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UK Local Elections 2026
3JUN

Essex audit unit meets the spend wall

3 min read
10:25UTC

Essex County Council named former Morgan Stanley vice-president Bo Davis to run an efficiency unit over a roughly £2bn budget that statute has already spoken for.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Around 98% of Essex spend is statutory, 71.6% adult social care, leaving an efficiency unit almost nothing legal to cut.

Essex County Council confirmed Peter Harris as leader at its annual meeting on Thursday 28 May and handed the council's finances to Bo Davis, a former Morgan Stanley vice-president and Barclays director, to run a DOGE (department of government efficiency) unit . The unit's target is waste across a budget of roughly £2bn serving 1.5 million residents. Most of that budget is locked by law. The Institute for Government (IfG, a Whitehall-focused think tank) puts statutory adult social care alone at about 71.6% of comparable county spending 1. Add children's services, special educational needs and waste collection, all of them legal duties, and roughly 98% of the budget is committed by statute, leaving under 2% a council can genuinely choose to cut.

Reform won Essex on a pitch to strip out waste, taking 53 of 78 seats and far outrunning the 1,448 English seats it took nationally . Davis now inherits the gap between that pitch and the ledger. Adult social care, children's services, special educational needs and waste collection are duties Parliament imposes, and a council cannot vote to stop providing them. The line Davis can move sits in the low single figures, and nine Reform councils have already reached for the easier lever and raised council tax .

A corporate audit assumes discretion: find the underperforming cost centre, close it, book the saving. A county council's largest cost centre is a legal obligation with a rising caseload, not a line item. Thurrock shows where the squeeze ends when it goes wrong, run by Reform since 7 May while government commissioners still control its £1.5bn Section 114 (the notice a council issues when it cannot balance its books) budget after effective bankruptcy . Davis is importing a model built for firms that can shed divisions into an institution that cannot.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Essex County Council is one of England's largest councils, covering about 1.5 million people and spending roughly £2bn a year. After winning the May elections, Reform UK put a former City banker in charge of an efficiency drive, promising to cut waste the way a company might. Parliament has passed laws saying councils must pay for adult social care (help for elderly and disabled people), children's services, and similar needs for everyone who qualifies. Those legal duties take up about 98p in every £1 Essex spends. A company can close an underperforming division; a council cannot stop providing legally mandated care. The new DOGE unit can only move the other 2p.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Care Act 2014 established a statutory duty for councils to meet all eligible adult social care needs, regardless of cost. Combined with rising longevity and a real-terms reduction in core government grant since 2010, this has converted adult social care from a variable budget line into a demand-led entitlement that grows automatically with the eligible population.

Adult social care in England receives no ringfenced grant of its own. Schools receive hypothecated funding that tracks pupil numbers; adult social care does not. County councils must absorb demand growth from within a general pot that also covers highways, libraries, and waste, so rising care costs crowd out every other service and then crowd out the political conversation about what genuine savings are possible.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If the DOGE unit fails to produce visible savings, Reform faces a credibility gap between its 7 May mandate and the statutory constraints it inherited, mirroring the Thurrock trajectory.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Adult social care demand growth will continue to crowd out discretionary spending regardless of the administration's political programme, leaving Essex with structural deficits absent additional central government grant.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Essex is the largest test case for whether a DOGE-model efficiency unit can function inside English statutory local government; its outcome will inform how other Reform-controlled counties frame their own efficiency programmes.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #10 · Reform's audit unit hits the spend wall

Essex County Council· 3 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
Welsh Government (Plaid Cymru under Rhun ap Iorwerth)
Welsh Government (Plaid Cymru under Rhun ap Iorwerth)
Plaid's Cardiff minority government relies on Green confidence-and-supply with no written agreement, the same arrangement that collapsed in Scotland in 2023. Green Westminster polling fell from 17% to 15% in two weeks as Greens took governing responsibility; whether that deflation reaches Cardiff is the near-term test for ap Iorwerth's majority.
Reform-run English county councils (Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk)
Reform-run English county councils (Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk)
Essex named a City-trained efficiency lead over a budget where statute has already committed roughly 98% of spend; Suffolk simultaneously issued a pre-action letter against the reorganisation that will dissolve it. Reform-controlled authorities are spending public money on litigation their own sector lawyers expect to fail while their DOGE units face statutory constraints they cannot override.
Scottish Government (SNP under John Swinney)
Scottish Government (SNP under John Swinney)
Swinney rested the 72-55 Holyrood mandate on the combined SNP-Green bloc rather than his own party's 58 seats, seven short of the trigger he named; he has publicly conceded he has no plan if Westminster holds its veto. The constitutional argument is made; the enforcement route does not exist.
UK Government (MHCLG and Downing Street)
UK Government (MHCLG and Downing Street)
MHCLG has until 12 June to respond to Suffolk's pre-action letter and faces three further counties at the same stage; Downing Street rejected Holyrood's Section 30 demand as a spokesperson lobby line rather than a written statement, declining to open formal inter-governmental correspondence. Both decisions compress Reform's two main legal challenges into the same two-week window.
UK Government (Labour)
UK Government (Labour)
Westminster framed the youth justice transfer as a culmination of prior work rather than a precedent, refused a Section 30 order before the request arrived, and omitted both the Representation of the People Bill and any Wales Bill from the 13 May King's Speech. Starmer is described as open to a devolved-leaders summit in June.
Reform UK
Reform UK
Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk filed pre-action protocol letters framing their LGR challenge as mandate-consistent, while 22 Reform councillors departed in 14 days at an annualised rate nearly three times the 10 percent projection. Richard Tice defended the Harborne 5 million pound gift as unconditional, with no acknowledgement of Farage's two contradictory accounts on record.