Sandwell’s Democracy Problem Was Bigger Than Labour — But Labour Built It
There is something deeply unhealthy about watching a Full Council meeting where almost nobody appears willing to genuinely challenge anything.
And after sitting through Sandwell’s Extraordinary Council, Full Council, Cabinet and Petitions meetings, one thing became crystal clear:
The problem in Sandwell was never simply “Labour policies”.
It was the political culture Labour created.
A culture of:
- managed debate
- weak scrutiny
- endless paperwork
- officer-led governance
- procedural control
- and public disengagement disguised as consultation.
For years residents complained that Sandwell felt detached, unresponsive and insulated from ordinary people.
After watching these meetings, it is difficult to argue otherwise.
The Great Sandwell Performance
Sandwell Council has become extraordinarily good at producing:
- reports
- frameworks
- strategies
- consultations
- peer reviews
- action plans
- transformation programmes
- corporate slogans
- “stories”
- and glossy promises.
What it has become much less good at is:
- answering difficult questions
- tolerating challenge
- encouraging public participation
- or demonstrating visible accountability.
The meetings themselves exposed this perfectly.
Hundreds upon hundreds of pages of reports.
Major decisions involving:
- budgets
- council tax
- rent increases
- housing compliance
- highways
- regeneration
- air quality
- safeguarding
- public safety
- and long-term financial risks
…all processed at astonishing speed with remarkably little scrutiny.
Sometimes it felt less like democratic governance and more like an audiobook with voting attached.
Full Council Or Rubber Stamp?
And this is the important point:
These were not merely Cabinet meetings.
These were Full Council meetings.
The place where every councillor is supposed to:
- scrutinise
- challenge
- probe
- amend
- debate
- expose weaknesses
- and represent residents.
Instead, what we repeatedly witnessed was:
- scripted speeches
- repetitive officer-approved language
- procedural manoeuvring
- time-limit obsession
- motions nodded through
- and difficult issues quietly avoided.
Even when major political motions were debated, there was often more interest in getting through the agenda than properly interrogating it.
That is not healthy local democracy.
The CSE Silence Still Hangs Over The Chamber
Nothing exposed this more clearly than the so-called “Safe Borough for Women and Girls” motion.
The motion spoke at length about:
- misogyny
- discrimination
- abuse
- coercive control
- hate crime
- allyship
- and Andrew Tate.
Yet somehow still managed to avoid explicitly naming:
- Child Sexual Exploitation
- grooming gangs
- organised rape of children
- or the institutional failures identified nationally in the Jay and Casey reports.
That omission matters.
Because safeguarding only works when political courage exists alongside political convenience.
You cannot claim to champion women and girls while tiptoeing around one of the gravest safeguarding scandals in modern British history.
And the public notices the selective silence.
Consultation Without Consequence
The budget consultation was equally revealing.
Residents overwhelmingly expressed concern about:
- cost of living
- hardship
- local services
- neighbourhood quality
- safety
- environmental conditions
- and rising costs.
Large numbers opposed council tax increases.
The increases went ahead anyway.
Which raises the obvious question:
What exactly is the point of consultation if the outcome is politically pre-decided?
Too often in Sandwell, consultation appears to function as a bureaucratic ritual rather than meaningful engagement.
Ask the public.
Record the answers.
Ignore them politely.
Move on.
Governance By Delegation
Another trend quietly running through the papers was the steady expansion of delegated powers.
More authority shifting:
- to officers
- to procedural mechanisms
- to technical consultation routes
- to closed decision-making structures.
Meanwhile public participation becomes increasingly controlled, formalised and difficult.
This is how democratic systems slowly become managerial systems.
Residents are technically still “included” — but practically sidelined.
The public can speak.
Provided:
- it is in writing
- submitted correctly
- in advance
- within constitutional rules
- within time limits
- and doesn’t disrupt the smooth flow of the meeting.
Democracy by permission slip.
The Labour Legacy
To be fair, Sandwell Labour did improve some things.
The council is more stable than it once was.
Children’s Services receiving a “Good” judgement is welcome.
The improvement journey after intervention was necessary.
But stability is not the same as accountability.
And improvement does not erase:
- democratic fatigue
- weak scrutiny culture
- poor public trust
- procedural arrogance
- selective safeguarding language
- or governance that increasingly feels detached from residents.
Labour’s greatest political mistake was not simply policy failure.
It was allowing the institution itself to become insulated.
And eventually the electorate noticed.
A Serious Warning To Reform
Now Reform controls Sandwell Council.
And this is where things become genuinely important.
Because the danger for Reform is not becoming Labour politically.
It is becoming Sandwell institutionally.
Once any administration inherits:
- weak scrutiny culture
- officer-heavy governance
- procedural convenience
- and managerial politics
…it becomes very easy to continue using the same machinery.
The temptation will be enormous:
- move meetings quickly
- rely on officers
- limit disruption
- avoid awkward debates
- centralise control
- manage messaging
- and treat challenge as irritation.
That path ends exactly where Labour ended.
What Reform Must Do Differently
If Reform genuinely wants to prove it represents change, then it must:
Restore genuine public participation
Not managed participation.
Encourage difficult scrutiny
Especially of its own leadership.
Publish plain-English summaries
Residents should not need law degrees to understand council decisions.
Confront safeguarding honestly
Including CSE and grooming.
Tighten declarations of interest
Transparency matters.
Empower ward councillors properly
Not simply funnel decisions through officers.
Stop treating consultation as symbolic
If residents overwhelmingly oppose something, explain honestly why.
Rebuild trust in local democracy
Because right now many residents simply no longer believe the system listens.
Final Thought
The electorate did not simply vote against one political party.
They voted against:
- complacency
- insulation
- managerial politics
- democratic fatigue
- and a council culture that too often looked like it was talking to itself.
Sandwell now has an opportunity to reset.
But only if the new administration understands something very important:
Changing the people in charge means nothing if the culture underneath remains untouched.
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