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‘Must have a say!’ Voter watchdog slams Keir Starmer’s latest elections delay

The Electoral Commission has weighed in to demand voters be given their say in their local representatives.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer And Scottish Labour Leader Anas Sarwar Visit Community Center In Glasgow

The PM has been condemned by the Electoral Commission (Image: Getty)

Keir Starmer’s move to delay yet another year’s local elections has been condemned by the official independent watchdog as illegitimate and concerning. The Electoral Commission intervened this afternoon after a last-minute announcement by the Department for Local Government was slipped out yesterday.

Amid outcry from opposition politicians and claims of the PM operating like a dictator, the watchdog issued a damning comment this afternoon. Chief Executive Vijay Rangarajan warned: “Voters must have a say on those that represent them at local government. We are disappointed by both the timing and substance of the statement. Scheduled elections should as a rule go ahead as planned, and only be postponed in exceptional circumstances.”

Cabinet Meeting in Downing Street in London

Local government secretary Steve Reed confirmed the delay yesterday (Image: Getty)

“We are concerned by the possibility of some council elections in May being postponed, and even more by any further postponement to those which already had been deferred from 2025.”

He added: “As a matter of principle, we do not think that capacity constraints are a legitimate reason for delaying long planned elections.”

“Extending existing mandates risks affecting the legitimacy of local decision making and damaging public confidence.

“There is a clear conflict of interest in asking existing Councils to decide how long it will be before they are answerable to voters.”

Yesterday the Department of Local Government said it would be offering 63 local councils the opportunity to avoid going to the polls next year.

Labour is currently overseeing sweeping reforms to councils, including the abolition of some discrict councils and merging them with larger unitary authorities.Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage Holds Rally In Falkirk

Nigel Farage blasted the move as akin to a ‘Banana Republic’ (Image: Getty)

Ministers have argued that holding elections for councils that would be abolished shortly afterwards makes little sense.

However, opposition parties including Reform UK and the Tories have condemned yet another years-worth of election delays.

the Tories’ Sir James Cleverly accused Labour of running “scared from the voters”.

He blasted: “Labour promised council elections would go ahead as planned as recently as last week. Now they’re saying they won’t. Another broken promise. Voters will now be denied the right to elect their own representatives – and not for the first time under this Labour Government.

“Labour are scared of the voters. They thought they could completely overhaul local government and stack the deck in their favour. They were wrong. Earlier this month, Labour cancelled mayoral elections and now they are at it again with council elections, fiddling the democratic process to serve their own political interests.

“It cannot be right that some elected representatives will now be serving seven year terms. The Electoral Commission warned the Government that elections should not be delayed by more than a year, but that has clearly fallen on deaf ears. Labour pushed these changes through at an unrealistic pace and are now blaming local leaders for not being ready.

“Labour talk a good game about empowering communities but they have shown their true colours with their top-down approach to local government and their disdain for local democracy. Only the Conservatives will ensure residents get a fair deal.”

However Nigel Farage slammed the Tories, and demanded that Kemi Badenoch instruct Conservative council leaders to allow elections to go ahead.

The Reform UK leader blasted: “Turkeys don’t vote for Christmas. Tory County Councils look set to collude with Labour to keep their control until 2027.

“Only a banana republics ban elections, that’s what we have under Starmer.”

The Government was approached for comment.

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