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East Sussex County Council

Local authority in East Sussex, England

East Sussex County Council

Summary

Local authority in East Sussex, England

FieldValue
nameEast Sussex County Council
coa_picArms of the East Sussex County Council.svg
coa_res100
coa_altArms of East Sussex County Council
coa_captionCoat of arms
logo_picEast Sussex County Council.svg
logo_res200px
logo_captionCouncil logo
house_typeNon-metropolitan county
leader1_typeChair
leader1Roy Galley
party1
Conservative
election17 May 2024
leader2_typeLeader
leader2Keith Glazier
party2
Conservative
election221 May 2013
leader3_typeChief executive
party3
leader3Becky Shaw
election32010
seats50 councillors
structure1East Sussex County Council January 2026.svg
structure1_res200px
:borderdarkgray}} Conservative (22)
:borderdarkgray}} Liberal Democrats (12)}}
:borderdarkgray}} Labour (5)
:borderdarkgray}} Green (5)
:borderdarkgray}} Reform (2)
:borderdarkgray}} Independent (4)
term_length4 years
voting_system1First past the post
last_election16 May 2021
next_election1to be confirmed
session_roomEast Sussex County Hall.jpg
session_res250
session_altCounty Hall at Lewes
meeting_placeCounty Hall, St Anne's Cresent, Lewes, BN71UE
website

Conservative Conservative ; Administration (22) : Conservative (22) ; Other parties (28) : : Labour (5) : Green (5) : Reform (2) : Independent (4)

East Sussex County Council is the upper tier local authority for the non-metropolitan county of East Sussex in England. The non-metropolitan county is smaller than the ceremonial county; the latter additionally includes Brighton and Hove.

East Sussex is divided into five local government districts. Three are larger, rural, districts (from west to east: Lewes; Wealden; and Rother). The other two, Eastbourne and Hastings, are mainly urban areas. The rural districts are subdivided into civil parishes.

The council has been under no overall control since 2023, being led by a Conservative minority administration. It has its headquarters at County Hall in Lewes; there are a number of other administrative buildings located throughout the county.

History

Sussex was historically divided into six sub-divisions known as rapes. From the 12th century the practice arose of holding the quarter sessions separately for the three eastern rapes and the three western rapes, with the courts for eastern rapes being held at Lewes. This position was formalised by the County of Sussex Act 1865, with the eastern and western divisions of Sussex treated as separate counties for the purposes of taxation, law enforcement, asylums and highways, whilst still deemed to be one county for the purposes of lieutenancy, militia and the coroner.

Elected county councils were established in 1889 under the Local Government Act 1888 to take over the administrative business of the quarter sessions. The eastern and western divisions of Sussex therefore became the administrative counties of East Sussex and West Sussex with separate county councils. The two administrative counties were still treated as one county for certain ceremonial purposes, notably sharing the Lord Lieutenant of Sussex and Sheriff of Sussex. The large towns of Brighton and Hastings were deemed capable of providing their own county-level services and so they were made county boroughs, independent from East Sussex County Council. Eastbourne was later also made a county borough in 1911.

Old County Hall, Lewes: Council's headquarters until 1938.

The first elections were held in January 1889 and East Sussex County Council formally came into its powers on 1 April 1889, holding its first official meeting on the same day at County Hall in Lewes. John Dodson, Lord Monk Bretton, a Liberal peer and former Member of Parliament, was appointed the first chairman of the council.

Local government was reformed in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, which made East Sussex a non-metropolitan county. As part of the 1974 reforms it ceded the Mid Sussex area (including Burgess Hill and Haywards Heath) to West Sussex, but gained the three former county boroughs of Brighton, Eastbourne and Hastings. East Sussex and West Sussex also became separate ceremonial counties, with East Sussex gaining its own Lord Lieutenant and High Sheriff. The lower tier of local government was rearranged at the same time, with the county being divided into seven non-metropolitan districts.

In 1997 the two districts of Hove and Brighton were merged to become a unitary authority called Brighton and Hove, independent from the county council, leaving only five districts in the area administered by the county council. Brighton and Hove (which subsequently gained city status in 2001) remains part of the ceremonial county of East Sussex.

Governance

East Sussex County Council provides county-level services. District-level services are provided by the county's five district councils: Eastbourne Borough Council, Hastings Borough Council, Lewes District Council, Rother District Council and Wealden District Council. Most of the county is also divided into civil parishes, which form an additional tier of local government. The exceptions are the two boroughs of Eastbourne and Hastings, which are unparished.

Political control

The council has been under no overall control since a by-election in August 2023, prior to which it had a Conservative majority.

Political control of the council since the 1974 reforms has been as follows:

Party in controlYears

Leadership

The leaders of the council since 1999 have been:

CouncillorPartyFromTo
David RogersMay 1999Jun 2001
Peter Jones19 Jun 2001May 2013
Keith Glazier21 May 2013

Composition

Following the 2021 election and by-elections and changes of allegiance up to November 2025, the composition of the council was:

PartyCouncillorsTotal50
22
12
5
5
2
4

Two of the independent councillors sit together as the "Independent Democrats" group, the other three are not aligned to any group.

In February 2025, the government postponed the elections that were due to take place in May 2025 for a year, to allow for alternative local government structures for the area to be considered.

Premises

The council is based at East Sussex County Hall on St Anne's Crescent in Lewes, which was purpose-built for the council in 1968. There are additional offices in Eastbourne and Hastings.

Southover House: County Council offices 1938–1998

When first created the council met at the old County Hall in Lewes, now known as Lewes Crown Court, which had been built in 1812 as a courthouse and had served as the meeting place for the quarter sessions which preceded the county council.

The council outgrew the space available there and in 1928 it purchased a large sixteenth century house called Pelham House to use as additional offices. In 1938 the council extended Pelham House to include a council chamber and committee rooms and also built a large office block called Southover House in the former gardens of Pelham House, with the two neighbouring buildings then serving as the council's main offices and meeting place, and the old County Hall reverting to being purely a judicial facility.

By the 1960s the council again needed more space and so the current County Hall was built. Southover House was sold to Lewes District Council in 1998. Full council meetings continued to be held in the council chamber at Pelham House until 2003 when a new council chamber was created in the 1968 County Hall and Pelham House was sold.

Elections

Main article: East Sussex County Council elections

Since the last boundary changes in 2017 the council has comprised 50 councillors representing 50 electoral divisions. Elections are held every four years.

Notable members

  • Lord Rupert Nevill (1954–1967)

References

References

  1. "Council meeting, 7 May 2024".
  2. "East Sussex County Council".
  3. See [[List of civil parishes in East Sussex]]
  4. "Connection". Sussex Newsroom.
  5. (1865). "A Compendious Abstract of the Public General Acts". Law Journal Reports.
  6. {{cite legislation UK. (1888)
  7. "Eastbourne Municipal Borough / County Borough". GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth.
  8. (2 April 1889). "East Sussex County Council". Mid Sussex Times.
  9. {{cite legislation UK. (1972)
  10. {{cite legislation UK. (1995)
  11. {{cite legislation UK. (1997)
  12. "Election Maps". Ordnance Survey.
  13. (2023-08-04). "East Sussex County Council: Tories lose overall control after by-election".
  14. Holl-Allen, Genevieve. (2023-08-04). "Tories lose control of heartland Sussex council in by-election blow". The Telegraph.
  15. "Compositions Calculator". University of Exeter.
  16. (27 May 1999). "Cabinet government comes to East Sussex". Mid Sussex Times.
  17. (13 June 2001). "Only Princes defeat upsets Tories". Eastbourne Gazette.
  18. "Council minutes, 19 June 2001".
  19. (18 April 2013). "Long serving leader Peter leaves County Council". Sussex World.
  20. "Council minutes, 21 May 2013".
  21. "East Sussex". Thorncliffe.
  22. "Councillors by party".
  23. (5 February 2025). "Council shake-up sees elections delayed in nine areas". BBC News.
  24. "History of East Sussex County Council: Meetings and buildings". East Sussex County Council.
  25. "Council buildings".
  26. {{National Heritage List for England
  27. (3 August 1928). "County Council Offices: Pelham House to be purchased". Sussex Express.
  28. (26 August 1938). "Lewes Notes and Comments". Sussex Express.
  29. Land Registry title ESX225351, Southover House, Southover Road, Lewes, change of ownership 9 January 1998
  30. {{cite legislation UK. (2016)
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