Reform, Tories oppose Suffolk council split

Source: eadt.co.uk

TL;DR

The story at a glance

Reform UK's Suffolk leader Christopher Hudson and Suffolk County Council's Conservatives criticise the government's plan to divide Suffolk into three unitary councils: Western Suffolk, Ipswich and Southern Suffolk, and Central and Eastern Suffolk. All existing councils will be abolished from April 2028. This follows the Secretary of State's confirmation on March 25, amid opposition preferring a single "One Suffolk" model.[[1]](https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/25982334.reform-conservatives-oppose-suffolk-three-councils/)[[2]](https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/25982334.reform-conservatives-oppose-suffolk-three-councils)

Key points

Details and context

The decision scraps Suffolk County Council and district councils to create unitary authorities handling all local services. Reform UK wants changes that keep decision-making close to people; Hudson spoke at an Ipswich rally in March on efficiency.[[1]](https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/25982334.reform-conservatives-oppose-suffolk-three-councils/)

Suffolk County Council is still reviewing transition details and priorities for the complex shift. Other parties were approached but no further comments detailed.[[1]](https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/25982334.reform-conservatives-oppose-suffolk-three-councils/)

Key quotes

“We were not aware of this crime until the sentencing took place this week. Stephen Harper came to us last year through a referral, and we were not informed that he was going through a criminal investigation, nor did he declare this.” – Christopher Hudson, Reform UK Suffolk leader.[[1]](https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/25982334.reform-conservatives-oppose-suffolk-three-councils/)

“Reform UK wants to ensure that councils in Suffolk are as efficient and effective as possible, but the government’s approach is likely to make things worse.” – Christopher Hudson.[[1]](https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/25982334.reform-conservatives-oppose-suffolk-three-councils/)

Why it matters

The reorganisation affects how services like housing, roads, and social care are run across Suffolk, potentially raising council tax or cutting services if costs overrun. Residents face changes in local representation and decision-making, with businesses eyeing efficiency impacts. Watch for judicial review announcements or election pledges from Reform UK and Conservatives, though no firm plans exist yet.[[1]](https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/25982334.reform-conservatives-oppose-suffolk-three-councils/)