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Kirklees Council

English local authority


Summary

English local authority

FieldValue
nameKirklees Council
coa_picCoat of arms of Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council.png
coa_captionCoat of arms
coa_res175px
logo_picKirklees Council.svg
logo_res175px
house_typeMetropolitan borough
foundation1 April 1974
leader1_typeMayor
leader1Elizabeth Smaje
party1
Conservative
election121 May 2025
leader2_typeLeader
leader2Carole Pattison
party2
Labour
election217 July 2024
leader3_typeChief Executive
leader3Steve Mawson
party3
election32023
members69 councillors
structure1Kirklees Council Oct 2024.svg
structure1_res250px
political_groups1: Labour (23)
:borderdarkgray}} Conservative (16)
:borderdarkgray}} Liberal Democrats (10)}}
: {{color box#008C82borderdarkgray}} Community Alliance Kirklees (6)
:borderdarkgray}} Green (4)
:borderdarkgray}} Independent (10)
joint_committeesWest Yorkshire Combined Authority
voting_system1Multiple member first-past-the-post
last_election12 May 2024
next_election17 May 2026
session_roomTown Hall and Concert Hall - geograph.org.uk - 321863.jpg
meeting_placeTown Hall, Ramsden Street, Huddersfield, HD12TA
website
constitution

Conservative Labour : Conservative (16) : : Community Alliance Kirklees (6) : Green (4) : Independent (10)

Kirklees Council, also known as Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council, is the local authority for the metropolitan borough of Kirklees in West Yorkshire, England. As a metropolitan borough council it provides the majority of local government services in the borough. Since 2014 the council has been a constituent member of the West Yorkshire Combined Authority.

The council has been under no overall control since 2024. It meets at Huddersfield Town Hall and has its main offices in the nearby Civic Centre.

History

Kirklees Council was established on 1 April 1974, when Kirklees and West Yorkshire were created under the Local Government Act 1972. The eleven former district councils within the area were abolished at the same time. Kirklees was awarded borough status, allowing the chair of the council to take the title of mayor.

The council was originally a district-level authority in a two-tier local government structure, alongside West Yorkshire County Council providing county-level services. However, the metropolitan county councils, including West Yorkshire County Council, were abolished in 1986 under the Local Government Act 1985. Since 1986 Kirklees Council has therefore been responsible for most local government functions in the borough.

Policing, fire services and public transport continued to be run on a county-wide basis by councillors from all five West Yorkshire boroughs. In 2012 responsibility for policing was transferred to the directly-elected West Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner, and then to the Mayor of West Yorkshire in 2021.

The council has been a constituent member of the West Yorkshire Combined Authority since 2014. The members of Kirklees Council elect one member of the combined authority.

Following several years of funding cuts from national government, in 2016 the council started transitioning to a different service model which the cabinet called being a New Council. The stated aim was to focus the reduced resources on services that only the council can provide, particularly those supporting vulnerable people, while encouraging communities to do more for themselves.

After the 2016 local elections the council was temporarily run without an elected leader. Labour councillors initially decided to replace incumbent leader David Sheard with Shabir Pandor, however Pandor's nomination to become leader at the council's AGM fell after Sheard and three other Labour councillors did not attend the meeting. With no leader, the council was run temporarily by the Chief Executive. Sheard was eventually re-elected as leader and appointed Pandor as his deputy. Pandor was subsequently elected leader of the council following the 2018 local elections.

In June 2016 the Huddersfield Daily Examiner exposed several councillors who had failed to pay their Council Tax in what it called the 'Ratesgate scandal'. Five serving councillors, four Labour and one Conservative, had been issued with court claims after previously receiving reminder letters. Two councillors who had denied the allegations, Deputy Leader Jean Calvert and Amanda Pinnock, were suspended by the Labour Party. All councillors subsequently paid their debts before facing the court.

At the 2021 local elections Joshua Sheard became the youngest councillor to be elected to Kirklees Council, at the age of 19.

In July 2023 Shabir Pandor resigned as council leader, reportedly before facing a vote of no confidence from Labour councillors. At the time Pandor was facing accusations from opposition councillors of misleading the council in his handling of Labour councillor Fazila Loonat, who had been convicted of perverting the course of justice.

History nearly repeated itself the following year, when Leader Cathy Scott faced a no-confidence vote following the local elections in which Labour lost control of the council, due to both a large drop in Labour's share in the vote as well as several Labour councillors resigning in early 2024 over the Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer's stance on the Gaza war. This group would go on to form a bloc on the council known as the Kirklees Community Independents Group.

In the weeks following the election, several more Labour councillors resigned from the party, including Cllr Scott after she had been replaced as Labour Leader in the council. Cllr Scott stated she would continue as Leader of the Council as an independent, subsequently forming a new council cabinet with positions taken up by the other now-independent councillors, now known as the Community Alliance. and leaving no party with a majority on the council.

Failings in children's services

In late 2016 Ofsted inspected Kirklees Council's services for vulnerable children and judged them to be inadequate. In response, Education Secretary Justine Greening appointed Eleanor Brazil as Children's Services Commissioner to make recommendations for improvement.

In her report published following the 2017 general election, Ms Brazil found that Kirklees did not have the leadership or management capacity to achieve the required standard. She recommended that Kirklees enter a formal partnership with Leeds City Council, a good neighbouring local authority. The Director of Children's Services in Leeds, Steve Walker, took overall responsibility for services in Kirklees.

In June 2019 Ofsted conducted another inspection and found all aspects of children's services still required improvement to be good.

Governance

Political control

The first election to the council was held in 1973, initially operating as a shadow authority alongside the outgoing authorities until the new arrangements came into effect on 1 April 1974. Political control of the council since 1974 has been as follows:

Party in controlYears

Leadership

The role of Mayor of Kirklees is largely ceremonial. Political leadership is provided by the leader of the council. The leaders since 1986 have been:

CouncillorPartyFromTo
John HarmanMay 19863 March 1999
title=Dimmock is new leader of Kirkleesurl=https://www.findmypast.co.uk/image-viewer?issue=BL%2F0005244%2F19990211&page=5access-date=25 June 2025work=Batley Newsdate=11 February 1999page=5}}3 March 1999May 2000
Kath Pinnock9 June 2000May 2006
Robert Light24 May 200621 January 2009
Mehboob Khan21 January 2009February 2014
David Sheard26 March 201425 May 2016
29 June 201623 May 2018
Shabir Pandor23 May 201826 July 2023
Cathy Scott13 September 202323 May 2024
23 May 202417 July 2024
Carole Pattison17 July 2024

Composition

Following the 2024 election, and subsequent by-elections and changes of allegiance up to March 2025, the composition of the council was:

PartyCouncillorsTotal69
23
16
10
4
16

Of the independent councillors, eight sit together as the 'Community Alliance' group, three form the 'Kirklees Community Independent' group and the other five do not belong to a group. The next election is due in May 2026.

Premises

The council generally meets at the Town Hall on Ramsden Street in Huddersfield, which had been built in 1881 for the old Huddersfield Borough Council. The council's main offices are at the Civic Centre, a complex of buildings lying to the west of the town hall between Albion Street and Market Street. The council also maintains a customer service centre on Town Hall Way in Dewsbury.

Elections

Since the last boundary changes in 2004, the council has comprised 69 councillors representing 23 wards. Elections are held three years out of four, with one third of the councillors (one for each ward) elected each time for a four-year term.

Mayor

Councillors appoint a mayor each year. The mayor represents the council at civic engagements and supports the work of their designated charity. They chair council meetings and are expected to be politically impartial whilst they hold the post, although they do get a casting vote in the event of a tie.

NamePartyCivic Year
Reginald Hartley, JP
William Gregory
Andrew Alastair Mason
Jack Brooke
Major Charles Cyril Kenchington
Donald White
Marjorie Fisher
Fred Pickles, J
Jack Wood
Alfred Ramsden
Stanley Dawson
Colin C. Walker, JP
Mary Walsh
George Speight, JP
John Greaves Holt
Colin Watson
Thomas Patrick O'Donovan
Jack Brooke
David A. Wright, JP
John Mernagh, JP
Harold Sheldon
Kenneth Douglas Sims
Allison Harrison
Rita Briggs
Michael Bower
Harry Fox
Ann Elspeth Denham
Mohan Singh Sokhal, JP
Margaret R. Bates
Barbara Allonby
Mary Harkin
Margaret Fearnley
Donald Firth
Jean Calvert
Kamran Hussain
Julie Stewart-Turner
Andrew Palfreeman
Eric Firth
David Ridgway
Martyn Bolt
Ken Smith
Paul Kane
Jim Dodds
Christine Iredale
Gwen Lowe
Mumtaz Hussain
Nigel Patrick
Masood Ahmed
Cahal Burke
Nosheen Dad

References

References

  1. "Council minutes, 21 May 2025".
  2. Council, Kirklees. (1 October 2023). "Chief Executive, strategic directors and service directors".
  3. {{cite legislation UK. (1972)
  4. {{cite legislation UK. (1973)
  5. (28 March 1974). "District Councils and Boroughs". [[Hansard.
  6. {{cite legislation UK. (1985)
  7. (4 September 2012). "Police and crime commissioner elections: West Yorkshire". BBC News.
  8. (4 May 2024). "Mayor of West Yorkshire".
  9. "Meetings and Committees".
  10. (23 January 2017). "Our new council". It's time to talk.
  11. (May 2016). "Kirklees Council leader Clr David Sheard announces shock departure". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  12. (May 2016). "Toppled Kirklees Council leader David Sheard takes to Twitter to vent anger". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  13. (May 2016). "Ousted Kirklees Council leader speaks out over Labour coup against him". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  14. (May 2016). "Put up or shut up!' Angry Kirklees Council leader-elect Shabir Pandor vows to fight on". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  15. (May 2016). "Chaotic scenes as Kirklees Council struggles to find a new leader". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  16. (June 2016). "Re-elected Kirklees Council leader David Sheard adds new faces to his top team Angry Kirklees Council leader-elect Shabir Pandor vows to fight on". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  17. Earnshaw, Tony. (23 May 2018). "New era for Kirklees Council as Shabir Pandor is elected leader". Huddersfield Examiner.
  18. (June 2016). "Named: The Kirklees councillors summonsed over council tax arrears". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  19. (June 2016). "Councillors suspended by the Labour party after council tax controversy". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  20. Earnshaw, Tony. (16 May 2021). "The 19 year old biscuit factory worker now sitting on Kirklees Council". Yorkshire Live.
  21. Marlow, Abigail. (27 July 2023). "Kirklees Council leader Shabir Pandor was set to face vote of no confidence before shock resignation". Yorkshire Live.
  22. Marlow, Abigail. (14 July 2023). "Kirklees council leader urged to resign after allegations of 'wilfully misleading' the council". Yorkshire Live.
  23. (1 June 2024). "Council Leader Cathy Scott Says It's "Business As Usual" For Kirklees Council Despite Upheaval And Mass Resignations". Huddersfield Hub.
  24. (13 February 2024). "Kirklees Council Labour Group Hit By Resignation Of Four Councillors In Protest Over Gaza And Local Leadership". Huddersfield Hub.
  25. (20 February 2024). "Ex-Labour members form new group on Kirklees Council after 'toxic swamp' resignations". [[Yorkshire Live]].
  26. (13 May 2024). "Kirklees councillor Musarrat Khan quits Labour over party's 'moral direction'". [[BBC News]].
  27. (23 May 2024). "Kirklees Council leader leaves Labour Party as other councillors resign". [[Yorkshire Live]].
  28. (14 May 2024). "Kirlees Council To Get New Leader After Cathy Scott Is Ousted By Labour Group". Huddersfield Hub.
  29. Dillon, Gemma. (14 May 2024). "Rebuilding trust a priority for new Labour leader". [[BBC News]].
  30. Moss, Alex. (17 July 2024). "Council leader ousted after vote of no confidence". [[BBC News]].
  31. (25 November 2016). "Inspection of services for children in need of help and protection, children looked after and care leavers and Review of the effectiveness of the Local Safeguarding Children Board".
  32. (25 November 2016). "Statutory direction to Kirklees Council in relation to children's services under Section 497A(4B) of the Education Act 1996".
  33. Brazil, Eleanor. (14 September 2017). "Kirklees Children's Services: report to the Secretary of State".
  34. Shaw, Martin. (15 September 2017). "MPs vow to hold Kirklees to account after Leeds City Council brought in to sort out failing children's services". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  35. (10 June 2019). "Kirklees Children's Services: Inspection of children's social care services".
  36. "Compositions Calculator". University of Exeter.
  37. (March 2016). "Previous Local elections summary". Kirklees Council.
  38. (16 May 1986). "Turning point after a year of turmoil". Huddersfield Daily Examiner.
  39. (11 February 1999). "Dimmock is new leader of Kirklees". Batley News.
  40. (25 May 2000). "Impasse leaves council without elected leader". Batley News.
  41. (15 June 2000). "It's Kath, 'first lady' of Kirklees". Batley News.
  42. (29 May 2014). "Kirklees Lib Dem leader Kath Pinnock steps down as leader". Dewsbury Reporter.
  43. (9 May 2006). "Hopkins elected as Tory group leader". Telegraph and Argus.
  44. "Council minutes, 24 May 2006".
  45. (22 January 2009). "Tories toppled from power". Yorkshire Live.
  46. "Council minutes, 21 January 2009".
  47. (9 January 2014). "Kirklees Council leader Mehboob Khan steps down as leader for new job in London". Yorkshire Live.
  48. "Council minutes, 26 March 2014".
  49. (1 July 2016). "Sheard is re-elected as Kirklees Labour councillors put differences aside". Dewsbury Reporter.
  50. (8 May 2018). "History repeats itself as controversial councillor takes control of Kirklees Labour group". Yorkshire Live.
  51. "Council minutes, 23 May 2018".
  52. (27 July 2023). "Shabir Pandor quits as leader of Kirklees Council amid controversy over councillor jailed for lying". Huddersfield Hub.
  53. Marlow, Abigail. (27 July 2023). "Kirklees Council leader Shabir Pandor was set to face vote of no confidence before shock resignation". Yorkshire Live.
  54. "Council minutes, 13 September 2023".
  55. (17 July 2024). "Council leader ousted after vote of no confidence". BBC News.
  56. (24 May 2024). "Leader of Kirklees Council resigns from the Labour Party amid 'deep-seated concerns over its direction' and sets out her goal to lead a 'fresh start' in the district". [[Dewsbury Reporter]].
  57. "Council minutes, 17 July 2024".
  58. (18 October 2024). "Kirklees Council has a new member after by-election in Holme Valley". [[Yorkshire Live]].
  59. "Kirklees". Thorncliffe.
  60. {{NHLE
  61. "Customer Service Centres".
  62. {{cite legislation UK. (2003)
  63. (January 2017). "Former mayors".
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