Renew was founded by Sandra Khadhouri, a former
UN worker;
Chris Coghlan, a former
Foreign and Commonwealth Office anti-terror officer; James Clarke, a tech business development consultant; and James Torrance, an accountant and former
Conservative. Coghlan, Clarke and Torrance ran as independents in
Battersea,
Bermondsey and Southwark and
Kensington respectively in the
2017 general election. Renew was registered with the
Electoral Commission in autumn 2017, and the party officials were named as Torrance (leader), Clarke (nominating officer) and David Britten (treasurer). Following its launch, the party embarked on a "Listen to Britain" tour of the UK, visiting 22 towns and cities and liaising with locals and supporters, addressing schools, holding campaign events and conducting over 5,000 surveys. He subsequently lost his seat in the
May 2018 local election. John Ferrett, a former
Labour councillor in
Portsmouth, joined Renew in 2018, but in 2019 was listed as a non-aligned independent. In September 2018, Renew formed an electoral alliance with
Advance Together, with Advance Together's Annabel Mullion joining the leadership team. While the party at first had three leaders – Mullion, Torrance and Clarke – Mullion was later described as leader, with the party's website describing Torrance and Clarke as deputy leaders. Mullion stepped down as leader on 7 June 2019 and was replaced by the independent
MEP for the Southwest of England and Gibraltar,
Julie Girling. On 15 April 2019, the party announced that it was preparing to wind up its
2019 European election campaign in order to support
Change UK. On 31 October 2019, Renew announced 51 candidates in England, Scotland and Wales in advance of the general election scheduled for 12 December. On 13 November, it said that only four of these would stand, in
Bromley and Chislehurst,
Edinburgh North and Leith,
Hackney North and Stoke Newington and
Sefton Central, in order to improve the chances of remain-supporting candidates in the other 47 seats. On 7 July 2020, Renew announced the results of its leadership election, with James Clarke elected as Leader and Carla Burns as Deputy Leader. On 1 February 2022, the Renew Party announced that it had merged its operations into the new
True and Fair Party, founded by
Gina Miller a few weeks earlier. == Finance ==