UK

Reform council leader quits within weeks — leaving 18-year-old in charge

A reform British Council leader resigned only weeks after the election and left a 18 -year -old child responsible for a hundred millions of pounds of public expenditure.

Rob Howard from the reform said that he had left the Warwickshire District Council leader as the leader of the Council of Warwickshire, and stated that he stated that he stated that he said he was “very regret ve and the health difficulties that prevents the role from realizing the level and standard.

This means that his assistant Reform will take over as a temporary leader of the Council until a permanent reserve is approved.

The amendment, a former member of the Conservative Party, means that the Council is responsible for $ 1.5 billion assets and a budget of approximately £ 500 million.

Howard said in his statement: “This was a very difficult decision.

“The role of the leader is a very challenging role and sadness, and my health difficulties prevent the role from realizing to the level and standard I want.

George Finh

George Finh (Facebook/CLLR George Finch)

“Even for a short time, I am honored to play the role and I am privileged.

“I am committed to my ongoing role of working as a district council member for the benefit of Warwickshire residents.”

His resignation comes after chaos after the increase in reform in the local elections.

Rob Howard is coming down

Rob Howard is coming down (Warwickshire District Council)

A newly elected council member resigned from the reform only days after his election and promised vomiting from the party after the local elections. Donna Edmunds asked Rupert Lowe to establish a challenge on the right to reform, and Nigel Farage said, “He should never be prime minister”.

He has left a series of England Assembly members since the local elections

He has left a series of England Assembly members since the local elections (PA)

Another, Wayne Titley, who was chosen in Staffordshire, left as a parliamentary member just two weeks later and following his criticism for a Facebook article about the small boats coming to England.

And Andrew Kilburn, a reform member of the Council, who could not declare that he was working for the Council, announced that he would no longer play a role in Durham a week after the local elections.

Desmond Clarke, who won at Newark West, resigned from his seat just a week after the vote and forced an election in Nottinghamshire.

However, chaos does not seem to slow down the rise of Reform in the chests, a great Yougov questionnaire on Thursday shows that Mr. Farage will win the most seats if an election is made today.

Yougov said that reform would jump from only five deputies to 271 and that Mr. Farage was ready to form a minority government.

Meanwhile, the worker would collapse from holding 403 chairs only to 178, and Sir Keir Starmer’s popularity has fallen since the general elections because of a series of disasters and chaotic U -turn.

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