I was honoured to be elected as a local Councillor in 2018. While I’ve known for a long time that work and family commitments would stop me from running again, it has been a really interesting experience. I have had loads of questions about it from family, friends and others so thought I would write this blog to answer some FAQs and share my personal experience.
- What is a local Councillor?
A Councillor is elected to represent a “ward” on the local Council. They are expected to contribute to committee meetings, handle casework, and address the concerns of residents in their area.
In Sutton, Councillors earn about £11,000 per year. Some have ‘cabinet’ positions as Chairs or Vice-Chairs of committees, and an additional payment comes with these commitments. The role of a Councillor sits in a strange middle ground where it is not quite a job, but not voluntary either. Most Councillors either have another job or are retired.
- Can Councillors make a difference?
Of course, such as through casework, working with Council officers to resolve wider problems, and effective campaigning on local issues. I served as the Vice Chair of the Environment & Sustainable Transport Committee, which allowed me to influence bigger picture issues affecting the borough as well. This helped me to appreciate how important and meaningful work in local Government can be.
There are of course frustrations though. Little wins can take a lot of grunt work, and it can sometimes feel like everything is harder than it needs to be. You also need to accept that you will sometimes be blamed for things which have nothing to do with you (and occasionally thanked for things which you had little influence over)!
- So you knock on doors of total strangers to talk about politics?
People sometimes ask this – with a glint in their eyes – when they hear about door-to-door canvassing. Sorry to disappoint, but the vast majority of people are really nice! I must have knocked on thousands of doors and I can only think of a few examples of serious unpleasantness. It’s a bit different on social media, where people can be ruder. But even then, we are talking about a handful of frequent users who are deep inside an echo chamber.
I find knocking on doors and speaking to people one of the most rewarding parts of the job. Whatever their opinions, most people are pleasant and interesting, and welcome the chance to speak to a local politician about issues in their area.
- What is it like working with opposition Councillors?
Most people who get involved in politics want to do what they think is right, and I’m sure this is true for most opposition Councillors in Sutton. But the relationship between Councillors from different parties can still be pretty toxic. I’ve found that opposing politicians are incredibly cynical about each other, assuming that everything an opponent says is calculated for political benefit. I think it’s a mistake to look at politics this way, but it isn’t surprising that these feelings develop. Politics is tribal. You have your team around you who are fighting for the same things as you, and another group who want something else, and are trying to persuade people to dislike you, sometimes personally.
I try to empathise when the opposition think the worst of us. It must be frustrating that their motions and positions are constantly voted down, as is inevitable for an opposition group. They probably see us as arrogant and dismissive, while we sometimes grumble that they are opportunistic and present few ideas of their own. I suspect that versions of these complaints are repeated all over the country, with the parties swapping places, but having similar gripes about one another.
I am more troubled by how often this cynicism morphs into borderline conspiracy theories. Certain opposition Councillors have frequently accused us of corruption; secret agendas and constructing House of Cards style maneuvers to get our way. When I see someone getting particularly red-faced about such theories in a sparsely populated committee meeting, I often smile about how much more boring things are in reality, with cock-up overwhelmingly more common than conspiracy.
- Do you get personal abuse as a Councillor?
A lot is written about the abuse MPs receive, and rightly so as it’s horrific. A lot of this – the death threats, the hate mail, the internet trolls – has never happened to me as a Councillor.
But that isn’t to say I haven’t been on the end of some fairly alarming behaviour. The difference in my experience is that the abuse aimed at Councillors is not driven by an army of internet trolls, but by a handful of politically active local people, and the occasional rogue blogger. These people may raise reasonable concerns about something the Council is doing, but blow the issue out of all proportion, exaggerate to the point of lying, and target local Councillors in ways which wildly cross the line.
In my term as a Councillor, a few such people have:
- Emailed their gripes about me and the Council to my last two employers (small charities with no interest in local politics).
- Written creepy messages to me linked to my relationship, housing and wider private life.
- Accused me of behaviour like intimidation, threats or coordinated harassment – claims which are so outrageous that it becomes pointless to engage with them.
- Sent frequent, bad faith complaints to the Council or Lib Dems about me, coupled with some legal threats for good measure. None of these have any basis, but each time one is dismissed another one appears.
- Published blogs about me which are full of falsehoods, and which I had no right to reply to before publication.
While my experience has been worse than most, it isn’t unique, especially among more senior Councillors. We don’t have the protection of MPs. We don’t have offices, security or staff. There is nothing much we can do to prevent the worrying behaviour of a minority of political opponents who don’t respect boundaries, and who are obsessed with targeting local Councillors.
While many people are attracted to local politics for good reasons, it also attracts people with more toxic qualities: paranoia, obsessiveness, cynicism, hubris. If such people choose to harass their local representatives, there is no one short of the police who can make them stop. This is a real issue, as if we continue to allow a tiny minority to poison local politics in this way, it will become an increasingly unappealing option for normal, good hearted people.
- “Could I be a Councillor”?
Many people think that Councillors have to be particular types of people: political junkies; the old and wealthy; people who have lived in the same area all of their life – but these stereotypes don’t need to be a barrier. Every political party is eager for new, diverse and passionate people to get involved, and I don’t think I’m breaking any state secrets when I say that none of them have snaking waiting lists. It’s okay if you don’t agree with every word of the party you choose to represent. It’s okay if you weren’t born and bred in the area you want to run in. It’s okay if you have other commitments. If you want to run for Council – pick the party which is the best fit for you and run for Council!
We need people of all races, ages and genders to stop shouting at their TVs and give elected politics a go! While there have been ups and downs to my time as a Councillor, I am glad that I did it and have learned a lot from the experience.
