Bring Restore Britain and Reform Together to Drive Real Change
People who care about this issue are not always connected. This space exists to bring those concerned together so they can act collectively. If you are negatively impacted, or if this resonates, and you want to help, have experience or ideas to move this activity forward, then get involved. We’ll show you how below. Check the Act Now section below for simple next steps you can take now. Note: All listings remain active until outcomes are either delivered or the listing is no longer required.
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Activity Listing Details
Ambition
To bring Restore Britain and Reform UK together to join and coordinate their efforts to deliver the best possible outcomes for the United Kingdom.
Ambition Type
Community, Social, Business, Economic, Political
Level
PL4 - National Participation
Goal
Stop What Needs Stopping, Co-Create New Realities
Audience
General Public, Students, Young People (16-25), Parent & Carers, Retired People, Engaged Citizens, Community Leaders & Volunteers, Activists & Advocates, Faith & Cultural Leaders, Politicians & Policy Professionals
Situation
Multiple political groups in the United Kingdom are calling for change.
Restore Britain and Reform UK both attract support from people who are dissatisfied with the current direction of the country and want better outcomes.
Yet they continue to operate separately, building parallel structures, competing for attention, and drawing from overlapping pools of support.
This fragmentation reduces overall effectiveness. Effort is duplicated. Influence is diluted. Opportunities to deliver meaningful outcomes are weakened.
At the same time, the challenges facing the United Kingdom continue to grow, requiring stronger coordination, clearer direction, and greater capability to deliver results.
If the objective is to improve outcomes, continuing to compete for the same space limits what either group can realistically achieve.
Bringing efforts together would increase clarity, strengthen collective capability, and improve the likelihood of delivering real-world results.
Leadership would need to be addressed, but the more important question is how any combined effort would be structured to succeed.
Without coordination, it does not matter who leads.
Like this idea?
Or what about bringing together a true coalition with the Conservatives, too?
Because Britain is bigger than any Party, isn't it?
Restore Britain and Reform UK both attract support from people who are dissatisfied with the current direction of the country and want better outcomes.
Yet they continue to operate separately, building parallel structures, competing for attention, and drawing from overlapping pools of support.
This fragmentation reduces overall effectiveness. Effort is duplicated. Influence is diluted. Opportunities to deliver meaningful outcomes are weakened.
At the same time, the challenges facing the United Kingdom continue to grow, requiring stronger coordination, clearer direction, and greater capability to deliver results.
If the objective is to improve outcomes, continuing to compete for the same space limits what either group can realistically achieve.
Bringing efforts together would increase clarity, strengthen collective capability, and improve the likelihood of delivering real-world results.
Leadership would need to be addressed, but the more important question is how any combined effort would be structured to succeed.
Without coordination, it does not matter who leads.
Like this idea?
Or what about bringing together a true coalition with the Conservatives, too?
Because Britain is bigger than any Party, isn't it?
How To Help
- Share this to highlight the cost of competing for the same support base
- Identify where Restore Britain and Reform UK have overlapping priorities
- Be clear about where their approaches align and where they differ
- Call out duplication of effort and its impact on results
- Push for open discussion on coordination between the two groups
- Encourage supporters to prioritise outcomes over party identity
- Bring together people from both sides who are open to working together
- Involve individuals with experience in leadership, governance, and organisational structure
- Explore practical ways the two groups could align or coordinate activity
- Turn specific areas of overlap into joint activity listings
- Focus on what would actually improve outcomes, not who leads
- Identify where Restore Britain and Reform UK have overlapping priorities
- Be clear about where their approaches align and where they differ
- Call out duplication of effort and its impact on results
- Push for open discussion on coordination between the two groups
- Encourage supporters to prioritise outcomes over party identity
- Bring together people from both sides who are open to working together
- Involve individuals with experience in leadership, governance, and organisational structure
- Explore practical ways the two groups could align or coordinate activity
- Turn specific areas of overlap into joint activity listings
- Focus on what would actually improve outcomes, not who leads
Outcomes
1. Clear Shared Direction: Agreement on a small number of priority outcomes to focus on.
2. Coordinated Effort: Aligned activity instead of competing campaigns, reducing duplication and confusion.
3. Stronger Collective Impact: Combined support, resources, and messaging increase overall influence and effectiveness.
4. Defined Leadership Structure: A clear and agreed approach to leadership that supports delivery, not division.
5. Measurable Progress: Visible movement against agreed priorities, demonstrating real-world results.
2. Coordinated Effort: Aligned activity instead of competing campaigns, reducing duplication and confusion.
3. Stronger Collective Impact: Combined support, resources, and messaging increase overall influence and effectiveness.
4. Defined Leadership Structure: A clear and agreed approach to leadership that supports delivery, not division.
5. Measurable Progress: Visible movement against agreed priorities, demonstrating real-world results.
Act Now
Join Ideas-Shared, Rate Listing, Share Listing
Status
At Step 3 - Sharing Only
Map Reference
Address
Palace of Westminster, The Terrace, Westminster, Millbank, City of Westminster, Greater London, England, SW1A 0AA, United Kingdom
Palace of Westminster, The Terrace, Westminster, Millbank, City of Westminster, Greater London, England, SW1A 0AA, United Kingdom

