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Hadleigh church joins Ipswich and East Suffolk Pastorate

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Hadleigh United Reformed Church celebrated joining the Ipswich & East Suffolk Pastorate on Sunday, marking closer cooperation with five other local churches.

Why it matters: The partnership aims to strengthen community support across Suffolk at a time when local areas face "unprecedented challenges," including housing, employment, health crises, and environmental concerns.

Vicar of Hadleigh United Reformed Church
Hadleigh United Reformed Church celebrated joining the Ipswich & East Suffolk Pastorate on SundayHadleigh URC

The details: The historic Market Place church hosted a well-attended service on Sunday, 9 February, to mark its integration into the pastorate. The partnership now includes six churches:

  • Hadleigh URC

  • Castle Hill and St John's in Ipswich

  • Felixstowe URC

  • Leiston & Saxmundham United Church

What they're saying: "Central to the URC's spiritual DNA is a desire to bring Christians together to work in witness to the love of Jesus Christ for all. By working more closely together across the towns, we believe we have a bigger impact in both helping people and showing them that a real alternative way of life is possible," said Revd David Rees.

Claire Coster, secretary of Hadleigh URC, said the arrangement would help them "turn up the light of hope to full beam at a time of growing darkness for the communities we love and serve."

For context: While maintaining its independence and local focus, Hadleigh URC will now benefit from:

  • Additional guidance from the pastorate's ministerial team, led by Revd David Rees and Revd Adam Earle

  • Closer cooperation on community projects

  • Shared environmental initiatives, with all churches having achieved the bronze-level Eco Church Award

The big picture: The United Reformed Church, founded in the 1970s, is part of the worldwide Reformed Churches family with more than 70 million members. Hadleigh URC's predecessor fellowship, the Congregationalist Church, has served the market town for nearly 200 years.

The bottom line: The celebration service brought together members from across the pastorate, including Hadleigh Town Mayor, Councillor Sue Monks, and Suffolk County Councillor Mick Fraser. Revd Lythan Nevard, moderator of the Eastern Synod of the URC, led the service.

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An award-winning local law firm

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Farage more trusted than Starmer in East of England, latest poll finds

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Attwells Solicitors

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Reform UK leader Nigel Farage is more trusted to represent the UK internationally than PM Keir Starmer among East of England voters, new polling reveals.

Why it matters: The findings highlight a significant decline in trust for the main party leaders in the region less than a year after the general election.

The poll, conducted by communications agency PLMR and Electoral Calculus, shows Farage ranked highest among named leaders at 19% in the East of England, ahead of Sir Keir Starmer (13%), Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch (6%) and Liberal Democrat Leader Sir Ed Davey (5%).

Nigel Farage
Nigel FarageAlamy

The bigger picture: One in three voters (33%) in the region responded "none of the above" when asked which political figure they would trust most, suggesting a broader decline in overall trust in UK political leaders.

By the numbers: The same poll indicates Reform UK would become the largest party in the region if an election were held tomorrow:

  • Reform: 21 seats

  • Conservatives: 10 seats

  • Labour: 4 seats

  • Liberal Democrats: 2 seats

  • Greens: 1 seat

In contrast: Nationally, Farage and Starmer are tied at 16% among those who named a preference, highlighting a more polarised national picture, with the Reform UK leader building more trust with voters in the East of England specifically.

What they're saying: "This polling highlights a significant decline in trust for the two main party leaders among East of England voters when it comes to representing the UK on the international stage," said Tim Miller , Managing Director of PLMR Genesis , the East of England branch of PLMR.

Reform and Nigel Farage have seemingly been able to capitalise on this and it's now translating into voting intentions, with the Party set to overtake Labour and the Conservatives in the region with the largest number of seats – a seismic political shift.

Between the lines: The poll suggests Reform would make strong gains across the region, potentially taking seats from both major parties:

  • Suffolk: Bury St Edmunds and Stowmarket from Labour

  • Essex: Braintree from the Conservatives and Thurrock from Labour

  • Cambridgeshire: North East from the Conservatives and North West from Labour

  • Norfolk: North West from the Conservatives and South West from Labour

Tim Miller on a backdrop of Ipswich from above and political party colour overlays
Tim Miller of PLMR GenesisOliver Rouane-WilliamsIpswich.co.uk

The national outlook: The survey of 5,180 adults showed Reform securing 25% of the vote share nationally, compared to 23% each for Labour and the Conservatives. This would translate to 227 seats for Reform, 180 for Labour and 130 for the Conservatives.

The bottom line: "If Labour wants to keep Reform at bay, hold onto the gains they made in the East of England and remain in government in four year's time, the Party needs to focus on getting their message across more clearly to voters and instil confidence in their domestic agenda," Miller concluded.

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