
Preston voted a third of its county councillors in this year’s elections as independent candidates.
Michael Lavalette – who came second in last year’s general election – took the Preston Central East seat from Labour with a majority of nearly 1,000.
While Preston South East saw Almas Razakazi narrowly beat former county council and Labour leader Jenny Mein by 41 votes.
The Preston City division remained Independent, as veteran councillor Yousuf Motala held on by just over 100 votes against Labour. County Cllr Motala defected from the Labour party in 2023 due to its stance on Gaza.
Read more: See the full Preston results in the Lancashire County Council local elections
All three independent candidates share a pro-Gaza cause, but they claim there is more to their politics than geo-political tensions and conflict in the Middle East.
Taken together there are now more independent councillors in County Hall than Labour or Lib Dem – and just one fewer than the Conservatives.
Asked if the Preston Independents candidates are truly independent or a new political party, Mr Lavalette said: “The three Preston Independents will sit and act collectively in council. We stood with a common programme, a common set of policy concerns and were selected by our colleagues in the Preston Independents network.
“We put out common literature across the divisions we stood in. We were clear that, for us, ‘Independent’ means independent of the political establishment, but we are part of our communities, trade unions and social movements and accountable to them and to members and supporters of Preston Independents network.”
Mr Lavalette said his group would align themselves with four other independent councillors, elected in East Lancashire, on a similar pro-Gaza mandate.
He also didn’t rule out co-operating with the established Labour, Lib Dem and Green Party groups to potentially form a ‘larger and broader alliance’ to ‘hold the Reform administration to account’. This could trump the Conservatives as the official opposition – who have eight seats and are positioning themselves as being the opposition to the Reform-controlled administration.
Mr Lavalette said: “No matter what alliances we may or may not enter into we will act as ‘Preston Independents’ and won’t be subject to any ‘whipping system’ imposed on us by any other group.
“Whilst we may, at times, vote with Labour or the Lib Dem’s, our view is that they are the parties of the establishment, are responsible for years and years of austerity and privatisation of services so we won’t have any formal relationship with them – though, as I said, on particular issues we may well vote the same way.”
Reform won a majority in County Hall, with 53 seats, and Mr Lavalette said he and his fellow Preston Independents would be ‘putting the interests of ordinary people first’.
He said: “Our priorities will be to focus on the negative impact that the Labour government and the Reform controlled council will have (we believe) on our communities. Labour’s ‘austerity 2’ will be disastrous for ordinary people – look at their cuts to winter fuel allowances, disability benefits and the two child cap. But Reform don’t have any answers that put the interests of ordinary people first – they are also promising cuts, privatisation and job losses.
“So we will oppose any cuts or outsourcing of services, we will oppose any redundancies and we will demand better provision of improved services for all. We believe in people before profit.
“We will also represent our communities and individuals as best we can. We are in the process of setting up meetings with local Churches, Mosques, Temples, community groups and trade unions. We want to be loud, active voices for the people of Preston.”
The city’s other results at the county council election saw the Lib Dems win two seats to take their total to three, Labour held one seat and Reform also won two. Nine county councillors represent the city at County Hall.
The local elections were for electing to Lancashire County Council, which is the over-riding authority for transport, schools, social care and other county-wide services. It is a different organisation to Preston City Council which is a district council and responsible for bins, parks, housing and other services in the city.
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