Ben Quinn 

Reform UK suspends another member of Kent county council

Isabella Kemp’s departure means party has lost nine of 57 councillors elected in May, including four after video leak
  
  

Nigel Farage posing for photo on a staircase with 30-40 members of the council
Nigel Farage poses with members of Kent county council in July, including Brian Collins (left) and Linden Kemkaran (right). Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK has suspended another member of its “flagship” county council in Kent as it held its first full meeting since the party’s councillors were thrown into crisis by a leaked meeting revealing bitter internal tensions.

The departure of Isabella Kemp, who had also worked as a data protection officer at Reform’s HQ, means the party has lost nine of the 57 councillors elected during the local elections in May.

Kemp said she had started the process of taking Reform UK to a tribunal for unfair dismissal. She said she had contacted the conciliation service Acas and the whistleblowing charity Protect.

The latest turmoil comes after the Guardian published a recording of an incendiary internal meeting in which the council leader, Linden Kemkaran, told dissenting Reform UK colleagues they had to “fucking suck it up” if they did not like her decisions.

Four Reform councillors were suspended shortly after the leak. One of those and another who had been suspended over separate allegations have now formed an “Independent Reformers” group on the council.

Kemkaran faced questions at a full meeting of the council on Thursday about the real-world impact of the suspension of Kemp, who had been chair of the adult social care and public health cabinet committee.

The Liberal Democrats, the second largest group with 12 councillors, appealed to Kemkaran to restore Kemp, who now sits as an independent, as chair of the important committee.

Another impact of Reform’s suspensions of its councillors was felt last month by another committee, which had been preparing to adjudicate on appeals by at least seven families who say they need supported school transport for their children. The committee meeting had to be cancelled because its chair was among those Kemkaran had suspended.

Kemkaran was in combative form during the meeting on Thursday, likening her experience to that of her son who she said had just finished the first phase of military training and had been “beaten up and ambushed”.

She compared the dropout rate among his fellow recruits to the axing of former Reform councillors in Kent, telling the meeting: “Along the way some had quit because they couldn’t hack it. Others had been thrown out for bad behaviour or were simply unwilling to accept discipline. It did make me reflect on my own troops.”

Kemkaran earlier answered simply “yes” when an opposition councillor asked if she believed her behaviour was in line with the Nolan principles setting out recognised standards in public life, and Kent’s own code of conduct.

Kemkaran has come under pressure from other council leaders in Kent after the leaked video showed her complaining about some of them, saying they had a “shocking” level of ignorance about upcoming local government reform plans and suggesting they did not like her because she was a woman.

On Thursday the council leadership also faced repeated questions from opposition councillors over whether it would be raising council tax, after Reform promised savings in leaflets to voters in the local elections. A senior member of Reform’s Kent team had let slip last month that rates may have to rise by 5%, the maximum permitted.

Brian Collins, a member of the Reform cabinet, said no decision had been made on council tax as the local authority was awaiting the outcome of a government funding review.

Alister Brady, a Labour councillor, said: “You are running away from residents when it comes to the question of what you will do on council tax.” He said while he had not agreed with the previous Tory administration, at least it had managed to get together spending plans by this point in its term.

Harry Rayner, the leader of the Tory group of councillors, said the council was now “mired in the consequences of self-inflicted damages” and he had seen nothing to rival it in 40 years of local government experience.

“This council has been made a laughing stock with more clowns on display since I saw Bill Smart’s last circus,” he said.

Kent is one of Britain’s largest county councils, with a £2.5bn annual budget.

 

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