Reform frozen out of scrutiny roles, says leader

Susie Rack,West Midlandsand
Ed James,BBC Radio WM
Jex Parkin A man stands in a city square. He is wearing a navy jacket, grey shirt and maroon tie. He has spiky brown hair and manicured beard. He is looking to the right of the camera at something. Passers-by can be seen in the square behind him, the Bank pub, a Caffe Nero and grassy areas. It is a sunny day.Jex Parkin
Reform UK leader Jex Parkin says it is anti-democratic that his party were not given any scrutiny roles on Birmingham City Council

Reform UK has been frozen out of scrutiny roles at Birmingham City Council despite the party having the most seats, it's leader has said.

The party had ruled itself out of controlling the council following May's elections, saying no one was willing to work with it. But Jex Parkin said he had understood Reform would be given the lions share of seven scrutiny chair positions on the authority, which eventually went to Conservative members.

"Not only were we frozen out of any administration," he said. "We've now been frozen out of the scrutiny roles."

Reform has 23 councillors and gained 20% of the city's vote. Lib Dem Roger Harmer was elected leader on Friday despite the party having 12 seats.

"I think that's incredibly anti-democratic and I think it sets a very concerning precedent if that's the kind of leadership this city's gong to see over the next four years," Parkin said on BBC WM.

Other parties had repeatedly claimed Reform were "divisive" and thrown "jabs" at them during the election campaign, he added.

"What residents wanted to see was a Reform administration and it's a shame that we couldn't form one because of the immaturity, you may describe it, of the other parties," he said.

Chart shows Reform has 23 councillors, Green has 19, Labour has 17, Conservatives have 16, Independents have 14 and Lib Dems have 12.
A breakdown of the number of seats each party holds on the council

The Lib Dems formed a minority administration with the Greens and Better Birmingham Independent Group.

Harmer told BBC Radio WM his appointment was democratic, and that forming coalitions was a "remarkably common thing" in countries where there was no traditional two-party system.

"It is democratic, because it's who got most votes in the chamber on Friday of those people elected by the people of Birmingham," he said.

Parkin claimed it was tricky for Reform to "trust the other parties", and an opposition-led scrutiny would have been most fair for the city.

"We're still the main opposition group, we'll still have a shadow cabinet and we're going to hold this administration to account," he said.

Birmingham was "a great city with a lot of potential, he said.

"I think it's going to need strong accountability, it's going to need strong leadership.

I'm not sure if we're going to see that in the short term, but I think longer term I certainly back Birmingham to get back to its best."

He added he would support an end to the city's bin strike as something "all parties could agree on".

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