The first meeting of the newly-elected Durham County Council met this morning. It was a lively affair.
The first business was to elect a new Chairman and say farewll to Edna Hunter who was the previous Chair and who lost her seat on 1 May. While I have been celebrating the increase in Lib Dem representation at County Hall and the slashing of the Labour majority, I am personally sad for Edna who, with her husband Roland, has been excellent ambassadors for County Durham during her year in office. She has been the first female Chairman of the Council in over 100 years and broke the male glass ceiling at County Hall with great distinction.
But then it was on to the politics.
First the political ‘balance’. As things stood at the start of this week, Labour had 67 members, Lib Dems 27, Conservatives 10 and there were three independent groups, one with 15, one with 6 and one unaffiliated individual. By this morning the independent situation was unclear, one rumoour was that it had gone to two groups 19-3, although the seating in the chamber appeared much more like 16-6. We shall see.
The relevance of the independents is that, in relation to Overview and Scrutiny and after some strong lobbying from the minority parties, Labour said they would agree to minority parties having chairs/vice chairs of some scrutiny committees.
That was the good news, the bad news was that it was only two out of 12 possible such positions (i.e. two vice chairs) and, in a snub to the Lib Dems and the larger Independent group, they would be offered to the smaller Independent group.
Not surprisingly my members were not amused and in response we decided to put forward an alternative slate for the Leader and Cabinet of the Council.
In the end we were defeated by about 66-39 (there are so many councillors now that the clerks had difficulty getting an exact count and I suspect the pro-Labour vote was higher than this). Disappointingly the Conservatives voted against us and with Labour, so now we know where their sympathies lie!
Even so, once the smoke had cleared, both the new Labour Leader and I did agree publicly to work co-operatively to create an effective structure for the new unitary council that will be in place from April 2009.
It cannot be stressed too much how important it is to get effective arrangements in place to bridge the enormous potential gap between what goes on in County Hall in Durham City and the real day-to-day needs of local communities and neighbourhoods across this great county.