The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, visited Harrogate today to attend the final day of the Local Government Association conference.
Mr Sunak, who is the Conservative MP for Richmond in North Yorkshire, is the latest high-profile politician to make an appearance at the three-day event at Harrogate Convention Centre.
It’s the biggest event on the local government calendar and has brought about 1,500 delegates to Harrogate.
On Tuesday, levelling up secretary Michael Gove gave the keynote address. His Labour Party shadow, Lisa Nandy, has also among the speakers.
Yesterday, Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey was in town for the conference and spoke to the Stray Ferret about the party’s ambitions in Harrogate.
Children at New Park Primary Academy also had a surprise visit this afternoon from secretary of state for education, Nadhim Zahawi.
Harrogate Convention Centre tweeted some pictures of Mr Sunak chatting with delegates today.
Day 3 of #LGAConf22 and among the 1,600+ delegates gathered in #Harrogate to debate important issues and make decisions on local public services is @RishiSunak #localgov @LGAcomms pic.twitter.com/WfmE25O5LA
— Harrogate Convention Centre (@HgtConventions) June 30, 2022
Read more:
- Big names in UK politics coming to Harrogate for conference
- Harrogate district MPs divided over Northern Ireland Protocol
- Michael Gove visits Harrogate as local government conference begins
Sir Ed Davey: Lib Dems will target Harrogate and Knaresborough as key seat
The Liberal Democrats are set to make Harrogate and Knaresborough a target seat at the next General Election.
On a visit to Harrogate today, party leader Sir Ed Davey MP told the Stray Ferret the Conservatives had taken local people for granted.
Sir Ed, who was also speaking at the Local Government Association conference at Harrogate Convention Centre, said he would be returning to Harrogate and Knaresborough personally in the run up to the next election.
He said:
“We are going to be working as hard as possible to win this seat. I’m really looking forward to the new candidate being selected very soon.
“I’ll be up here working with them so that we do win this seat.”
Read more:
- Big names in UK politics coming to Harrogate for conference
- Harrogate district MPs divided over Northern Ireland Protocol
- Michael Gove visits Harrogate as local government conference begins
Sir Ed said the Lib Dems’ agenda included tax cuts to tackle the cost of living, better healthcare and “getting tough” on water companies that pump sewage into rivers.
Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, holds a majority of 9,675 in the constituency.
He has been re-elected three times since winning the seat in 2010.
When pressed on how he could be so confident of winning the seat when voters in Harrogate and Knaresborough have returned a Conservative to Westminster for the last 12 years, he said:
“The Conservatives have taken the people of Harrogate for granted.
“We’re going to work hard to earn their votes. One of my criticisms of Conservative MPs is that they have taken their local areas for granted. It has got to stop.
“We will work tirelessly to listen to the communities, to take up their concerns and be their local champion.”
Last week the Lib Dems overturned a 24,239 majority to gain a seat from the Conservatives in the Tiverton and Honiton.
Besides Harrogate and Knaresborough, the party is also expected to focus on Tory marginals such as Cheltenham and Wimbledon, according to iNews.
The Stray Ferret has approached Mr Jones for comment.
Big names in UK politics coming to Harrogate for conferenceSome big names in UK politics including Michael Gove, Ed Davey, Nadim Zahawi and Lisa Nandy will be in Harrogate this week for the Local Government Association (LGA) conference.
The LGA is the national membership body for local authorities. At its annual conference, delegates debate issues affecting councils across the country such as housing, social care and the environment.
Mr Gove, who is secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities, will be giving the keynote address at the conference which takes place from June 28-30 at Harrogate Convention Centre.
Lisa Nandy, Labour’s shadow secretary of state, will also be speaking. As will Nadhim Zahawi, secretary of state for education and Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey.
Jackie Weaver, who became an unlikely internet star of a viral parish council meeting during the covid pandemic, will also be in town to address delegates.
Read more:
- Lib Dem leader Ed Davey to visit Harrogate next week
- Andrew Jones MP writes to Priti Patel about ‘law-breaking’ Travellers
Harrogate fire station changes won’t increase risk to life, says commissioner
North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner Zoe Metcalfe has rejected claims that proposed changes to Harrogate’s night time fire service will increase the risk to lives.
Ms Metcalfe is consulting on a three-year plan for fire services in the county in the face of severe financial pressure.
One of the proposals is to reduce the number of fire engines operating overnight at Harrogate and Scarborough fire stations from two to one.
This has been criticised by firefighters and trade unions, who fear it could cost lives.
But in her first interview with the Stray Ferret since she was elected commissioner in November, Ms Metcalfe said she disagreed with this assessment:
“From everything I’ve seen I’m confident that won’t happen. This is a genuine consultation. I would really urge everyone to engage with it.”
Ms Metcalfe’s Risk and Resource Model 2022 to 2025 Consultation, published in May, sets out how the fire service will deploy its resources over the next three years. It puts the emphasis on fire prevention, especially during the day when most fires occur.

Firefighters tackling a recent blaze in West Tanfield.
Harrogate and Scarborough currently both have an emergency fire engine and a tactical response fire engine operating 24 hours a day.
The model proposes both stations have two emergency response vehicles during the day but only one at night. They would lose their tactical response engines altogether.
Ms Metcalfe was accompanied at the interview by Dave Winspear, who is part of the senior management team at North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service.
Mr Winspear, who is based in Ripon, said the changes would enhance the current fire service model across the county, adding:
“During the times when we know we are busiest we are providing additional resource into those two towns by bringing in a different type of fire engine.
“It improves the ability to respond to a wide range of incidents.
“We are looking to remove a fire engine in the evening when we are quiet but based on the fact that we have robust arrangements in around the Harrogate and Scarborough area from other fire stations that can respond into that area.”
He added the tactical response engine, which will be lost, had “limited response capability” compared to emergency fire engines.

Harrogate fire station
Harrogate currently employs 40 firefighters across four watches and five could be affected by the changes. Mr Winspear said they would be offered the chance to be redeployed.
Government cuts £8m a year
The new model for fire services is being drawn up against a bleak financial backdrop.
The government recently axed North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service’s capital grant, worth about £8m a year.
It means the service could have to borrow up to £31 million over the next five years. Steve Howley, Fire Brigades Union North Yorkshire brigade secretary, has said the service would be left struggling to buy basics.
Ms Metcalfe described the decision to cut the capital grant as “very unfair” at the time it was announced and this week told us she was “working hard for additional funding” to ensure the service didn’t end up in the position outlined by the union.

Zoe Metcalfe
Delays answering 101 and 999 calls
Ms Metcalfe, who was born in Ripon, went to school in Harrogate and now lives in Aldborough, also said she was working to reduce delays in answering 101 and 999 calls in the police control room.
Home Office figures last month showed that North Yorkshire police took on average 30 seconds to answer 999 calls — the third worst performance in the country. The calls should be answered within 10 seconds.
“Over the last couple of years there has been a huge increase in the volume of calls, especially 999 and they come first.”
The commissioner’s office has pledged £140,000 to address the issue. When will people noticed a difference?
The force control room should currently employ 146 full-time equivalent employees across communications and dispatch when it is fully staffed.
Read more:
- Fire Brigades Union ‘seriously concerned’ over cuts to Harrogate service
- Harrogate firefighter brands plans to rely on one fire engine ‘farcical’
There are currently 141. With the commissioner’s additional investment, there will be a revised target of 161.
Ms Metcalfe said a third of calls to police involved mental health issues and it was important to understand the data better and work with other organisations to tackle the issues.
She said her background as a Conservative councillor on Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council meant she was familiar with many of the agencies involved in mental health.
Asked whether she, as a senior Conservative politician, shared Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative MP Andrew Jones’ lack of confidence in Prime Minister Boris Johnson, she said:
“I will leave that to MPs in the parliamentary party.”
You can find out more about the proposed changes and take part in the consultation here.
Andrew Jones MP writes to Priti Patel about ‘law-breaking’ TravellersHarrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has written to Home Secretary Priti Patel about speeding up measures to evict Travellers who break the law.
The Conservative MP said the recent encampment at Hay-a-Park in Knaresborough produced “disorder and anti-social behaviour completely off the scale compared to that associated with previous traveller encampments in our area”.
Mr Jones said his comments were based on reports received from residents, police and landowner Harrogate Borough Council.
Writing on his Community News website, he said:
“Vandalism of property, damage to cars, late night motorbike and quad bike racing through residential estates, break-ins at barns, use of pavements and open space as a toilet were just some of the unpleasantness residents nearby reported and had to put up with.”
Mr Jones added that some Travellers had “took the openness and generosity of spirit which is the hallmark of our communities and simply abused it” and further action was needed to “protect the rights and property of residents against future incursions of this nature”.
Eviction currently takes place three days after notice is served.
“I have written to the Home Secretary asking her to look at ways in which enforcement can be brought forward on the advice of the police where law-breaking occurs from the activities of a travelling community.
“I have also written to our local Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner, Zoe Metcalfe, asking her to look at the policing of this encampment and to see if any improvements could be made with the benefit of this experience.
“Finally, I have asked the council to look at how it can secure public land more effectively and more anticipate the movements of travelling communities and provide appropriate sites to be used as layovers for them.”
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Mr Jones described the Traveller encampment as “a darker episode for many” amid recent celebrations, such as Knaresborough Bed Race and the Queen’s platinum jubilee.
“I want to make sure that local people and travelling communities can enjoy their everyday lives in peace.
“It is a shame when the minority act in a way that risks labelling the majority and that is what my actions are seeking to avoid.”
Harrogate district MPs to vote on Prime Minister’s future
Conservative MPs in the Harrogate district will vote on Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s future this evening after a confidence vote was triggered.
Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee of backbench MPs, confirmed this morning that a ballot will be held at 6pm today.
The move comes as the threshold of 15% of the parliamentary Conservative party seeking a vote of confidence in Mr Johnson was met.
It means Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith, and Nigel Adams in Selby and Ainsty, which includes south and east rural parts of the Harrogate district, will all have a say in the Prime Minister’s future.
Should Mr Johnson lose the vote, he will have to stand down as Prime Minister.
The ballot comes as 54 Tory MPs have submitted letters of no confidence in the wake of partygate and revelations that lockdown parties were held at 10 Downing Street.
What have the Harrogate district MPs said?
Mr Jones was named by the Daily Mail last week as one of the Conservative rebels.
Mr Jones has not publicly called for the Prime Minister to resign and has not revealed whether he submitted a letter to the 1922 committee.
Read more:
- Harrogate district MP: ‘Time for Boris to get on with the job’
- Andrew Jones MP tells constituent he feels ‘anger’ over partygate
- Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones MP named as Tory ‘rebel’
In a letter to a constituent who had asked about the Sue Gray report, he said he felt “anger” over partygate.
Meanwhile, Mr Adams has said previously that it was time for Mr Johnson to “get on with the job” following the publication of the report.
A member of the Prime Minister’s cabinet and a key ally, he said last month:
“The Prime Minister welcomes Sue Gray’s report and has apologised again.
“He now needs to get on with the job, levelling up the country, tackling global challenges including the cost of living and Ukraine crisis and delivering for the country and for the people who put their faith in him in 2019.”
Mr Smith has yet to speak publicly on Mr Johnson’s future.
Conservative leader says ‘send Boris a message theme was clear’ in local electionsThe leader of Harrogate Borough Council has spoken out after his Conservative party were left bruised during last week’s elections to the new North Yorkshire Council.
Councillor Richard Cooper – who was not standing for re-election – partly blamed Boris Johnson for the election results which saw the Liberal Democrats win the most seats in the Harrogate district after more than a decade of Conservative control.
Councillor Cooper said:
“It is right to reflect when you have results that don’t go as you would have wished and I have been in local politics long enough to have seen results go both ways; sometimes with the trend and sometimes against.
“A knee-jerk reaction is seldom the right one although it is clear that the opposition’s oft-repeated ‘send Boris a message’ theme was clear and had some degree of resonance to put it mildly.
“We will need to reflect too on local issues although they did not seem to be the dominant theme of the literature or social media activity during the campaign.
“But while that reflection occurs, as an outgoing council leader and someone who announced his retirement from representative politics some time ago, I would like to congratulate the winners of all parties, commiserate with the losers and look forward to them all promoting our fantastic area in a constructive way for the next five years.”
Councillor Cooper last year announced he will stand down after 24 years of service when the borough council is abolished in April 2023.
Read more:
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Harrogate district village wins eight-year battle for more planning control
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New Conservative Wathvale councillor puts young people at top of agenda
And although the new North Yorkshire Council will remain a Tory majority, the party have suffered some big losses in Harrogate where several senior councillors – including deputy leader Graham Swift – were defeated in last Thursday’s elections.
Previously, the Conservatives had 16 Harrogate district seats on North Yorkshire County Council compared to just two for the Lib Dems.
Now, they have nine while the Lib Dems have taken 10 in what marks a significant swing of power.
Meanwhile, one Independent and one Green councillor were also elected.
Speaking after the results were announced on Friday, Lib Dem leader Pat Marsh – who was voted in to represent the Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone division – said the Conservatives “should realise that being elected isn’t just about having the title of councillor”.
She said:
New Conservative Wathvale councillor puts young people at top of agenda“You have got to be on the council for a reason – and that is to improve the area you represent.”.
Amid the frenzy of Friday’s election results for the new North Yorkshire Council, a new Harrogate borough councillor was voted in.
Conservative Sam Green was elected to represent the Wathvale ward for the final year of Harrogate Borough Council before the authority is abolished in April 2023.
He beat his closest rival Liberal Democrat Chris Knight by 365 votes, while the Green Party’s Hannah Corlett came in third place.
Speaking after his by-election win, Cllr Green, who is 26-years-old and a former Harrogate Grammar School student, pledged to put young people at the top of his agenda.
He said:
“This is my first time standing for election, so I’m of course delighted to have been elected to represent the people of Wathvale.
“I’ll strive unceasingly to try to fulfil the trust and confidence that the people of Wathvale have placed in me and the things in which I believe.
“It is my ambition to encourage greater engagement by younger voters and to try and address the fundamental issues affecting our future generations, including a need for more genuinely affordable homes.”
The by-election was held following the resignation of Conservative councillor Bernard Bateman who held the Wathvale seat since 2016.
Read more:
- Parties react as Tories maintain narrow majority in North Yorkshire
- What cost the Tories votes in the Harrogate district?
Cllr Green, who owns a financial and real estate company in the town, is now the youngest of the borough council’s 39 members.
He added:
“I know first hand from my peers that many young people simply cannot afford to remain in the rural villages and locations in which they have grown up in, in many instances due to the cost of housing or lack of suitable supply.
“This is a critical issue not only for these people and their families, but also for the future of the settlements themselves.
“Without fresh blood and ideas, villages and settlements slowly become less and less sustainable, with the resulting loss of services and facilities.
“Moreover, if our young people are then forced to move out of the borough to meet their housing needs in lower value areas, this creates a needless brain drain and will have several knock on effects across the borough.
“The answer is not simple, but this is something I feel very passionately has to be looked at properly and every viable avenue explored to try and address the issue.”
The turnout for the by-election vote was 38%.
Meanwhile, Conservative Nick Brown was voted in to represent the Wathvale and Bishop Monkton division on the new North Yorkshire Council in last Thursday’s local elections.
His victory was one of a few reasons to celebrate for the Tories, which loosened their grip on Harrogate by winning nine seats on the new unitary authority compared to 10 for the Liberal Democrats.
One Green Party candidate and one Independent were also elected in the district.
North Yorkshire leadership to be discussed at local Tory AGM todayNorth Yorkshire’s Conservative councillors will gather today for their annual general meeting with discussions on who will lead the new authority on the agenda.
After losses across the county, the Conservatives now hold 47 out of 90 seats on the new unitary authority, North Yorkshire Council.
Despite having overall control, the Conservatives have a greatly reduced majority. Whoever leads the new authority will face the challenge of dealing with a larger group of opposing parties.
Cllr Carl Les, the current leader of North Yorkshire County Council, has confirmed he intends to stand as leader once again but his position is by no means certain.
There’s also deputy leader, group secretary and whip roles to be filled.
Councillors have had to put themselves forward ahead of the meeting and it will be down to those at today’s AGM to vote them in.
Read more:
- Parties react as Tories maintain narrow majority in North Yorkshire
- What cost the Tories votes in the Harrogate district?
Talking about Friday’s results, Cllr Carl Les said:
“It has been a sizeable event for us in terms of seats, we’ve gone from 55 out of 72 to 47 out of 90. The council will look very different.
“Whenever you have an election, people often bring up national matters and this time there were a lot of matters on a national level such as Partygate.
“I wish people were more concerned about looking at what we do locally rather than on national issues.”
He said moving forward the main aim would be to work collaboratively with new councillors to ensure a “smooth transition” as devolution gets underway.
“We have to work together as a group, it’s vitally important. Whatever party you are there’s always difference between us but there’s an awful lot that binds us together.
One of the main things is ensuring a smooth transition from eight divisions to one. When it comes to things like bin collection local people shouldn’t feel a difference.”
Election 2022: Ouseburn candidate preview
Ahead of polling day on May 5, the Stray Ferret will be previewing each of the divisions in the Harrogate district up for election to North Yorkshire Council.
A total of 21 seats will be up for grabs in the district with most of the major parties contesting each one.
Today, we look at the Ouseburn division which will see two candidates standing for election.
Richard Musgrave, Conservative
Richard Musgrave will be the Conservative candidate for the Ouseburn division on North Yorkshire Council.
Mr Musgrave is currently the councillor for the Escrick Division on North Yorkshire County Council.
The Stray Ferret asked Mr Musgrave for comment for this preview, but did not receive a response by the time of publication.
A Conservative party spokesperson told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that they were confident in their election campaign and pledged to continue investing in services across North Yorkshire if elected.
A party spokesperson said:
“The Conservatives are fielding an experienced slate of candidates. This is important as we argue the case for local services with settlements from Selby to Richmond and Whitby to Settle.
“That case includes continued investment in local services that has seen a new pool in Ripon and the start of a new pool and leisure centre in Knaresborough.
“We are investing in the Hydro to provide more leisure facilities for local people.
“We need to continue the investment in our conference centre adapting it to the modern conference and exhibition industry. The centre underpins thousands of jobs across the district and brings in an estimated £29m to the local economy.”
Arnold Warneken, Green Party
Arnold Warneken is the Green Party candidate for the Ouseburn division on North Yorkshire Council.
Mr Warneken has lived in Ainsty for 40 years and was the councillor for Marston Moor on Harrogate Borough Council in the 1980s.
He said he joined the Green Party as it “recognises the need for social and environmental justice”.
On standing for North Yorkshire Council, Mr Warneken said:
“I joined the Green Party because it recognises the need for social and environmental justice, through the empowerment of local communities, with positive solutions to the issues that challenge human survival.
“I am active throughout the year organising food parcels via Ainsty Community Larder, medicines deliveries, and transport for residents. I support road safety measures such as 20’s Plenty and better recycling facilities, and I have personally emptied overflowing dog-poo bins. I have also distributed 300 recycling bags & boxes to residents.
“I have a proven track record of getting things done as a volunteer so that I can achieve so much more as a county councillor.”
Read more:
- How the Harrogate district’s wards will change ahead of local election
- Full list of election candidates in Harrogate district revealed