Elections delayed in nine council areas as more town halls urged to come forward

Elections delayed in nine council areas as more town halls urged to come forward

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Elections delayed in nine council areas as more town halls urged to come forward
Author: Will Durrant
Published: Feb, 05 2025 14:12

May elections in nine council areas have been postponed for one year amid the reorganisation of local government in England, Angela Rayner has confirmed. The Deputy Prime Minister has also invited all 21 two-tier areas – which have both county and district councils – to submit proposals to reorganise themselves into single “unitary” authorities. Ms Rayner, who is also the Housing, Communities and Local Government Secretary, agreed to cancel elections in May because the Government is “not in the business of holding elections to bodies that won’t exist”, so votes will be held in May 2026 after the expected reorganisation.

The nine affected areas are East Sussex, West Sussex, Essex, Thurrock, Hampshire, the Isle of Wight, Norfolk, Suffolk and Surrey. Ms Rayner also unveiled seven new potential devolution areas with “a view to mayoral elections in May 2026” across Cumbria, Cheshire and Warrington, Greater Essex, Hampshire and Solent, Norfolk and Suffolk, Sussex and Brighton, and Lancashire. Announcing the delay to elections, the Deputy Prime Minister told the Commons: “For certain areas, a significant amount of work is needed to unlock devolution and deliver reorganisation. For this reason, some areas requested to postpone their elections until May 2026.

“The Government’s starting point is for all elections to go ahead unless there’s a strong justification for postponement, and the bar is high, and rightly so. “I am only agreeing to half of the requests that were made. After careful consideration, I have only agreed to postpone elections in places where this is central to our manifesto promise to deliver devolution. “We’re not in the business of holding elections to bodies that won’t exist and where we don’t know what will replace them. This would be an expensive and irresponsible waste of taxpayers’ money, and any party calling for these elections to go ahead must explain how this waste would be justifiable.”.

Ms Rayner added Surrey had been selected “given the urgency of creating sustainable new unitary structures and to unlock devolution for this area”, amid financial difficulties at Woking Borough Council where the authority had a £1.2 billion hole in its budget caused by “extreme” high levels of borrowing. The Deputy Prime Minister earlier said: “Today, I will be issuing a legal invitation to all 21 two-tier areas to submit proposals for new unitary councils.”.

On the seven new potential devolution areas, Ms Rayner said: “These places will get a fast-track ticket to drive real change in their area. “While devolution can sound techie, the outcome is simple – it’s a plan for putting more money in people’s pockets, it’s a plan for quicker, better, cheaper transport designed with local people in mind, a plan for putting politics back in the service of working people.”.

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