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Suffolk County Council
Governmental body in England
Governmental body in England
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | Suffolk County Council | |
| coa_pic | File:Arms_of_Suffolk.svg | |
| coa_res | 100px | |
| logo_pic | Suffolk County Council.svg | |
| logo_res | 250px | |
| house_type | Non-metropolitan county | |
| leader1_type | Chair | |
| leader1 | Jessica Fleming | |
| party1 | ||
| Conservative | ||
| election1 | 22 May 2025 | |
| leader2_type | Leader | |
| leader2 | Matthew Hicks | |
| party2 | ||
| Conservative | ||
| election2 | 24 May 2018 | |
| leader3_type | Chief Executive | |
| leader3 | Nicola Beach | |
| party3 | ||
| election3 | May 2018 | |
| seats | 75 seats | |
| structure1 | File:SuffolkCountyCouncil Dec2025.svg | |
| structure1_res | 250px | |
| political_groups1 | ;Administration (44) | |
| : | border | darkgray}} Conservative (44) |
| : | border | darkgray}} Green (9) |
| : | border | darkgray}} Labour (6) |
| : | border | darkgray}} Reform UK (6) |
| : | border | darkgray}} Liberal Democrats (5)}} |
| : | border | darkgray}} West Suffolk Ind. (1) |
| : | border | darkgray}} Independent (4) |
| term_length | 4 years | |
| last_election1 | 7 May 2021 | |
| next_election1 | to be confirmed | |
| voting_system1 | First-past-the-post | |
| session_room | Endeavour_House,_home_of_Suffolk_County_Council_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1305044.jpg | |
| meeting_place | Endeavour House, 8 Russell Road, Ipswich, IP12BX | |
| website |
Conservative Conservative : Conservative (44) ;Other parties (31) : Green (9) : Labour (6) : Reform UK (6) : : West Suffolk Ind. (1) : Independent (4) Suffolk County Council is the upper-tier local authority for the county of Suffolk, England. It is run by 75 elected county councillors representing 63 divisions. It is a member of the East of England Local Government Association.
The council has been under Conservative majority control since 2017. It is based at Endeavour House in Ipswich.
History
Elected county councils were created in 1889 under the Local Government Act 1888, taking over administrative functions that had previously been performed by unelected magistrates at the court of quarter sessions. In most counties the quarter sessions were held at a single location, but in Suffolk the custom was long-established of holding the quarter sessions across several days, sitting in different towns. Prior to 1860 the court sat in the four towns of Beccles, Bury St Edmunds, Ipswich and Woodbridge. In 1860 the Beccles and Woodbridge divisions merged with the Ipswich one to form the eastern division, and the area administered from Bury St Edmunds became known as the western division.
Officially it remained one court of quarter sessions which adjourned after each day of hearings and travelled to a new venue, and the original draft bill in 1888 therefore envisaged that there would be a single Suffolk County Council. As the bill progressed through its parliamentary processes an amendment was proposed by Frederick Hervey, 3rd Marquess of Bristol, who lived at Ickworth House near Bury St Edmunds, that the eastern and western divisions of the county should instead become separate administrative counties. The amendment was agreed by 59 votes to 20 in the House of Lords. It was also agreed that the borough of Ipswich was large enough to provide its own county-level functions and so it was made a county borough. Suffolk therefore had three county-level authorities after 1889: West Suffolk County Council, East Suffolk County Council and Ipswich Corporation.
This system continued until 1974, when the Local Government Act 1972 abolished the separate county councils for East Suffolk and West Suffolk and downgraded Ipswich to providing district-level services only. In their place, Suffolk County Council was created with responsibility for county-level services across the whole county. Initially based at East Suffolk County Hall in Ipswich, the council relocated to Endeavour House in 2004.
In September 2010, the council announced that it would seek to outsource a number of its services, in an attempt to cut its budget by 30%. Controversy surrounding the then chief executive Andrea Hill, some concerning £122,000 spent on management consultants, featured in the local and national press in 2011; this led to her facing a disciplinary hearing, and subsequently resigning.
Governance
Suffolk County Council provides county-level services. District-level services are provided by the area's five district councils:
- Babergh District Council
- East Suffolk District Council
- Ipswich Borough Council
- Mid Suffolk District Council
- West Suffolk District Council
With the exception of Ipswich, the rest of the county is covered by civil parishes, which form a third tier of local government.
Political control
The council has been under Conservative majority control since 2017.
The first election to the county 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 control | Years |
|---|---|
| 1974–1993 | |
| 1993–2005 | |
| 2005–2016 | |
| 2016–2017 | |
| 2017–present |
Leadership
The leaders of the council since 1984 have been:
| Councillor | Party | From | To | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Christopher Penn | 1984 | 18 May 1993 | ||||
| Chris Mole | 18 May 1993 | 22 Nov 2001 | ||||
| Jane Hore | 18 Dec 2001 | 22 May 2003 | ||||
| Bryony Rudkin | 22 May 2003 | May 2005 | ||||
| title=Council minutes, 26 May 2005 | url=https://committeeminutes.suffolk.gov.uk/DocSetPage.aspx?MeetingTitle=(21-07-2005),%20County%20Council | website=Suffolk County Council | access-date=3 June 2025}} | 26 May 2005 | 1 Apr 2011 | |
| Mark Bee | 26 May 2011 | 21 May 2015 | ||||
| Colin Noble | 21 May 2015 | 24 May 2018 | ||||
| Matthew Hicks | 24 May 2018 |
Composition
Following the 2021 election and subsequent by-elections and changes of allegiance up to September 2025, the composition of the council was:
| Party | Councillors | Total | 75 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 47 | |||
| 9 | |||
| 6 | |||
| 5 | |||
| 3 | |||
| 1 | |||
| 4 |
The Greens, Liberal Democrats, West Suffolk Independent and one of the independent councillors sit as a 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.
Future
Local Government Reorganisation in Suffolk from 2025 was initiated with Matthew Hicks, the leader of Suffolk County Council welcoming the announcement by the Deputy Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government Angela Rayner that Suffolk had been selected for the government’s fast-track Devolution Priority Programme (DPP) on 5th February 2025.
Suffolk County Council is proposing a single unitary authority covering the whole of the county, a proposal known as "One Suffolk".
The five district councils are, on the other hand, proposing three unitary authorities, a "Central and Eatern" one covering most of East Suffolk and part of Mid Suffolk, a Western one covering West Suffolk and parts of Babergh and Mid Suffolk and an "Ipswich and Southern" one covering Ipswich and parts of Babergh, East and Mid Suffolk.
Premises

The council is based at Endeavour House at 8 Russell Road in Ipswich. It also maintains area offices in Bury St Edmunds and Lowestoft. Endeavour House was built in 2003. It was originally commissioned as private offices but was bought by the county council whilst still under construction; the council moved into the building in 2004. Since 2017 the council has shared the building with Babergh District Council and Mid Suffolk District Council.

Previously the council was based at County Hall on St Helen's Street in Ipswich, the oldest parts of which had been built in 1837 as a jail and courthouse, which had been one of the meeting places of the quarter sessions. The building had become the meeting place of East Suffolk County Council after 1889, and that council had built substantial extensions to the building, notably in 1906 with an office block, new council chamber and clock tower at the corner of St Helen's Street and Bond Street.
Both County Hall and the Shire Hall in Bury St Edmunds had been inherited by Suffolk County Council from the two former county councils when local government was reorganised in 1974; Shire Hall served as an area office until 2009 when the council moved its Bury St Edmunds office to West Suffolk House, a new building shared with St Edmundsbury Borough Council (West Suffolk Council after 2019).
Elections
Elections were held every four years from 1973 to 2021. The next election has been postponed from 2025 to 2026. Since the last boundary changes in 2005 the council has comprised 75 councillors representing 63 electoral divisions, with each division electing one or two councillors. New division boundaries reducing the number of councillors to 70 have been drawn up to come into effect for the 2026 election.
Electoral divisions
Main article: List of electoral wards in Suffolk#County Council
As of 2021, there were 63 divisions of which 51 each returned a single member, a further 12 divisions each being represented by two members. Each councillor is responsible for their own Locality budget which amounted to £8,000 for the 2021/2022 financial year.
| District | No. | Division | Councillor | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Babergh District | 1 | Belstead Brook | Reform UK}}; color:white" | Christopher Hudson |
| 2 | Cosford | Green Party of England and Wales}}; color:white" | Robert Lindsay | |
| 3 | Great Cornard | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Peter Beer | |
| 4 | Hadleigh | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Mick Fraser | |
| 5 | Melford | Independent politician}}; color:black" | Richard Kemp | |
| 6 | Peninsula | Green Party of England and Wales}}; color:white" | Simon Harley | |
| 7 | Samford | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Georgia Hall | |
| 8 | Stour Valley | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | James Finch | |
| 9 | Sudbury | Green Party of England and Wales}}; color:white" | Jessie Carter | |
| 10 | Sudbury East and Waldingfield | Reform UK}}; color:white" | Philip Faircloth-Mutton | |
| Mid Suffolk District | 26 | Bosmere | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Kay Oakes |
| 27 | Gipping Valley | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Chris Chambers | |
| 28 | Hartismere | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Jessica Fleming | |
| 29 | Hoxne & Eye | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Henry Lloyd | |
| 30 | Stowmarket North & Stowupland | Green Party of England and Wales}}; color:white" | Keith Welham | |
| 31 | Stowmarket South | Liberal Democrats (UK, 2025)}}; color:white" | Keith Scarff | |
| 32 | Thedwastre North | Green Party of England and Wales}}; color:white" | Andy Mellen | |
| 33 | Thedwastre South | Liberal Democrats (UK, 2025)}}; color:white" | Penny Otton | |
| 34 | Thredling | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Matthew Hicks | |
| 35 | Upper Gipping | Green Party of England and Wales}}; color:white" | Andrew Stringer | |
| Borough of Ipswich | 16 | Bixley | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Paul West |
| 17 | Bridge | Labour Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Rob Bridgeman | |
| 18 | Chantry | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Nathan Wilson | |
| Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Nadia Cenci | |||
| 19 | Gainsborough | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Liz Harsant | |
| 20 | Priory Heath | Labour Party (UK)}}; color:white" | Lucy Smith | |
| 21 | Rushmere | Labour Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Sandy Martin | |
| 22 | St Helen's | Labour Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Elizabeth Johnson | |
| 23 | St John's | Labour Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Adele Cook | |
| 24 | St Margaret's and Westgate | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Debbie Richards | |
| Liberal Democrats (UK, 2025)}}; color:white" ! | Inga Lockington | |||
| 25 | Whitehouse and Whitton | Independent politician}}; color:black" ! | Sam Murray | |
| Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | David Goldsmith | |||
| East Suffolk District | 45 | Aldeburgh and Leiston | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | T-J Haworth-Culf |
| 46 | Blything | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Richard Smith | |
| 47 | Carlford | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Elaine Bryce | |
| 48 | Felixstowe Coastal | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Steve Wiles | |
| Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Graham Newman | |||
| 49 | Felixstowe North and Trimley | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Stuart Bird | |
| 50 | Framlingham | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Stephen Burroughes | |
| 51 | Kesgrave and Rushmere St Andrew | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Stuart Lawson | |
| Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Debbie McCallum | |||
| 52 | Martlesham | Reform UK}}; color:white" ! | Patti Mulcahy | |
| 53 | Wickham | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Alexander Nicoll | |
| 54 | Wilford | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Andrew Reid | |
| 55 | Woodbridge | Liberal Democrats (UK, 2025)}}; color:white" ! | Caroline Page | |
| 56 | Beccles | Green Party of England and Wales}}; color:white" ! | Caroline Topping | |
| Green Party of England and Wales}}; color:white" ! | Ash Lever | |||
| 57 | Bungay | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Judy Cloke | |
| 58 | Gunton | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | James Reeder | |
| Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Ryan Harvey | |||
| 59 | Halesworth | Green Party of England and Wales}}; color:white" ! | Annette Dunning | |
| 60 | Kessingland and Southwold | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Michael Ladd | |
| 61 | Lowestoft South | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Jenny Ceresa | |
| Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Jamie Starling | |||
| 62 | Oulton | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Edward Back | |
| Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Keith Robinson | |||
| 63 | Pakefield | Labour Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Peter Byatt | |
| Reform UK}}; color:white" ! | June Mummery | |||
| West Suffolk District | 11 | Brandon | Victor Lukaniuk | |
| 12 | Exning and Newmarket | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Rachel Hood | |
| 13 | Mildenhall | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Lance Stanbury | |
| 14 | Newmarket and Red Lodge | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Andy Drummond | |
| 15 | Row Heath | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Colin Noble | |
| 36 | Blackbourn | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Joanna Spicer | |
| 37 | Clare | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Roberta Bennett | |
| 38 | Eastgate and Moreton Hall | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Peter Thompson | |
| 39 | Hardwick | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Richard Rout | |
| 40 | Haverhill Cangle | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Joe Mason | |
| Reform UK}}; color:white" ! | Heike Sowa | |||
| 41 | Haverhill East and Kedington | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | David Roach | |
| 42 | Thingoe North | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Beccy Hopfensperger | |
| 43 | Thingoe South | Conservative Party (UK)}}; color:white" ! | Karen Soons | |
| 44 | Tower | Reform UK}}; color:white" ! | Martin Robinson | |
| Independent politician}}; color:black" ! | David Nettleton |
References
References
- "Chairman of the Council".
- "Chief Executive Officer". Suffolk County Council.
- (1848). "Reports of cases argued and determined in the Queen's Bench Practice Court".
- (1874). "History, Gazetteer and Directory of Suffolk".
- (7 August 1888). "Parliamentary Intelligence: The Local Government Bill in the House of Lords". The Times.
- {{cite legislation UK. (1888)
- (27 December 2018). "New plans revealed for former County Hall in Ipswich".
- (2010-09-23). "Suffolk County Council to outsource most services". [[BBC News]].
- [http://www.private-eye.co.uk/sections.php?section_link=rotten_boroughs&issue=1264 Private Eye]
- (2011-07-06). "Council chief Andrea Hill quits Suffolk Council". BBC News.
- {{cite legislation UK. (1972)
- "Election Maps". Ordnance Survey.
- "Compositions Calculator". University of Exeter.
- (2009-04-19). "Suffolk". [[BBC News Online]].
- (9 October 2012). "Suffolk: Tributes paid to former county council leader Christopher Penn". East Anglian Daily Times.
- (21 May 1993). "Two parties work together for council". Bury Free Press.
- "Council minutes, 18 December 2001".
- (15 May 2003). "Bryony's big challenges". East Anglian Daily Times.
- "Council minutes, 22 May 2003".
- "Council minutes, 26 May 2005".
- (1 April 2011). "Suffolk: County council leader Jeremy Pembroke quits". East Anglian Daily Times.
- "Council minutes, 26 May 2011".
- (31 March 2015). "Suffolk County Council leader Mark Bee to quit". Eastern Daily Press.
- "Council minutes, 21 May 2015".
- (11 May 2018). "Suffolk Conservative leader Colin Noble ousted by Matthew Hicks". BBC News.
- "Council minutes, 24 May 2018".
- "County councillors".
- "Councillors by group".
- (5 February 2025). "Council shake-up sees elections delayed in nine areas". BBC News.
- "Suffolk". Thorncliffe.
- (2025). "Suffolk on the fast-track towards complete council restructuring and devolution".
- "One Suffolk plan submitted to government". [[Suffolk County Council]].
- "Welcome". Three Councils for Suffolk.
- "Case for Change". Three Councils for Suffolk.
- "Suffolk County Council offices".
- (28 May 2004). "Unite and Rule". Building.co.uk.
- (7 August 2017). "Babergh and Mid Suffolk councils set to move to Ipswich in September". East Anglian Daily Times.
- {{NHLE
- "Ipswich's former County Hall". Victorian Society.
- "Contact us".
- "West Suffolk House".
- "Elections - Suffolk County Council".
- {{cite legislation UK. (2002)
- {{cite legislation UK. (2022)
- "Electoral Divisions – Key to Map". Suffolk County Council.
- "Councillor's Locality Budget". Suffolk County Council.
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