Peter Harris was elected Reform UK group leader at Essex County Council on Monday 11 May 2026, with Russell Quirk as deputy. 1 Formal confirmation as council leader is scheduled for the Annual General Meeting on Thursday 28 May 2026 at County Hall, Chelmsford. The group's first early policy signal is to reverse the "book tax," the library charge brought in under the previous Conservative administration.
The AGM gap matters because it lands seventeen days after election. Stuart Prior, the Essex CC member expelled within four days of polling (event 9, , resigned both his county and Rochford district seats over the social-media controversy. The 28 May 2026 meeting will therefore be Harris's first formal vote on both his own confirmation and the procedural response to the Prior expulsion. Essex picks the precedent that other Reform-controlled councils watch.
Reform inherits an Essex CC budget with the standard adult-social-care pressures the LGA flagged in early May 2026 . Reversing the book tax is the easy first deliverable for Harris. The harder calls (children's services contracts, Highways England partnership renewals, the SEND backlog) sit in the AGM-and-after work. Harris and Quirk arrive without prior cabinet experience between them, into a £2 billion-plus budget environment.
Essex carries weight as one of two large counties, alongside Lancashire, where Reform holds both a working majority and a national-press profile, and where every early decision becomes a template for the other 12. The library-charge reversal lands as the easy headline. The next 17 days will surface whether Harris reads the brief.
