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Opinion: It’s clear from the off that it won’t be business as usual at County Hall, writes Simon Finlay

Depending on how one views these things, the first day in the chamber at Kent County Council for Reform UK’s newly-elected members was a day for triumph or triumphalism.

The victors clapped, cheered, walloped the tabletops, and gave standing ovations to themselves, while the minuscule opposition contingent watched in bemused fascination or near disgust. Decorum, their faces seemed to say, was in rather short supply.

Reform UK members gather on the stairs at County Hall
Reform UK members gather on the stairs at County Hall

But it was Reform’s time, after all, and who could deny them their gloating rights?

These Farage-following newbies are not of the old UKIP stereotype variety - all maroon-trousers, blazers, club ties and whiskers.

The Reform UK lot was a symphony in turquoise as they gathered on the grand, red-carpeted staircase. Matching ties, pressed dark suits and sharp shoes with one or two sporting brand new hair-dos.

The women, and there are quite a few, seemed to have followed the dress code: Make it sassy.

At first flush, they look determined, confident, on it. They clearly prefer the pack mentality presently, partly because they hardly know each other and because only a handful know what they are actually doing.

But then that is true of every person who enters life as an elected public servant. Most MPs haven’t a clue what they’re doing when they enter the Houses of Parliament for the first time. This is no different.

Reform has the mandate delivered at the polling stations and those on the losing end of the chamber will have to get used to it.

Although no one will say it publicly in the opposition ranks, they are just waiting for Reform to foul up

In time, it will be clubbable, full of cliques and friendships, perhaps some out-of-hours, chummy bonhomie in the coffee bars and boozers.

There are a fair few younger members, too, which is no bad thing. Back in the dying days of the long Conservative administration, even its own backbenchers admitted it had become way too “pale, male and stale”.

“The Barbarians are no longer at the gate,” messaged one of the opposition members with a knowing look up to the assembled press folk loitering in the public gallery.

Although no one will say it publicly in the opposition ranks, they are just waiting for Reform to foul up.

Cornered in the corridor, one sidled up and said: “The place will be ****ing bankrupt in nine months with this lot in charge.”

Others were not so charitable with the timeline, it has to be said. It is probably sour grapes. Bad losers, and all that.

Such a large Reform group in the chamber - 57 of 81 after May 1 - will be hard to manage, to keep sweet and onside.

That will be the job, in part, of the amiable and youthful chief whip Maxwell Harrison. At 25, he entered the political arena at a time of great change in local government.

Clearly, his leader, Linden Kemkaran, is not relishing the prospect of compulsory reorganisation, which will entail KCC demolishing itself, fearing Kent will cease to be “one county, one people”.

She has a point but she may not have any choice. Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner’s “Devolution Revolution” seems a fait accompli and will require a collegiate approach with the 13 other doomed authorities in Kent.

Despite the absence of a reprieve from the government, it is said that there is far from harmony among the council leaders about what the county will look like - with either three or four new unitary authorities.

They have around six months to come up with a plan.

So, they’d better get a move on or face the prospect of having the decision made for them. Maybe the no-nonsense Cllr Kemkaran can knock some heads together?

Local democracy reporters Simon Finlay, Daniel Esson, and Robert Boddy host the Kent Politics Podcast each week
Local democracy reporters Simon Finlay, Daniel Esson, and Robert Boddy host the Kent Politics Podcast each week

There are plenty of ways to stay in the know when it comes to politics in Kent and Medway.

For more from Simon Finlay and the local democracy team, you can sign up to the Kent Politics Briefing newsletter, which arrives in inboxes every Friday.

You can also listen to our Kent Politics Podcast. This week’s episode welcomes Whistable Green councillor Stuart Heaver, who also gives his views on the first council meeting.

You can listen to the podcast at IM Listening, or download it from Apple Podcasts, Spotify and TuneIn – just search for Kent Politics Podcast. New episodes are available every Friday.

And you can watch the KMTV Kent Politics Show every Friday at 5pm on Freeview channel 7 and Virgin Media channel 159.

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