The leaders of a council which has remained under Conservative stewardship for decades have dismissed proposed changes to its constitution.
A full meeting of North Yorkshire County Council, which has been run by Tories for all but eight of the last 50 years, saw the authority likened to the Russian parliament under Vladimir Putin as opposition members vented frustration over the level of control Conservatives exert over meetings.
The meeting heard while the Conservatives only attracted 41% of the votes at last May’s elections, the political group held 100% of the posts on its decision-making executive, control of all but one of its watchdog-style scrutiny committees, and was now looking to restrict the time opposition members could ask questions.
A proposal had been put forward to allow more time for questions, with its proponents saying it would allow them to better hold the ruling administration to account.
Leader of the opposition, Councillor Bryn Griffiths, told the meeting proposals for the county council’s successor unitary authority’s constitution contained clauses that would limit the quarterly question time for the authority’s leader to ten minutes and to five minutes to other executive members.
The Liberal Democrat group leader said democracy was effectively being “guillotined”, leaving sufficient time for only two or three questions to be answered, and no time for follow-up questions.
Coun Giffiths said the Tories’ concession to publish councillors’ questions and the council’s answers on its website was welcome, but it was “not an alternative to democratic questioning and scrutiny in the council chamber and in the public forum”.
Green group leader Councillor Andy Brown told the meeting elected members had a right to have their voice heard and that should not come at the gift of the ruling group.
He urged the Conservatives to give opposition members “the chance to ask sensible questions for a reasonable time”.
Coun Brown added:
“I know nobody here wants to establish a Soviet-style parliament, but if you’re not careful this resembles very much the kind of rule that exists in the Russian parliament at the moment to curb debate. If you vote for it all you will be doing is forcing the opposition to work more closely together.”
The meeting also heard opposition calls for more of the council’s scrutiny committees to be lead by councillors who are not in the administration’s party, but Conservatives rejected claims they were “marking their own homework” and argued they had an open transparent system of scrutiny that had worked well for many years.
A move to end notices of motion to full council being referred to the council’s executive without debate was also voted down by Conservatives, who argued the proposal would lead to inordinately long and unfocused meetings.
However, the meeting heard the proposed constitution would give about 90 minutes for councillors’ questions.
The authority’s deputy leader, Councillor Gareth Dadd, said the constitution would be reviewed in a year.
He said rather than having to wait for the quarterly full council meetings to ask questions, the proposed system would enable members to ask questions immediately and get a response from executive members within ten working days.
Coun Dadd said by publishing councillors’ questions and responses to them the unitary authority would operate “a more modern way of doing business”.
Both Coun Dadd and other executive members underlined that the council chamber was about debate and holding the executive to account, rather than raisng very parochial issues, and the constitution aimed to “protect the integrity of the council chamber”.
Harrogate Spring Water and Yorkshire Tea suspend trade with RussiaHarrogate Spring Water and Yorkshire Tea said today they will cease trade with Russia with immediate effect.
The two Harrogate-based companies issued statements in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has so far claimed about 13,000 lives and forced two million people to flee their homes.
A Harrogate Spring Water spokesperson said:
“Harrogate Spring Water has made the decision to stop all exports to Russia with immediate effect.”
Russia has been one of Harrogate Spring Water’s biggest export markets in the past, according to multiple articles published in 2013.
An article in The Business Desk, published in 2013, said water sales in Russia has increased by 40% year-on-year.
The company itself tweeted an image of Russian President Vladimir Putin drinking a bottle of its water in 2013.
https://twitter.com/HarrogateSpring/status/375589127275560960?s=20&t=DQo5_CMsbRdj8AltJnys1g
Read more:
- Harrogate firefighter Bruce Reid forced to abort Ukraine mission
- Ripon man helping Ukraine says ambulances are being shot by Russians
Yorkshire Tea is owned by Taylors of Harrogate, a 130-year-old company founded in Harrogate. It has a distributer in Moscow.
A spokesperson for Taylors of Harrogate said today:
“Like everyone, we’ve been deeply shocked and saddened by the invasion and our thoughts are with all those impacted.
“Our ethical trade and human rights policy states that our values guide how we work with suppliers, customers and distributors, including the provision that we will not trade with individuals, entities, regions or countries where UK sanctions have been applied.
“While Russia has been an export market for some of our teas for several years, as a result of the invasion and the subsequent sanctions we’ve suspended trade.”
All brands owned by Taylors of Harrogate, which also include coffee products, will no longer be exported to Russia.