Reform UK appear to have lost yet another councillor at their flagship authority in Kent, hours before a key meeting.
A full council meeting is currently being held in Kent, the first since footage of a chaotic online meeting resulted in the suspension of several members last month.
Isabella Kemp, who represents Sheppey, is now listed as independent on the councilâs website. She and Reform UK have been approached for a comment.
The party had taken control of KCC in May, winning 57 of 81 seats â but ongoing suspensions and removals mean fewer than 50 Reform councillors remain at the authority.
Just last week, Bill Barrett, Oliver Bradshaw and Paul Thomas, along with another councillor, Brian Black, were kicked out of Reform UK following investigations.
It came after footage of an online meeting in which KCC leader Linden Kemkaran could be seen berating backbench councillors when they questioned her was leaked to the press.
In the full council meeting on Thursday, one of the suspended councillors, Mr Thomas, challenged members of his former party on ongoing road closures.
He accused the council of âkicking the can down the roadâ, as he said residents were âsufferingâ and going without bus services for up to six weeks.
He said the council has to go âwider and deeperâ and suggested an independent inquiry into the matter.
Cabinet member for highways and transport, Peter Osborne, said their powers do not extend to preventing such emergency works from taking place.
The topic of the councilâs slimming membership was raised by several opposition members and by Ms Kemkaran herself, who insisted: âSitting here now six months on, we too may be slightly leaner in number, but we are much stronger, and we are totally battle fit.â
However, the chaotic administration was compared to the hit TV show The Traitors by Mark Hood, the leader of the councilâs Green Party, who said members await to see who else may be deemed as such.
Leader of the Liberal Democrats in Kent, Antony Hook, said the council is in âpolitical crisisâ and said he had heard of âbets being madeâ about whether the administration would last until Christmas. He urged councillors to ânot act in a way that becomes a punchline on Have I Got News for Youâ.
The council chair, Richard Palmer, had to remind councillors several times of the Nolan principles in the meeting, which saw laughs erupt in the chamber several times.
At one point, Ms Kemkaran herself described her oppositionâs contribution as having gone âfrom Halloween to panto season in blink of an eyeâ.
Kentâs deputy leader, Brian Collins, had to speak over laughter in the chamber as he failed to rule out whether the council would be raising council tax.
He was asked by Green Party councillor Stuart Heaver how much less residents could expect to be paying next year. Mr Collins thanks Mr Heaver for allowing him to âaddress some of the nonsense spoken in the media about council taxâ and said âno decision had been madeâ on the matter.
He said councillors âmay laughâ and âsmirkâ but insisted that it is Reformâs âintention to one day be able to lower council taxâ.
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