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Kensington and Chelsea London Borough Council

Local authority in London


Local authority in London

FieldValue
nameKensington and Chelsea London Borough Council
coa_picCoat of arms of the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea.svg
coa_res100
coa_captionCoat of arms
logo_picRb kensington and chelsea logo.svg
logo_captionCouncil logo
logo_res120
foundation1 April 1965
house_typeLondon borough council
leader1_typeMayor
leader1Tom Bennett
party1
Conservative
election121 May 2025
leader2_typeLeader
leader2Elizabeth Campbell
party2
Conservative
election219 July 2017
leader3_typeChief Executive
leader3Maxine Holdsworth
party3
election32022
seats50 councillors
structure1KCLBC2024.svg
structure1_res250
structure1_altKensington and Chelsea Council composition
:borderdarkgray}} Conservative (36)
:borderdarkgray}} Labour (7)
:borderdarkgray}} Liberal Democrats (2)
:borderdarkgray}} Green (2)
:borderdarkgray}} Independent (3)
term_lengthWhole council elected every four years
voting_system1Plurality-at-large
last_election15 May 2022
next_election17 May 2026
session_roomKensington and Chelsea Town Hall 2005.jpg
session_res250
meeting_placeKensington Town Hall, Hornton Street, London, W87NX
website

Conservative Conservative ; Administration (36) : Conservative (36) ; Other parties (14) : Labour (7) : Liberal Democrats (2) : Green (2) : Independent (3)

Kensington and Chelsea London Borough Council, also known as Kensington and Chelsea Council, is the local authority for the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in Greater London, England. The council has been under Conservative majority control since its creation in 1965. It is based at Kensington Town Hall.

History

The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea and its council were created under the London Government Act 1963, with the first election held in 1964. For its first year the council acted as a shadow authority alongside the area's outgoing authorities, being the councils of the two metropolitan boroughs of Chelsea and Kensington. The new council formally came into its powers on 1 April 1965, at which point the old boroughs and their councils were abolished.

The old borough of Kensington had held the honorific title of royal borough since 1901. The royal borough status was transferred to the new borough created in 1965, and so the modern council's full legal name is the "Mayor and Burgesses of the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea", although it styles itself Kensington and Chelsea Council or RBKC.

From 1965 until 1986 the council was a lower-tier authority, with upper-tier functions provided by the Greater London Council. The split of powers and functions meant that the Greater London Council was responsible for "wide area" services such as fire, ambulance, flood prevention, and refuse disposal; with the boroughs (including Kensington and Chelsea) responsible for "personal" services such as social care, libraries, cemeteries and refuse collection. The Greater London Council was abolished in 1986 and its functions passed to the London Boroughs, with some services provided through joint committees. Kensington and Chelsea became a local education authority in 1990 when the Inner London Education Authority was dissolved.

Since 2000 the Greater London Authority has taken some responsibility for highways and planning control from the council, but within the English local government system the council remains a "most purpose" authority in terms of the available range of powers and functions.

Powers and functions

The local authority derives its powers and functions from the London Government Act 1963 and subsequent legislation, and has the powers and functions of a London borough council. It sets council tax and as a billing authority also collects business rates and precepts for Greater London Authority functions. It sets planning policies which complement Greater London Authority and national policies, and decides on almost all planning applications accordingly. It is a local education authority and is also responsible for council housing, social services, libraries, waste collection and disposal, traffic, and most roads and environmental health.

Political control

The first election was held in 1964, initially operating as a shadow authority alongside the outgoing authorities until it came into its powers on 1 April 1965. The Conservatives have held a majority of the seats on the council since its creation.

Party in controlYears

Leadership

The role of mayor is largely ceremonial in Kensington and Chelsea. Political leadership is instead provided by the leader of the council. The leaders since 1965 have been:

CouncillorPartyFromTo
last=date=12 April 1968title=New council leaderurl=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0002501/19680412/382/0010access-date=5 June 2024work=Kensington Postlocation=Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelseapage=10via=British Newspaper Archive}}196512 Apr 1968
last=date=8 December 1977title=Council meeting grinds to a halturl=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0002502/19771209/001/0001access-date=5 June 2024work=Kensington Postpage=1via=British Newspaper Archivequote="because this was Sir Malby Crofton's last meeting as leader after 10 years"}}12 Apr 19689 Dec 1977
last=date=30 March 1989title=First female council leader is chosenurl=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0003307/19890330/003/0003access-date=5 June 2024publisher=Chelsea News and General Advertiserpage=3via=British Newspaper Archive}}9 Dec 197711 Apr 1989
Joan Hanham11 Apr 198912 Apr 2000
title=Council minutes, 12 April 2000url=https://rbkc.moderngov.co.uk/Committees/Data/Council/200004121832/Agenda/Minutes.pdfwebsite=Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelseaaccess-date=24 May 2025}}12 Apr 200022 May 2013
Nicholas Paget-Brown22 May 201330 Jun 2017
Elizabeth Campbell19 Jul 2017

Composition

Following the 2022 election and subsequent by-elections and changes of allegiance up to May 2025, the composition of the council was as follows:

PartyCouncillorsTotal50
36
8
2
1
1
2

The two independent councillors sit together as a group. The next election is due in May 2026.

Wards

The wards of Kensington and Chelsea and the number of seats:

  1. Abingdon (3)
  2. Brompton & Hans Town (3)
  3. Campden (3)
  4. Chelsea Riverside (3)
  5. Colville (3)
  6. Courtfield (3)
  7. Dalgarno (2)
  8. Earl's Court (3)
  9. Golborne (3)
  10. Holland (3)
  11. Norland (2)
  12. Notting Dale (3)
  13. Pembridge (2)
  14. Queen's Gate (3)
  15. Redcliffe (3)
  16. Royal Hospital (3)
  17. St Helen's (2)
  18. Stanley (3)

Elections

Since the last boundary changes in 2014 the council has comprised 50 councillors representing 18 wards, with each ward electing two or three councillors. Elections are held every four years.

Premises

The council is based at Kensington Town Hall on Horton Street, which was purpose-built for the council to the designs of Basil Spence between 1972 and 1976 and opened in 1977.

Prior to 1977 the council's functions were split between several buildings, notably including the Old Town Hall on Kensington High Street and Chelsea Town Hall on King's Road, both of which had been inherited from its predecessor councils. The council held its meetings at the Old Town Hall in Kensington.

In 1982 the then leader of the council, Nicholas Freeman, provoked a storm of opposition amongst people of all political persuasions by ordering the overnight destruction of Kensington's Old Town Hall, which had been completed in 1880.

The Royal Fine Art Commission condemned the action as "official vandalism... decided upon covertly, implemented without warning and timed deliberately to thwart known opposition". The Kensington Society predicted that the council would be "completely condemned" for its actions and a journalist writing in The Times recorded the council as being "deeply shamed for the example it had set to other listed-building owners". Demolition work was temporarily halted, but in 1984 it was decided that the building was beyond repair and the rest of the building was demolished and the site redeveloped.

Grenfell Tower fire

On 14 June 2017, a major fire destroyed the council-owned, 24-storey Grenfell Tower, a public housing building in the mainly working-class area of North Kensington, causing 72 deaths. The tower block was managed on behalf of (but independently of) the council by Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation (KCTMO), the largest tenant management organisation (TMO) in England, which is responsible for the management of nearly 10,000 properties in the borough.

On 15 June, Kensington and Chelsea invoked the help of the other London boroughs in supporting the survivors. Responsibility was handed over to a Grenfell fire-response team led by a group of chief executives from councils across London. Resources available to them included central government, the British Red Cross, the Metropolitan Police, the London Fire Brigade and local government across London. Neighbouring councils sent in staff to improve the rehousing response.

On 21 June, the council chief executive Nicholas Holgate resigned amid criticism over the borough's response to the fire. The Prime Minister Theresa May commented that the council "couldn't cope" in the response to the fire, and that it "was right" that the chief executive had resigned. The Conservative leader of the council, Nicholas Paget-Brown, initially resisted calls to resign, He was replaced as leader by Conservative councillor Elizabeth Campbell on 19 July 2017. Lewisham Council's chief executive, Barry Quirk, was seconded to take over from Nicholas Holgate in June and took up the chief executive role on a permanent basis in September 2017.

References

References

  1. (22 May 2025). "Kensington and Chelsea ushers in new Mayor". London News Online.
  2. "Maxine Holdsworth is set to become the new Chief Executive of Kensington and Chelsea Council".
  3. {{cite legislation UK
  4. Youngs, Frederic. (1979). "Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England". Royal Historical Society.
  5. Youngs, Frederic. (1979). "Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England". Royal Historical Society.
  6. {{London Gazette. (19 November 1901)
  7. "Grant terms".
  8. "Former RBKC employees".
  9. {{cite legislation UK. (1985)
  10. [[Education Reform Act 1988]] (c. 40)
  11. Leach, Steve. (1998). "Local Government Reorganisation: The Review and its Aftermath". Routledge.
  12. "Council Tax and Business Rates Billing Authorities". Council Tax Rates.
  13. (12 November 2015). "Local Plan Responses – within and outside London". Mayor of London.
  14. "Compositions Calculator". University of Exeter.
  15. "Local elections: Kensington & Chelsea". [[BBC News Online]].
  16. "London Boroughs Political Almanac: Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea".
  17. . (12 April 1968). ["New council leader"](https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0002501/19680412/382/0010). *Kensington Post*.
  18. . (8 December 1977). ["Council meeting grinds to a halt"](https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0002502/19771209/001/0001). *Kensington Post*.
  19. . (30 March 1989). ["First female council leader is chosen"](https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0003307/19890330/003/0003). *Chelsea News and General Advertiser*.
  20. "Council minutes, 12 April 2000".
  21. (16 April 2013). "LGA chair Sir Merrick Cockell steps down as council leader". The Guardian.
  22. "Council minutes, 22 May 2013".
  23. (30 June 2017). "Kensington Council leader Nicholas Paget-Brown resigns after fatal Grenfell Tower fire". The Independent.
  24. "Council minutes, 19 July 2017".
  25. (5 May 2022). "Local Elections 2022 – Thursday, 5th May, 2022". Kensington and Chelsea London Borough Council.
  26. "Your councillors by political grouping".
  27. "Kensington and Chelsea". Thorncliffe.
  28. legislation.gov.uk - [http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2014/25/made The Kensington and Chelsea (Electoral Changes) Order 2014]. Retrieved on 3 November 2015.
  29. {{cite legislation UK. (2014)
  30. "Building of the month, March 2008: Kensington and Chelsea Town Hall".
  31. (1998). "London's Town Halls". Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England.
  32. (1976). "The Municipal Year Book". Municipal Journal.
  33. (25 June 1982). "Lords questions over Town Hall demolition". Westminster and Pimlico News.
  34. (16 July 1982). "Heseltine asked to look at Old Town Hall site". Westminster and Pimlico News.
  35. (27 August 2014). "Carnival clearing, not backing Boris, and Korean comparisons: politics in Kensington". New Statesman.
  36. "Annual Report 1982". Kensington Society.
  37. (9 February 2007). "Bulldozers outpace the Heritage bureaucrats".
  38. [https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-44190742 Grenfell Tower: Inquiry opens with tribute to stillborn baby]. BBC.
  39. "Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation – The Board". kctmo.org.uk.
  40. Macaskill, Ewen. (18 June 2017). "Council sidelined in Grenfell Tower response as leader refuses to quit". The Observer.
  41. (18 June 2017). "Kensington council sidelined after faltering Grenfell relief effort". Financial Times.
  42. (22 June 2017). "London fire: Kensington council boss quits over Grenfell tragedy". [[BBC News]].
  43. (22 June 2017). "High rise cladding 'combustible' says PM". BBC News.
  44. Walker, Peter. (30 June 2017). "Kensington and Chelsea council leader quits in wake of Grenfell disaster". [[The Guardian]].
  45. (19 July 2017). "Grenfell Tower fire: New council leader heckled by public". BBC News.
  46. Anthony Barej (11 September 2017) [https://www.publicfinance.co.uk/news/2017/09/lewisham-chief-join-rbkc-permanently-following-grenfell "Lewisham chief to join RBKC permanently following Grenfell"], Public Finance magazine. [[Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy]]. Retrieved 24 June 2018.
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