All content for Byline Times Audio Articles is the property of Unknown and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The latest articles from Byline Times converted to audio for easy listening
Reform Council Asks Opposition for Help Making Cuts After 'Desperate' Search for Savings Falls Short
Byline Times Audio Articles
9 minutes 37 seconds
1 week ago
Reform Council Asks Opposition for Help Making Cuts After 'Desperate' Search for Savings Falls Short
Support our mission to provide fearless stories about and outside the media system
Packed with exclusive investigations, analysis, and features
SUBSCRIBE TODAY
Reform's flagship 'cost-cutting' Kent County Council leadership has started approaching opposition parties for help finding extra cash, after struggling to identify the tens of millions of pounds in budget savings they promised, Byline Times can reveal.
The newly-won Council was heralded by Nigel Farage as a symbol of what the party could achieve nationally by cutting local government "waste".
The party went on to appoint Reform councillor Matthew Fraser-Moat as a £36,000 cabinet member for what the party calls DOLGE - the Department for Local Government Efficiency, mimicking Elon Musk's aborted efforts under President Trump in the US.
However, the administration has since descended into chaos, with four councillors suspended last week following leaked footage exposing major divisions within the council leadership.
As a result Kent is now reportedly among a series of Reform-led authorities set to break the party's pledge not to raise local taxes.
Opposition councillors have told Byline Times that the party is now so "desperate" for ideas on what to cut to make the upcoming budget add up that it is now arranging brain-storming sessions with opposition parties.
Don't miss a story
SIGN UP TO EMAIL UPDATES
An opposition councillor told Byline Times: "DOLGE is arranging meetings with all political groups because they have run out of ideas. They will not be able to find service delivery efficiencies which do not impact the most vulnerable in society.
"So far they have just been looking to see what can make the best headlines without anything to back it up."
It comes as Zia Yusuf stepped down on Wednesday as head of the national Reform "DOGE" unit that has been "struggling to find council waste to cut," according to Politico. He was just four months into the role and had already resigned once and returned to it.
The outlet reports that Reform second-in-command Richard Tice will take over instead. Yusuf will remain the party's head of policy.
Another opposition councillor, from a different party, told this outlet: "The most painless saving the council can make is to cut the DOLGE charade, because it costs the council about £70,000 a year, and they have failed to come up with any economies."
ENJOYING THIS ARTICLE? HELP US TO PRODUCE MORE
Receive the monthly Byline Times newspaper and help to support fearless, independent journalism that breaks stories, shapes the agenda and holds power to account.
PAY ANNUALLY - £39.50 A YEAR
PAY MONTHLY - £3.75 A MONTH
MORE OPTIONS
We're not funded by a billionaire oligarch or an offshore hedge-fund. We rely on our readers to fund our journalism. If you like what we do, please subscribe.
They claimed that when Kent DOLGE lead councillor Matthew Fraser-Moat presented to the scrutiny committee recently about what the team has done, "the paper presented was basically a rehash of all the claims made by Zia Yusuf and co when they rolled up at County Hall and started lying about our finances."
Asked why they thought DOLGE was asking opposition parties for things to cut, they replied: "I think they're desperate for ideas. We're on the other side of 14 years of austerity and because the fair funding review isn't going to be favourable to Kent County Council that will continue.
"We're not expecting the Government to be more generous than the Conservatives, and Reform have come in expecting to find profligacy in the council which hasn't been the case."
Every directorate of the council has trimmed their budget every year over more than a decade.
"There's no budget to cut at the moment. [Nearly all] the money that we spend is on statutory services that we cannot avoid", they said.
"The scope for reducing the rest of the budget is very small but the valued additional discretionary services include subsidised school bus passes, community wardens, librarie...
Byline Times Audio Articles
The latest articles from Byline Times converted to audio for easy listening