Reform hike Council taxes after a promise to cut them.

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Reform UK have control of a few Councils and have promised to bring down rate bills

Seven local authorities set to hike council tax by more than 5%​

A row of green wheelie bins with small green recycling boxes next to them on a quiet residential street
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
Bin collection is among the services provided by local authorities
ByBrian Wheeler, Political reporter and Elizabeth Glinka, West Midlands political editor
Seven English local authorities have been given permission by the government to increase their council tax by more than the 5% normally allowed to ease a "challenging financial position".

Most local councils are allowed to increase their share of tax bills by up to 5% - and must ask for residents' permission in a referendum before hiking it further.

But the seven councils have been given permission to bust the cap without a referendum when bills land on residents' doormats in April.

Three of them - Reform-controlled Worcestershire County Council, Liberal Democrat-controlled Shropshire and North Somerset, which is run by Lib Dem-led coalition - are likely to increase bills by 9%.
Authorities in Trafford and Warrington - both Labour controlled - and Lib Dem-led Windsor and Maidenhead have been allowed to raise their share of council tax by up to 7.5%.

Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council, which is run by a Lib Dem-led coalition, can raise its share by up to 6.75%.

With the exception of Trafford, none of these areas are holding elections in May.

Local government minister Alison McGovern said the government had only agreed to "small additional flexibilities" in the seven areas to ease financial pressure.

"These additional flexibilities are a limit, not a target. Decisions on council tax levels are for local authorities," she said.

The cap-busting increases are lower than the seven councils requested "in almost every case", the government said, and people living in those areas will not see their bills "pushed above the national average".

Worcestershire is likely to prove awkward for Reform UK after the party promised to "reduce waste and cut your taxes" on leaflets in the West Midlands at last May's local election.

The council has warned it is facing effective bankruptcy and has also applied for a £71m emergency bailout from the government.

But council leader Jo Monk, who defected from the Conservatives to Reform before last year's elections, denied she had "lost control" of the council's finances.

"We have only been doing it for nine months. I think we have got hard job and we are going to do our absolute best to sort this mess out," she told the BBC.
Three people sat behind a table at a press conference, including the leader of Worcestershire County Council, Cllr Jo Monk, and Richard Tice, deputy Reform UK leader.

Image caption,
Jo Monk (centre), who leads Worcestershire County Council, was joined by her party's deputy leader Richard Tice
Reform's deputy leader Richard Tice took the unusual step of joining Monk and other council leaders at a media briefing on Friday, where he said Worcestershire was in the greatest financial trouble of the 12 councils it runs in England.

He said he was confident the council, which had asked for permission to increase council tax by up to 10% from April, would turn things round.

But his words were not enough to prevent Reform councillor David Taylor resigning from the party live on air on the BBC's Politics Midlands show on Sunday.

The Worcestershire county councillor said people in his constituency were "skint" and did not have the money "to pay for a massive upheaval in council tax".

A Reform spokesman said Taylor "has never been prepared to undertake the role of a councillor to the extent we feel is required" and resigned when challenged.

Worcestershire is one of about 100 local authorities in England to have applied to the government for Exceptional Financial Support, external.

The government is expected to write to councils shortly with their decision on funding.

The government has also announced an extra £440m in so-called recovery grants for councils in economically deprived areas - and an extra £272m to tackle homelessness.

"We promised to reconnect funding to deprivation and this final settlement delivers on that promise," said McGovern in a written statement on Monday, external.

"With more new funding, we're giving councils the certainty they need to plan ahead and transform services.

"Our purpose is to support families, tackle homelessness before it happens, and finally giving communities worst affected by historic cuts their fair share."

But Steven Broadbent, finance spokesman for the County Councils Network, said the funding had been "unfairly" targeted at urban and metropolitan borough councils - and county councils would be forced to increase tax and cut services.

The government also announced on Monday that it would be spending £5bn on writing off 90% of councils' historic debts relating to special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) support, accumulated up to April this year.
 
Reform have no control of Worcester county council, see below.

Reform UK leads Worcestershire County Council as the largest party following the 2025 elections, with Joanne Monk as Council Leader, but they don't have an overall majority (27 seats vs. 30 needed), so they are running a minority administration, with key decisions made on a vote-by-vote basis, risking opposition from other parties.
 
Reform have no control of Worcester county council, see below.

Reform UK leads Worcestershire County Council as the largest party following the 2025 elections, with Joanne Monk as Council Leader, but they don't have an overall majority (27 seats vs. 30 needed), so they are running a minority administration, with key decisions made on a vote-by-vote basis, risking opposition from other parties.
At least you know where you are with Reform Uk in La La Land, the same Tory Ministers who continue to lie in a wholesale fashion to the British public Same people same lies.
 
Labour allowed a 10% rise after promising to freeze council tax. This raise is in line with Labour councils and government policy.
Yes but Reform said that they would CUT council taxes, a party with no governmental experience is guilty of making commitments that WHEN elected are very easily cast aside,a very venal approach and an uninspiring debut to local politics does NOT look good.No better than what has gone before without the experience, that is what you get with an unwanted bunch of Tory rejects.
 
I really can't take seriously anyone who thinks that Reform are really the mould-breaking, trailblazing catalyst for real change that they present themselves as. I consider that believing them, let alone voting for them, is a sign of a severe mental defect.
 
Yes but Reform said that they would CUT council taxes, a party with no governmental experience is guilty of making commitments that WHEN elected are very easily cast aside,a very venal approach and an uninspiring debut to local politics does NOT look good.No better than what has gone before without the experience, that is what you get with an unwanted bunch of Tory rejects.
When you posted Reform did it autocorrect from Labour? Labour had 14 years in opposition and still were totally unprepared to govern. Lucky they didn’t make commitments that WHEN elected were easily cast aside 🤨
 
If anybody wants the truth, over the last decades Tory and Labour sold off the country's assets and left Britain a shadow of its former self. Controlled from abroad and foreign money as much as any other country. Barely able to defend itself or to sort anything out domestically, or internationally.
But feel free to vote for them. They've been fine obviously. Have a look around at how just fine it is.
 
When you posted Reform did it autocorrect from Labour? Labour had 14 years in opposition and still were totally unprepared to govern. Lucky they didn’t make commitments that WHEN elected were easily cast aside 🤨
The subject is Reform Uk and their maladministration of public finances,they promised much better and instead of cutting Council Tax Rates they have ballooned, THEY are under the microscope not Labour,under another thread I would happily debate Labour and their slavish adherance to manifesto pledges. I intend to show why Reform UK are unelectable and are scrabbling along trying to bury their policy commitments and as a result they are unelectable on anything more than a cursury glance. Quite frankly I expected better, at least keeping their pledges for a few months but alas they have proven to be thoroughly useless.
 
The subject is Reform Uk and their maladministration of public finances,they promised much better and instead of cutting Council Tax Rates they have ballooned, THEY are under the microscope not Labour,under another thread I would happily debate Labour and their slavish adherance to manifesto pledges. I intend to show why Reform UK are unelectable and are scrabbling along trying to bury their policy commitments and as a result they are unelectable on anything more than a cursury glance. Quite frankly I expected better, at least keeping their pledges for a few months but alas they have proven to be thoroughly useless.
It's not really a story if Labour have raised all of their council tax rates. It's just normal in that case - in line with government policy. You should be delighted that their rolling in behind the great leader Starmer.
 
Funny how politicians never "promised" anything. It's impossible to even remember broken promises from our politicians. Manifesto promises need to be made constitutionally binding, or trigger an election. Then some real and attainable promises can be made. Anybody could promise anything with the current rules in place. Then not do it and even try to delay elections. Note how terms were a maximum of five years, yet elections were always after four. That won't be happening from now on. Labour will hold on until the last minute.
 
Funny how politicians never "promised" anything. It's impossible to even remember broken promises from our politicians. Manifesto promises need to be made constitutionally binding, or trigger an election. Then some real and attainable promises can be made. Anybody could promise anything with the current rules in place. Then not do it and even try to delay elections. Note how terms were a maximum of five years, yet elections were always after four. That won't be happening from now on. Labour will hold on until the last minute.
As every Party does, it is a Mr. Micawber approach,something will turn up.
 
As every Party does, it is a Mr. Micawber approach,something will turn up.
They don't though. They do the decent thing and go. This lot should already be gone. We're heading towards COVID like times, but without the COVID. Restrictions on everything and high costs. Money is the usual reason governments go, not ideology. Labour can't grasp that so try to enforce ideology for five years and hope some of their sh1t sticks.
 
They don't though. They do the decent thing and go. This lot should already be gone. We're heading towards COVID like times, but without the COVID. Restrictions on everything and high costs. Money is the usual reason governments go, not ideology. Labour can't grasp that so try to enforce ideology for five years and hope some of their sh1t sticks.
😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 bull 💩 💩 💩 💩
 
😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 bull 💩 💩 💩 💩
The last five year term was the Conservative Labour coalition. 2010-2015. Not sure of Blair and Thatcher but my feeling is four year terms before elections. Both going before the end of their terms. Then it was Wilson before that who managed over the five years. Nearly all served four year terms and called an election. As I said, this will be like Wilson: call an election at the last possible legal date, probably at midnight. It won't be due to their popularity. In fact, the complete opposite.
 
If anybody wants the truth, over the last decades Tory and Labour sold off the country's assets and left Britain a shadow of its former self. Controlled from abroad and foreign money as much as any other country. Barely able to defend itself or to sort anything out domestically, or internationally.
But feel free to vote for them. They've been fine obviously. Have a look around at how just fine it is.

I completely agree with your truth, but the question is are Reform actually presenting an alternative to that?

It’s a load of ex Tory MPs, led by a bloke more interested in ‘foreign money’ than any politician I can remember.

I understand the desire for change. I have exactly the same desire.

But Reform are not change - it’s just more flawed neoliberal economics and culture war bollocks.
 

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