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.
