.
Journalists and bloggers
Use receipts as leads, not allegations. Verify before publishing.
Campaign volunteers
Keep voter information calm, sourced and easy to share.
Designers and social sharers
Turn verified records into cards that travel without looking like noise.
Citizen action
The record should travel faster than the slogan.
Use Reform Receipts to collect, check, save and share source-backed records where you live.
Download the appTrack locally
Follow candidates, wards and topics that matter where you live.
Check sources
Keep claims tied to public records, documents, clips and links.
Share carefully
Use calm receipt cards that voters can verify for themselves.
Editorial standard
No rumours. No noise. Just the record.
Reform Receipts is only useful if people can trust it. Every public receipt should be careful, sourced and correctable.
A receipt needs a source, status and explanation of what is confirmed or disputed.
Opinion, uncertainty, correction and evidence should never be blurred together.
Weak sources, broken links, missing context and better evidence should be easy to flag.
Built for democratic participation, public scrutiny and voter information.
Download
Claims fade. Receipts stay.
Download Reform Receipts and keep a public memory for political promises close at hand.
FAQ
Questions voters and contributors ask first.
What is Reform Receipts?
Reform Receipts is a source-backed political accountability app for tracking public claims, candidates, receipts and sources.
How does Reform Receipts work?
Capture the claim, attach the source, add context, explain the consequence and share a receipt that voters can check.
Can I submit evidence?
Yes. You can submit public links, documents, screenshots, clips, leaflets, council votes and local examples for review.
Is Reform Receipts affiliated with Reform UK?
No. Reform Receipts is not affiliated with Reform UK, any election authority or any public body.
Are receipts source-backed?
Every public receipt should include a source, status and clear context about what the record shows.
How can I help locally?
Follow a local candidate, submit evidence, check sources, build local packs, design share cards or organise a local receipt-gathering group.
Is the app free?
Check the App Store listing for current pricing and availability.