Reform Council in Chaos as It Prepares to Slash Scrutiny Committees Following Wave of Councillor Suspensions
Update: 2025-11-12
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Reform UK in Kent looks set to drastically cut the number of committees scrutinising its work, Byline Times can reveal, amid claims it can't raise the numbers to do the work, following a wave of suspensions of its own own councillors.
Reform plans to bring a motion to the council in December - which opposition councillors say would cut back on scrutiny - to cut the number of committees holding it to account, following a wave of suspensions that means the administration is struggling to fill vacancies on important council bodies. Nine Reform councillors have been sacked by the party since being elected in May, severely weakening the party's majority.
One option is, Byline Times understands, to abolish cabinet committees entirely - which sense-check decisions of the Reform cabinet - and most scrutiny committees which are not legally-required.
Kent County Council operates a hybrid model with cabinet committees and overview/scrutiny committees which scrutinise decisions after they're made, as well as committees to look at big decisions before they're made. While they have to have an audit committee by law, cabinet committees aren't mandatory and could be in line for the chop.
The change would leave the council with (legally-required) bodies scrutinising governance and audit, standards, and regulatory and planning issues - while potentially abolishing committees for social care, environment and transport, children, young people and education, and growth, the economy, and communities.
A motion pushing for the changes will be put forward in December, the council confirmed to Byline Times. Labour group leader on Kent County Council Cllr Alister Brady argues this will reduce transparency, and shows Reform "are not fit to do the job - they want to reduce checks and balances."
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The party's recent suspensions have left a series of key posts unfilled.
Councillor Isabella Kemp, who was elected as a Reform councillor, was previously chair of the housing committee - but can't sit on it anymore since being sacked by her party last week amid internal infighting. She was also vice-chair of the fire authority, which has been thrown into chaos by the latest raft of suspensions by Reform on the council, under leader Linden Kemkaran.
Labour Cllr Brady told this outlet: "Reform are either afraid of hard work, or don't have the time to do the job properly. As a result, they're trying to change the system so they don't have to work as hard. With only 48 Reform councillors now, they're finding it hard to find chairs for committees."
"The proposed changes will make it harder for Kent residents to find out what they are doing - it will be a return to the 1980's where decisions were being made behind closed doors in smoke filled rooms."
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Cllr Mark Hood, the leader of the Green group at Kent County Council, said Reform will "carry out a review of the number of committees, the number of people who serve on committees, and the frequency that committee meetings are held at the county council."
"Committees [are] there to oversee the behaviour of the administration, and they are the tools that ordinary Kent residents rely on to ensure adequate scrutiny and transparency about the way Reform UK are running the council."
"Reform UK are telling us they've got an overwhelming mandate to do as they please…The reality is they only won 37...
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Reform UK in Kent looks set to drastically cut the number of committees scrutinising its work, Byline Times can reveal, amid claims it can't raise the numbers to do the work, following a wave of suspensions of its own own councillors.
Reform plans to bring a motion to the council in December - which opposition councillors say would cut back on scrutiny - to cut the number of committees holding it to account, following a wave of suspensions that means the administration is struggling to fill vacancies on important council bodies. Nine Reform councillors have been sacked by the party since being elected in May, severely weakening the party's majority.
One option is, Byline Times understands, to abolish cabinet committees entirely - which sense-check decisions of the Reform cabinet - and most scrutiny committees which are not legally-required.
Kent County Council operates a hybrid model with cabinet committees and overview/scrutiny committees which scrutinise decisions after they're made, as well as committees to look at big decisions before they're made. While they have to have an audit committee by law, cabinet committees aren't mandatory and could be in line for the chop.
The change would leave the council with (legally-required) bodies scrutinising governance and audit, standards, and regulatory and planning issues - while potentially abolishing committees for social care, environment and transport, children, young people and education, and growth, the economy, and communities.
A motion pushing for the changes will be put forward in December, the council confirmed to Byline Times. Labour group leader on Kent County Council Cllr Alister Brady argues this will reduce transparency, and shows Reform "are not fit to do the job - they want to reduce checks and balances."
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We're not funded by a billionaire oligarch or an offshore hedge-fund. We rely on our readers to fund our journalism. If you like what we do, please subscribe.
The party's recent suspensions have left a series of key posts unfilled.
Councillor Isabella Kemp, who was elected as a Reform councillor, was previously chair of the housing committee - but can't sit on it anymore since being sacked by her party last week amid internal infighting. She was also vice-chair of the fire authority, which has been thrown into chaos by the latest raft of suspensions by Reform on the council, under leader Linden Kemkaran.
Labour Cllr Brady told this outlet: "Reform are either afraid of hard work, or don't have the time to do the job properly. As a result, they're trying to change the system so they don't have to work as hard. With only 48 Reform councillors now, they're finding it hard to find chairs for committees."
"The proposed changes will make it harder for Kent residents to find out what they are doing - it will be a return to the 1980's where decisions were being made behind closed doors in smoke filled rooms."
Don't miss a story
SIGN UP TO EMAIL UPDATES
Cllr Mark Hood, the leader of the Green group at Kent County Council, said Reform will "carry out a review of the number of committees, the number of people who serve on committees, and the frequency that committee meetings are held at the county council."
"Committees [are] there to oversee the behaviour of the administration, and they are the tools that ordinary Kent residents rely on to ensure adequate scrutiny and transparency about the way Reform UK are running the council."
"Reform UK are telling us they've got an overwhelming mandate to do as they please…The reality is they only won 37...
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