More on likely way forward in Devon County Council

The full picture will emerge at the full Council meeting on Thursday 22 May, when Councillors will decide who takes up the positions of Leader, Deputy Leader, Cabinet Members, appointments to committees, as well as the roles of Chairman and Vice Chairman.

But there is a hint in the press report below.

This  gives the background to the appointment of Cllr Julian Brazil to become the Leader of the Lib Dem group in the new County Council, with Cllr Paul Arnott his new group Deputy Leader.

At South Hams District Council, where Cllr Brazil is leader, the Lib Dems have an outright majority yet members of other parties hold cabinet posts.

Cllr Brazil said it would be his group that would decide who to appoint to which posts but that he would be “encouraging them to give as much responsibility to other parties as possible”.

Leader change for Devon’s Liberal Democrats after election surge

Bradley Gerrard www.exmouthjournal.co.uk

Devon’s Liberal Democrats have appointed Julian Brazil as their leader, marking a change atop the group after its election surge.

A vote at the weekend put Cllr Brazil (Kingsbridge) in charge of the party, which secured the most seats of any single group in the Devon County Council elections last week.

The Lib Dems tripled the number of seats they hold, after entering the election with nine and emerging with 27.

However, the party is short of an overall majority – which would have been 31 out of the total 60 seats – partly because of the significant performance by Reform UK, which is now the second largest party at County Hall with 18 seats.

The change means that councillor Caroline Leaver (Barnstaple South), who took the reins of the county council’s Lib Dem group off Cllr Brazil in January last year, will no longer be heading the party.

Cllr Leaver said she was “so proud” to have led the party in Devon to such a “stunning increase” in councillors.

“It’s a huge achievement,” she said.

“A few weeks ago I decided that I would stand down as leader of the Lib Dems after the election, for a host of reasons, and have every confidence in our new leader in sorting out the mess at County Hall left after 16 years of Conservative rule.

“There are many longstanding and complex problems to address, which will require the whole council to work together to solve.”

Alongside Cllr Brazil, the deputy leader is now Councillor Paul Arnott (Seaton & Colyton), who is the leader of East Devon District Council.

“The decision about the leader and deputy leader was taken via a vote of group members and it was quite close, but we emerged victorious,” Cllr Brazil said.

Asked whether the party would adopt a formal tie-up with the Green Party, Cllr Brazil said that was something that was yet to be decided, but he felt the “mood music suggested there might not be a formal coalition or agreement”.

“But that is a decision for the group,” he added.

“It is slightly daunting [to become leader] but it is incredibly exciting and it’s why you come into politics, to make a difference and now we hope to do just that.”

Cllr Brazil said he and his party had a “massive challenge” given what he deemed a “protest” vote by some of the electorate.

“We have heard it and so we have got to step up and get on with the job,” he added.

At South Hams District Council, where Cllr Brazil is leader, the Lib Dems have an outright majority yet members of other parties hold cabinet posts.

Whether this will be replicated at Devon County Council now is uncertain.

Cllr Brazil said it would be his group that would decide who to appoint to which posts but that he would be “encouraging them to give as much responsibility to other parties as possible”.

The Tory legacy: Devon County Council children’s services rated inadequate again

Children in Devon are “at risk of harm” due to continued failings in council services, a report has found.

Miles Davis BBC Devon political reporter www.bbc.co.uk

The Ofsted report into children’s services at Devon County Council rated the council as “inadequate” and said “serious weaknesses remain”.

The council was previously rated inadequate in March 2020 for its children’s services which cover children in care and children who need help and protection.

The council’s chief executive said it would now “focus all our energies on continuing to work on our improvement journey”.

The Ofsted report was carried out in September 2024 but was only published on Tuesday.

Devon County Council was under Conservative control at the time of the inspection but is now under no overall control following the local elections, with a new leader to be appointed on 22 May.

The report said there was a risk of harm particularly for “children experiencing neglect and domestic abuse, those at risk of extra-familial harm and care leavers living in unsuitable accommodation”.

Inspectors found basic checks were “not completed consistently when children are accommodated in an emergency”.

They said there was a “lack of immediate planning to ensure that children are helped and kept safe” and delays in child protection strategy discussions “leave some children at potential risk of ongoing significant harm”.

The report also said: “When children are first identified as being at risk of criminal or sexual exploitation, the response is not sufficiently effective across the partnership for all children.”

‘Decisive action’

The report said there had been “increased stability in leadership” which had “an impact on practice, from a very low base”.

It said there had been “decisive action” leading to “positive change” but “the current positive impact for children and care leavers is not widespread”.

Donna Manson, chief executive of the county council, said: “We have much to do but we must also recognise that progress is being made.

“Our ethos is that children and young people must be in our hearts, in our minds and in our sight.”