- David Henwood, leader of the IOA group on the council, worked alongside other opposition group leaders to try to force a special meeting of the full Council
- As a result, on 6 Jan, Susan Brown confirmed that a special meeting of the city council would take place at 5pm on Wed 14 January, immediately before the Government’s response deadline of 15 Jan.
- When the agenda for the meeting on 14 Jan came out, it was apparent that there was no motion, and therefore no vote, planned for the meeting.
The accompanying briefing paper recommended that “Members consider and debate the issues set out in this report in relation to the Oxford City Council 2026 local elections”. This falls far short of the Council reaching a decision, let alone recording in a vote the strength of views.
We considered this to be totally unsatisfactory – effectively setting the stage for the decision to be taken OUTSIDE the Council chamber.
So we wrote another letter.
- On 12 January, IOA wrote to the Council’s Chief Executive, Caroline Green, and the Monitoring Officer, Emma Jackman, raising procedural concerns about the meeting and the lack of a vote, and making specific reference to the Council’s own constitution.
- The IOA emailed both local MPs, Anneliese Dodds and Layla Moran with a copy of our letter to the Chief Executive, pointing out that we had received an inadequate reply, and asking them to get involved.
Layla Moran’s office responded saying she could not respond to anyone other than one of her constituents, even though we made it clear we were writing on behalf of her constituents in Oxford.
There was no reply at all from Anneliese Dodds or her office.
- CG responded by email on 14 January, assuring us that the response sent to the Secretary of State would “reflect the comments of councillors made in the chamber”; and refusing our request for IOA councillors to “see a copy of the response to be sent to the Minister before it goes”, saying that they could not commit to this “given the timelines involved in terms of a need to reply by Thursday this week”.
- Meanwhile, our councillor David Henwood, along with other opposition councillors, was still pushing for councillors to have a vote at the meeting. The request was denied again on the afternoon of the meeting.
- On the afternoon of the meeting (14 Jan), IOA led a protest outside the Town Hall, which was reported in the Oxford Mail and on the BBC. Several IOA members observed the meeting from the public gallery.
- A significant majority of councillors spoke in favour of the elections going ahead, complained at there not being a vote at full council, and asked that their comments be included in the minutes.
- IOA then sent directly to the Minister of State, a letter signed by all four of our city councillors, pointing out that the letter from the Leader of the City Council did not reflect the strength of feeling of the Council, and that it over-stated capacity issues. We further highlighted that three claims made regarding capacity issues were incorrect or illogical. In the accompanying email the IOA requested that the letter be brought to the attention of both the Minister of State and the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, who would be making the decision.
- On Monday 19 Jan, the Secretary of State wrote to Cllr Susan Brown, pointing out that her response had not been clear whether or not it was requesting that elections be postponed. His letter explicitly stated that he was taking account of her representation “and the other representations I have received” in coming to a final decision.
- It was later confirmed that Oxford City Council elections will go ahead.
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