logo
Durham County Council departments renamed as Reform UK takes charge

Durham County Council departments renamed as Reform UK takes charge

BBC News21-05-2025

Reform UK has officially taken over control of Durham County Council, renaming several key departments to remove references to climate change and equality and inclusion.The party, who has 65 councillors, swept to victory in the local elections to gain an overall majority. New council leader Andrew Husband said he had "positive" discussions with the most senior non-political managers about their plans for the local authority, which is one of England's largest councils.It comes after Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said council staff working on diversity or climate change initiatives should look for "alternative careers".
"It may be that over the next four years, hopefully a lot sooner, we do look at random projects or irrelevant projects that don't fit in within our objectives," said Husband, who was officially elected leader in an uncontested vote."Naturally, if projects start getting closed down, the resources are less required, but I'm hoping for more of a case of redeployment than mass firing across departments."He said the party had to "work with transparency" and wanted "to share as much information" as it could with the public "and do things differently".
Several departments and cabinet titles were renamed at a meeting earlier.The previous neighbourhood and climate change position is now neighbourhoods and environment, while equality and inclusion has been changed to stronger communities and belonging.
Former council leader Amanda Hopgood, Liberal Democrat, warned that County Durham would be "the guinea pig for the experiment of the Reform Party".Hopgood, who led the council as part of a coalition between 2021 and 2025, criticised the party for making several promises it is unable to deliver while in control of a local authority."It is a tragedy that County Durham will be the guinea pig for the experiment of the Reform Party leading one of the biggest councils in the country," she told the Local Democracy Reporting Service."Their statements so far seem not to recognise their strong local inheritance from the administration I led for the past four years."Labour councillor Rob Crute suggested the party will "hit a brick wall" when attempting to set a zero per cent council tax increase next year and repair potholes within 24 hours of being reported."I think they might find it quite uncomfortable," he said.Reform's 65 new councillors also voted through new rules giving the party and its members greater autonomy over committee and scrutiny meetings, in a move political rivals likened to marking its homework.
New deputy leader Darren Grimes will combine his role with being the portfolio holder for finance, policy and communications.Joe Quinn and Cathy Hunt, who both defected from the Conservative Party earlier this year, also landed key roles.Ferryhill's Quinn will head up the council's resources, investments and assets portfolio, while Willington and Hunwick's Hunt will oversee the children and young people's services department.Reform councillor for Crook Robbie Roddiss was elected as council chair, describing it as a "great honour". The role, which requires the occupant to be politically neutral, represents the council at community events and in neighbouring authorities and beyond.Cross-party members paid tribute to outgoing chair Joan Nicholson, who lost her seat at the election, for her dedication to the role.
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

Diplomatic win for UK hosting US-China trade talks
Diplomatic win for UK hosting US-China trade talks

Sky News

timean hour ago

  • Sky News

Diplomatic win for UK hosting US-China trade talks

Sky News understands that the Trump administration approached the UK government to ask if it would host round two of the US-China trade talks. This is a useful 'diplo-win' for the UK. The first round was held in Geneva last month. News of that happening came as a surprise. The Chinese and the Americans were in the midst of a Trump-instigated trade war. President Trump was en route to Saudi Arabia and suddenly we got word of talks in Switzerland. They went surprisingly well. US treasury secretary Scott Bessent and his Chinese counterpart He Lifeng, met face-to-face and agreed to suspend most tariffs for 90 days. But two weeks later, the Trump administration accused Beijing of breaking the agreements reached in Geneva. Beijing threw the blame back at Washington. On Wednesday, Donald Trump and Xi Jinping spoke by phone. The Chinese claimed this call was at the Americans' request. Either way, the consequence was that the talks were back on track. "I just concluded a very good phone call with President Xi of China, discussing some of the intricacies of our recently made, and agreed to, trade deal," President Trump said this week. From that call came the impetus for a second round of talks. A venue was needed. In stepped the UK at short notice. Beyond being geographically convenient, UK government sources suggest that Britain is geopolitically in the right place right now to act as this bridge and facilitator. The UK-China relationship is in the process of a "reset". Other locations, like Brussels or other EU capitals, would have been less workable. Crucially too, for the UK, this is also potentially advantageous as it seeks to get its own UK-US trade agreement, to eliminate or massively reduce tariffs, over the line. 5:08 Talks on reaching the "implementation phase" have been near-continuous since the announcement last month, but having the American principals in London is a plus. Sideline talks are possible, but even the presence of the US team in the UK is helpful. For all the chaos that President Trump is causing with his tariffs, he has instigated face-to-face conversations as he seeks resets. Key players are sitting down around tables - yes, to untangle the trade knots which Trump tied, but this whole episode has pulled foes together around the same table; it has forced relationships and maybe mutual understanding. That's useful. And for this next round, between superpowers, the UK is the host. Also useful.

Anas Sarwar should not expect to oust John Swinney yet, says polling guru
Anas Sarwar should not expect to oust John Swinney yet, says polling guru

Daily Record

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Record

Anas Sarwar should not expect to oust John Swinney yet, says polling guru

John Curtice said the battle for the South Lanarkshire seat always looked as if it would be a close affair and that's how it turned out. Anas Sarwar should not expect to oust John Swinney as first minister just yet despite Labour's success at the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election, Professor John Curtice has said. The election guru said the battle for the South Lanarkshire seat always looked as if it would be a close affair and that's what happened. ‌ The Strathclyde University academic told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'If you take in the opinion polls, what's happened in Hamilton, and the ups and downs in Labour and SNP support since 2021, we see Labour at 31 per cent and the SNP at 31 per cent. ‌ 'So the contest always looked to be close and that's what's been proven in the end. Labour has done slightly better and the SNP slightly worse, but there is nothing in the result to suggest Labour has turned around the polls. 'But equally what's true is there are no signs in this result that the SNP are making much progress in reversing the losses from last year. 'The recent message from opinion polls are the SNP is running at just over 30 per cent, Labour is around 20 per cent, so it seems a reasonable expectation that such a result would not mean Anas Sarwar is Scotland's next first minister.' Curtice also said that the by-election was positive for Reform, even though it came third after some pundits predicted it could finish higher. Nigel Farage's party took 26.2 per cent of the vote - well above the 19 per cent it is sitting at in the national polls for Scotland. Writing in The Times, he said: 'Once again it is Reform's political prospects that now look brighter. ‌ 'As in the English local elections, so in Hamilton the party outperformed its current standing in the polls, winning as much as 26 per cent of the vote. 'Hitherto politicians in Scotland have comforted themselves with the thought that Nigel Farage could never make the political weather in a country that voted against Brexit and which seems less concerned about immigration. 'However, as in the rest of the UK, that is not a thought that is credible any more.' It is estimated around one in four Conservative voters in Scotland from last year's general election have switched to Reform, along with one in six Labour voters. Curtice said: 'Reform UK is damaging both of the principal unionist parties in Scotland. 'In this instance, it was not enough to save the SNP's bacon. But across Scotland there is still the likely prospect that the SNP will be the largest party in the next Holyrood election, but much diminished and much less powerful than the one currently occupying the debating chamber.'

Illegal work arrests double in year as police target 'unscrupulous' employers
Illegal work arrests double in year as police target 'unscrupulous' employers

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Illegal work arrests double in year as police target 'unscrupulous' employers

Arrests for illegal work have doubled in a year as police focus on "unscrupulous" employers who exploit undocumented migrants, the government officers arrested more than 6,400 people in the past year in raids at businesses across the UK, data released by the Home Office shows. It said the figure is 51% higher than the previous year. It did not provide numbers as to how many arrests led to charges, convictions or said immigration enforcement officials had "intensified" their work to "tackle those abusing the UK immigration system and exploiting vulnerable people". Officers had visited more than 9,000 businesses - among them restaurants, nail bars and construction sites - to check paperwork and working businesses had often subjected migrants to "squalid conditions and illegal working hours" as well as below-minimum Home Office said there were a range of industries exploiting migrant one case in Surrey, officers arrested nine people at a caravan park who had been working as delivery one one major operation in March, officers arrested 36 people at a building site in Belfast's Titanic Quarter. Some had breached visa conditions while others didn't have working Enforcement director Eddy Montgomery said there were many cases where people travelling to the UK were "sold a lie by smuggling gangs that they will be able to live and work freely in the UK."In reality, they often end up facing squalid living conditions, minimal pay and inhumane working hours," he Angela Eagle, the minister for border security and asylum, said the government would "continue to root out unscrupulous employers and disrupt illegal workers who undermine our border security".The government said it had also returned nearly 30,000 people over the past year who did not have the right to be in the has said it is cracking down on illegal migration, setting out its plans in a White Paper to tighten work visas and those overstaying. It scrapped a special visa for care workers introduced during the pandemic, noting that this had been a pathway exploited by was mixed reaction to the plans, with some business sectors decrying the restrictions on work visas, while some Conservative opponents said the reforms didn't go far enough to stop illegal most recent data shows that approximately 44,000 people have entered the UK illegally in the year to March 2025, more than 80% through small boat journeys.

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