logo
Kim McGuinness: Reform need to 'step up' to lead Durham Council

Kim McGuinness: Reform need to 'step up' to lead Durham Council

BBC News11-05-2025

The North East mayor has called on Reform to "step up" as they take control of their first council in the region. Kim McGuinness said she would welcome the party to her combined authority team, but "it's time to move on from what we're used to from Reform, which is pledges and soundbites, they've got a council to deliver".Meanwhile, Green councillor David Francis raised concerns Reform leader Nigel Farage was already interfering too much in the council in remarks made after the election.When elected, Reform UK councillor Darren Grimes said he hoped his party would "deliver at least on people's council priorities, if not on their national priorities".
The party made significant gains in the local election held on 2 May, with the party taking control of Durham County Council, among others. Speaking on BBC Politics North, Grimes accused Labour of "moving on" from working people. "People have moved on from Labour, the word that kept coming up [on the doorstep] was 'betrayal'," he said.
He added when he was campaigning, people told him their ancestors had voted Labour, but that they were not willing to continue that tradition because "the Labour Party itself has moved away from being the party of workers to being the party of metropolitan liberals".
Grimes is considered a frontrunner to become council leader and when asked if she would work with him in cabinet, McGuinness said: "I'll work with anybody who wants to make this region better."They've been democratically elected in Durham, they now need to step up and run Durham County Council and run it well.
"It's now time to move on from what we're used to from Reform, which is pledges and soundbites, they've got a council to deliver."We'll welcome someone onto our cabinet when Durham elect a leader or select a leader."
Speaking on the leadership of Durham County Council, South Tyneside councillor Francis said: "The difficulty there is, we saw within 24 hours of the election results Nigel Farage announcing what was going to happen in County Durham, not anybody that was from County Durham or elected to represent them." He also said his party had not been given enough credit for its own electoral success. "The Greens have more councillors than Reform at this time, but people would be forgiven for not knowing about it, because we haven't enjoyed the massively disproportionate amount of attention that's given to Nigel Farage and Reform."If we had, I think you'd see very different results."
BBC Politics North airs on Sundays at 10.00. Catch up now on BBC iPlayer.Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Starmer will be breathing a sigh of relief after clinching shock victory over SNP and Reform UK
Starmer will be breathing a sigh of relief after clinching shock victory over SNP and Reform UK

Sky News

time29 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Starmer will be breathing a sigh of relief after clinching shock victory over SNP and Reform UK

Anything other than a win for Labour would have been a humiliation in this contest. It wasn't any old local by-election - this was a contest where Labour knew it could act as a mini barometer of Sir Keir Starmer's recent U-turn on winter fuel payments and become a test of how popular the politics of Nigel Farage are in Scotland. Labour are power hungry and have, for a long time, set their sights on forming the next Scottish government. The prime minister will this morning be breathing a sigh of relief after clinching this shock victory over the SNP and Reform UK. 1:01 This contest on the outskirts of Glasgow came at a time where Labour had been firefighting and grappling with polling suggesting they had blown their chances of ousting the SNP from power in Edinburgh after almost 20 years. The SNP had a spring in their step during this campaign after a chaotic couple of years. First Minister and SNP leader John Swinney had apparently stemmed the bleeding after the infamous police fraud investigation, endless fallout over gender identity reforms, and last year's general election where they were almost wiped out. This result leaves them no further forward than 12 months ago with questions over the party's strategy. Reform UK is very much in the Scottish picture now, finishing a few hundred votes behind the nationalists. This is a party led by a man who barely registered any support north of the border for many years. A remarkable transformation. The surge in support has spooked many because they know fine well Nigel Farage is only just getting started. One poll had Reform UK forming the next official opposition at Holyrood. After tonight, that might be a tall order but Mr Farage is shaking things up at the expense of the Conservatives. The unpredictable nature of this contest may give us a taste of what is to come.

Kemi Badenoch to give speech on the ECHR
Kemi Badenoch to give speech on the ECHR

Telegraph

time35 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Kemi Badenoch to give speech on the ECHR

Kemi Badenoch is set to use a major speech to declare she is 'increasingly of the view' that the UK should withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights. The leader of the Conservative Party is expected to set out a plan to launch a commission into whether Britain should quit the treaty. The ECHR was a dividing issue in last year's Conservative leadership election, with Mrs Badenoch's rival Robert Jenrick championing the idea that Britain should pull out. Critics of the treaty want to leave it because it has been used to frustrate attempts to deport migrants from Britain. Mrs Badenoch is expected to say that she is 'increasingly of the view that we will need to leave, because I am yet to see a clear and coherent route to change within our current legal structures'. 'I have always been clear that if our national interest means that we need to leave the ECHR, we will leave,' the Conservative leader will say. She will add: 'But I say that not because of any particular obsession with international law or with our treaty arrangements. I say that because for me, the most important thing is making our country safer, richer and fairer.'

Reform's Richard Tice doubles down on call for burqa ban debate after chairman quits
Reform's Richard Tice doubles down on call for burqa ban debate after chairman quits

The Independent

time36 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Reform's Richard Tice doubles down on call for burqa ban debate after chairman quits

Reform's deputy leader has doubled down on calls for a debate on whether burqas should be banned in Britain after a furious row over the issue saw the party's chairman quit. Zia Yusuf resigned on Thursday after describing a call from the party's newest MP to ban the burqa as 'dumb'. Speaking as he entered the count for the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse Holyrood by-election, Richard Tice said MPs should 'discuss' a potential ban. 'Let's have a discussion about these things, all these important issues, as opposed to not discussing anything, smearing and labelling,' he said. Pressed on his personal view amid chaotic scenes, Mr Tice said there should be a 'national debate'. And, asked if Mr Yusuf's resignation implied the party was racist, the Boston and Skegness MP said: 'With the greatest of respect, that's nonsense.' It came after the new Runcorn and Helsby MP Sarch Pochin used her first Prime Minister's Questions question to call on Sir Keir to ban burqas 'in the interest of public safety'. She said: 'Given the prime minister's desire to strengthen strategic alignment with our European neighbours, will he, in the interest of public safety, follow the lead of France, Belgium, Denmark and others and ban the burqa?' Sir Keir welcomed Ms Pochin to the Commons, but said 'I am not going to follow her down that line'. A Reform spokesman later clarified that banning burqas was not party policy, sparking calls from the far-right for Mr Farage to adopt the proposals. Later, Mr Yusuf said it was 'dumb for a party to ask the prime minister if they would do something the party itself wouldn't do'. He quit the party on Thursday saying 'I no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time, and hereby resign the office'. Asked on Wednesday night about Ms Pochin's comments on the burqa, party leader Nigel Farage also said he would welcome a broader debate about face coverings in public. He told GB News: 'I think this debate actually goes beyond the burqa… I was in Aberdeen Monday, there was a mob there to meet me, an organisation called Antifa, and half of them had complete face coverings on so they would be unidentifiable. 'I don't think face coverings in public places make sense, and I think we do deserve debate about that, which I see the burqa as being a part.' Denying his party was 'in chaos', Mr Tice paid tribute to the outgoing former chairman. 'As Nigel's said, as I've said, we're very sad that Zia has resigned,' he said. 'He's worked incredibly hard, he's been instrumental in driving the party forward. ' One of the reasons that this result could be really close – who knows which way it will go – is because of the success of what Zia has achieved.' He added: 'It's very sad, politics is difficult, it's time-consuming, but he's worked incredibly hard.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store