Harrogate Borough Council‘s Conservative leaders took a parting swipe at the BBC, Gary Lineker and local media at the final cabinet meeting last night.
The council will be abolished in just over a week’s time to make way for the new North Yorkshire Council.
The cabinet met to accept a £2.5 million grant from central government to help buy 21 homes for Afghan and Ukrainian refugees, as reported last week.
Graham Swift, deputy leader of the council, said:
“One of the frustrating things about being a councillor in Harrogate is the amazing good things that are done by the Conservative government.
“This is another example, £100 million putting into the aid of people who really need it most and yet is ignored by the Gary Linekers of the world, the BBC of the world and media organisations in Harrogate who aspire to operate under the same principles of the BBC.”
Cllr Swift, who lost to Liberal Democrat Peter Lacey in his bid to represent Coppice Valley and Duchy division on North Yorkshire Council, added:
“I think it’s just fantastic that these sort of things are carried out. “
Council leader Richard Cooper, who did not stand for election to the new council, nodded in support of Cllr Swift’s comments and replied by saying what the government does “dun’t fit with the narrative sometime”.
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Cllr Mike Chambers, the cabinet member for housing and safer communities, added:
“It’s well known that Harrogate Borough Council over the years has always stood by those people who are in greater need than many of us.”
The money will come from the government’s Local Authority Housing Fund, which is a £500 million grant fund launched enabling English councils to provide housing for those unable to find accommodation.
In the Harrogate district, just over £2 million will go towards buying 19 homes for Ukrainians and just under £500,000 will help buy two larger four-bedroom homes for Afghan families currently in temporary accommodation.
Harrogate district MPs yet to reveal who they want as Prime MinisterThe three Conservative Harrogate district MPs are yet to publicly reveal who they are backing in the race to become the next Tory leader and Prime Minister.
Since Boris Johnson resigned last Thursday, 11 MPs have declared leadership ambitions.
They include former Chancellor Rishi Sunak, current Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss.
Whoever is selected will bring in their own team, signalling a change of fortunes for many Conservative MPs.
Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith, a former chief whip to former Prime Minister Theresa May, was well regarded during his time as Northern Ireland Secretary from 2019 to 2020 and could be hoping for a return to a senior role.
Selby and Ainsty MP Nigel Adams , who is currently a minister without portfolio in the Cabinet Office, is regarded as one of Boris Johnson’s loyalist allies. He stood outside Downing Street next to Carrie Johnson when the PM made his resignation speech.
Some of Mr Johnson’s allies have been critical of Richmond MP Rishi Sunak’s bid so it seems unlikely Mr Adams will support the current bookies’ favourite.
According to a report in The Times on Saturday, Mr Adams has been telling friends he will get a peerage in Mr Johnson’s final honours list.
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Harrogate and Knaresborough’s Andrew Jones, a rail minister under Theresa May, has been openly critical of Mr Johnson in the last few months and voted against him in the confidence vote. But like Mr Smith and Mr Adams, he has yet to state who he supports.
The Stray Ferret asked all three MPs what qualities they are looking for in the next leader and if they have a preferred candidate but none has responded.
Mr Smith is currently 200/1 to become the next leader with most bookmakers, which drifted from 100/1 over the weekend.
Mr Adams is also 200/1. The bookies do not currently have a price for Mr Jones.
Second homes council tax premium plan gets mixed receptionA plan to tackle the affordable housing crisis in North Yorkshire by doubling the council tax charge on second homes has received a mixed reception.
North Yorkshire County Council has said the proposal to introduce a 100% council tax premium on all second homes in the county from April 2024 will depend on the government passing legislation in the coming months.
The move would double an average band D council tax charge for second home owners to more than £4,100 in some of the most heavily affected areas of the county.
Announcing the proposal, the authority stated it had potential to generate an annual £14m windfall to fund services and affordable housing schemes, funding for which the North Yorkshire Rural Commission identified as a significant challenge. About £1.5m would come from the Harrogate district.
Upper Dales councillor Yvonne Peacock, whose drive to introduce a council tax premium on second homes was rejected by Richmondshire District Council four years ago, said she was “absolutely delighted” by the county council’s proposal.
She said the premium would bring some rarely used second homes on to the market as “people don’t like paying over the odds for anything”, while the funding it would generate would overcome one of the biggest obstacles to building affordable houses.
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About half of the “windfall” would come from properties in Scarborough district, especially along the coast, and a further large proportion from Richmondshire, which the county council has stated would be shared with all precepting authorities, such as police, rather than ploughed directly back into the most affected areas.
A report to a meeting of the council’s executive, which is considering the proposal on Tuesday, warns that numerous concerns have been raised whether the second homes premium might encourage council tax premium avoidance, with owners transferring properties to holiday lets to qualify for discounted business rates.
Devaluing fears
The proposal has been met with open hostility by some who say it has potential to flood the housing market with properties, devaluing homes and undermining the viability of businesses which depend on second home owners.
County council Independent group leader Councillor Stuart Parsons described the move as “one of the stupidest suggestions the Tories have ever come up with”, adding it would cause more damage than good as there would be “so many loopholes people could dodge out of paying the premium as they wish”.
Restricting the premium to second homes rather than holiday lets would simply lead to the creation of “a multitude of small companies”, he added, to which owners would pay a small nominal fee to themselves to stay at their properties.
Cllr Parsons predicted the authority would see a net loss in council tax as a result and that a levy limited to 100 per cent more council tax would be “pass vaguely unnoticed” by many second homeowners.
Other local politicians have claimed some areas of the county are suffering more due to holiday lets than second homes.
Nevertheless, Councillor John Amsden, chairman of planning in Richmondshire district, said while he welcomed action, the proposed premium would be “a non-starter unless you can pin a property’s ownership down”.
He said:
Chancellor Rishi Sunak visits Harrogate today“It is a step in the right direction, but the problem is now local people cannot afford many of the properties due to a rise in demand, particularly in areas with good broadband connections, after the pandemic.
“Why should we have to suffer depopulation, see our infrastructure like schools and roads dwindle and watch hospitality industry struggle to find staff due to people wanting a second home?”
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
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- Big names in UK politics coming to Harrogate for conference
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Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones MP named as Tory ‘rebel’
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has been named in a Daily Mail article today about Conservative MPs plotting to oust Boris Johnson.
Mr Jones has told constituents asking about partygate that his “anger is not going to lessen”.
His also said:
“I understand the anger people feel. I feel it too. Most of all I feel intensely depressed that senior people in our political system have pretended, or somehow genuinely believed, that tables groaning with bottles of wine, as we have now seen pictured, were in some way allowed work practices.”
But Mr Jones has not called for the Prime Minister to resign and has not revealed whether he has submitted a letter calling for a vote of no confidence in Mr Johnson to Sir Graham Brady, chair of the backbench 1922 committee. Fifty-four Tory MPs must do so to trigger a leadership contest.
Mr Jones has declined to respond to questions about the matter from the Stray Ferret.
Nevertheless the Daily Mail includes him in a list of 41 Conservative MPs in an article about Tory ‘plotters’.
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- Andrew Jones MP tells constituent he feels ‘anger’ over partygate
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York Outer MP Julian Sturdy is also named, along with former Cabinet minister Andrea Leadsom and former Shadow Home Secretary David Davis.
The article claims the ‘rebels’ could get enough support for a confidence vote next week.
It quotes Home Secretary Priti Patel urging them to “concentrate on doing our jobs” rather than creating a “distraction”.
She adds:
“Writing letters is a sideshow, quite frankly, rather than focusing on the real challenges that we have to find solutions to.’
“Our job is to deliver on the people’s priorities. They won’t thank the Conservative Party for talking about itself at a time when people have anxieties, concerns, apprehensions. Our job is deliver for them.’
Harrogate’s Independents vow to stand again
A group of five Independents has vowed to stand in future elections after they failed to win a seat on the new North Yorkshire Council.
Anna McIntee (Stray, Woodlands, Hookstone), Lucy Gardiner (Valley Gardens & Central Harrogate), Sarah Hart (Harlow Hill and St Georges) Daniel Thompson (Coppice Valley and Duchy) and Jon Starkey (Boroughbridge & Claro) all stood for the election on May 5.
Using the motto ‘Time for a Change’ and sporting pink uniforms, they pledged to put a stop to housebuilding in the area and oppose transport schemes like the Harrogate Station Gateway.
In the end, the district’s electorate voted for change, but it was the more familiar yellow of the Liberal Democrats that they chose.
But during their concession speeches at the election count, Ms Hart, Mr Thompson and Ms Gardiner all suggested they’d stand again in future elections, with a potential Harrogate Town Council on the horizon.
‘Same old faces’
It was a disappointing set of results for the Independents, in contrast to the strong showing by Independents in Ripon.
Over the past couple of years, thousands of people signed petitions set up by Anna McIntee and Lucy Gardiner to oppose the Oatlands Drive one way scheme and the Beech Grove Low Traffic Neighbourhood.
However, they weren’t able to translate successful petitions into votes.
Ms McIntee came fourth in her division with 167 ticks next to her name.
Ms Gardiner and Ms Hart fared better, receiving over 300 votes each, but they didn’t come close to beating the victorious Tory and Lib Dem councillors they were up against.
The five candidates met for a debrief last week where they reflected on the campaign.
Ms Gardiner said they were disappointed to see “the same old faces and old ideas being returned for another five years”.
She said:
“We were not just paper candidates but true representatives of the community, sharing many of the main issues as the residents and businesses, too many houses, no proper infrastructure, increase in congestion with no realistic solutions, pocket planning, all the wasted money on vanity projects, to name a few.
“It is disappointing that we didn’t get the majority and it was a shame there wasn’t an Independent candidate for every seat. However, considering we had no party machine behind us and none of us had ever stood before, we didn’t do too badly.”
Mr Starkey said he was disappointed by the low turnout.
“An average of only 36% voted and many still voted for the ‘party’ rather than the ‘person’, so we have to ask ourselves why?
Is the thought process ‘let’s give them another chance’, ‘I’ve always voted the same’, ‘it’s time for change’, or ‘what’s the point?’”
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- What cost the Tories votes in the Harrogate district?
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Upsets
Before the election, it was difficult to predict who would vote for the ‘Time for a Change’ five.
Would it be disgruntled Conservative voters? Or people who don’t usually vote but who were attracted to their anti-establishment message?
The Conservatives failed to win three of the five seats where the independents stood.
These included the current deputy leader of Harrogate Borough Council, Cllr Graham Swift. He came a close second in the Coppice Valley and Duchy division, in a big upset for the Lib Dems.
Daniel Thompson came third and suggested his 199 votes helped to deny Cllr Swift the win.
Ms Gardiner said they succeeded in part of their aim of getting “the wrong people out”.
She said:
“We may not have succeeded by getting in but we certainly opened up the conversation and put the cat amongst the pigeons seeing a few key Conservatives in ‘safe’ seats voted out.”
Mr Thompson added:
“The Conservatives have been in power for years and their only legacy is a shambolic local plan favouring the pockets of the national house builders, pocket planning with multi million pound cycling lanes going nowhere and the (reported) £17 million vanity project that is the Civic Centre.”
Local issues
Following the abolition of HBC next year, it’s expected that a Harrogate town council will be set up to potentially manage local assets such as the Stray and Harrogate Convention Centre.
Elections could take place in 2024, and Ms Gardiner said the independents want to ensure Harrogate has a strong “community” voice, free from the shackles of party politics.
She said:
Strayside Sunday: Was it Boris or was it local failure?“Our efforts weren’t in vain, the independents aren’t going anywhere and we will strive to ensure Harrogate and Knaresborough doesn’t get swallowed up by the new North Yorkshire Council.
“We must not be led by politics, we must be led by the community and have a town council with the right people at the helm.”
Strayside Sunday is a monthly political opinion column. It is written by Paul Baverstock, former Director of Communications for the Conservative Party.
In the wake of last week’s local elections, Councillor Richard Cooper, the Leader of Harrogate Borough Council, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that the Conservatives poor showing could be put down to dissatisfaction with Boris Johnson’s national government.
And what a poor showing it was for the blues, with 10 of 21 Harrogate district seats turning yellow. The Lib Dems ended the evening as the largest group in the Harrogate district and with the most seats (8/13) on the Harrogate and Knaresborough Area Constituency Committee.
I do, however, have some sympathy with Mr. Cooper’s view that national issues predominated. My household and our area relatives voted Liberal Democrat en masse, in some cases voting that way for the first time in their lives.
We simply could not bring ourselves to vote Conservative because of the shambles in Westminster. Shambles both singular (…Boris Johnson,) and shambles plural (…his cabinet).
I felt compelled to vote against the interests of a man with no integrity, no honour and no shame. I didn’t try, nor did I need to, persuade others in my circle to do the same. As with millions of people around the country they came to the view that Boris is not to be trusted. Nor, increasingly, is he to be liked.
We know he lied and lied again about Partygate and his role in it. We know too that whatever his role he presided over a 10 Downing Street with a work culture that would make any self-respecting American frat house blush. A culture lacking appropriate sobriety. Worse yet a culture lacking appropriate accountability.
The question that gurgles out of the Downing Street cess pit is precisely what, these days, represents a resigning issue?
I don’t contest that Boris had a half-decent coronavirus and lockdown. I think too that he has been almost exemplary in his handling of British interests and leadership in respect of Ukraine.
But these issues, and the consequential negative economic and cost of living crisis effects are going to severely test the nation in the months ahead and to navigate that needs the government to reach into a now non-existent goodwill bank account.
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- What cost the Tories votes in the Harrogate district?
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Boris is responsible for that penury, along with Rishi’s wealth and wife’s non-dom status, Priti’s ghastly and shaming “send them back to Rwanda” policy, and pretty much anything to do with Jacob Rees-Mogg.
This government’s juice is not worth the squeeze: As a result councils like Westminster, Wandsworth, Barnet and Southampton slipped from Tory grasp last week and the North Yorkshire almost did.
Andrew Jones MP must now be in fear of his seat, bless him. Harrogate has a solid Liberal Democrat base again and a recent tradition of its parliamentary representation.
When approached for comment by the Ferret on local elections night he waved our intrepid journo away. Not for him it seems to speak to local residents through, by some margin, the most read news outlet in the district.
Prideful nose bitten to save fearful face? Silly man. He may well come to regret his stance come the night of the next General Election, if indeed he stands – some think that he may give way to a Richard Cooper candidacy.
If so, Stray Ferret readers can no doubt look forward to continuing ghosting from the local Conservative Party during the next couple of years. This kind of behaviour goes beyond the obviously misguided view in some local Tory circles that the Ferret is a Liberal Democrat organ and becomes a democratic insult to local constituents.
Which brings me back to the local election results. Whatever the national picture Harrogate Borough Council has not covered itself in glory these past few years. Expensive (vanity?) projects like the Knapping Mount council HQ, Appy Parking, and now the Station Gateway development substituting for a concerted and sustained effort to get the planning and economic development knitting right.
The town centre of Harrogate is a sorry mess; with empty shop fronts and discount outlets wherever you look. Oxford Street’s concrete desert lacks any sort of charm.
This was meant to sorted out through the town plan, a plan which was never used as the means to bring people together in share municipal endeavour. Instead, multiple outsourced and bought consultations led to division, stasis and, as we can see, inaction.
National issues were important last Thursday, but don’t kid yourselves that local issues didn’t matter at all, Messrs Jones and Cooper.
Your tenure has been marked by arrogance and a lack of focus on issues that matter a great deal to local people. And, notwithstanding that responsibility for highways rests with North Yorkshire County Council, the landmine like potholes and crazy pavements of the district matter too.
If indeed Double Devolution happens as Leader of NYCC Councillor Les Carl says it still will, the newly formed Harrogate Town Council will need to get a grip and quickly. If not, the local Liberal Democrat ascendency might very well continue.
That’s my Strayside Sunday.
PS Love the Stray Ferret’s royal bunting!
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.
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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:
“You have got to be on the council for a reason – and that is to improve the area you represent.”.