Prehya James, 25, is delivering food.
She says: “I can see why people would vote Reform – they want change. But I really don’t think they would fix the state of the economy.”
A few miles away, in Marfleet ward in the east of the city, Reform took a seat from Labour.
Maureen Wood, 82, tells me Labour will always have her vote, but she gives no real reason why that is so, shrugging: “I always have done.”
But Paul Wick, 58, a former Army tank commander, says Labour should no longer count on such unequivocal loyalty.
In previous local and general elections, he has voted Labour.
At this election, he voted Reform.
“People are coming to Britain for the benefits,” he says. “We’re putting them up in hotels while former servicemen – people I know – are sleeping rough. It’s not right.”
