Exeter City Council
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Exeter City Council is the local authority for the city of Exeter in Devon, England. Exeter has had a city council since medieval times, which has been reformed on numerous occasions. Since 1974 it has been a non-metropolitan district council. The council has been under Labour majority control since 2010. It meets at Exeter Guildhall and has its main offices at the Civic Centre on Paris Street.
History
Exeter was an ancient borough with city status. It was historically governed by a corporation, also known as the city council. The city was given the right to appoint a mayor by King John in the early thirteenth century.[1] In 1537 the city was made a county corporate with its own sheriff and quarter sessions, separating it from the jurisdiction of the Sheriff of Devon.[2]
The city council was reformed in 1836 to become a municipal borough, governed by a body formally called the "mayor, aldermen and citizens of the city of Exeter" but informally known as the corporation or city council.[3] When elected county councils were established in 1889 under the Local Government Act 1888 Exeter was considered large enough for its existing corporation to provide county-level services and so it was made a county borough, independent from Devon County Council.[4]
The city was reconstituted as a non-metropolitan district on 1 April 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, becoming a lower-tier district authority with Devon County Council providing county-level functions to the city for the first time. The city kept the same outer boundaries, but gained control of the "Devon County Buildings Area", being three separate exclaves of Devon surrounded by the city, containing Devon County Hall, Rougemont Castle and the county judges' lodgings at Larkbeare House.[5][6] Exeter's city status was re-conferred on the reformed district, allowing the council to take the name Exeter City Council.[7] The city's mayor was raised to the status of a lord mayor in 2002.[8]
In 2010 the government proposed that the city should become an independent unitary authority, like nearby Plymouth and Torbay. The statutory orders to set up the unitary authority were passed in Parliament and a new unitary city council was due to start in Exeter on 1 April 2011. However, following the change of government at the 2010 general election the reorganisation was cancelled.[9][10]
At the end of 2024, in response to the government encouraging the creation of unitary authorities across the country, the council put forward a motion to bid to become a unitary authority, which was unanimously supported by the council in early 2025.[11][12] The government's final decision on what form the new unitary authorities may take is awaited.[13][14]
Governance
Exeter City Council provides district-level services. County-level services are provided by Devon County Council.[15] There are no civil parishes in Exeter; the entire city is an unparished area.[16]
Political control
The council has been under Labour majority control since 2012.
Political control of the council since the 1974 reforms took effect has been as follows:[17][18]
| Party in control | Years | |
|---|---|---|
Template:Redirect category shell || 1974–1976 | ||
Template:Redirect category shell || 1976–1983 | ||
Template:Redirect category shell || 1983–1995 | ||
Template:Redirect category shell || 1995–2003 | ||
Template:Redirect category shell || 2003–2012 | ||
Template:Redirect category shell || 2012–present | ||
Leadership
The role of Lord Mayor of Exeter is largely ceremonial. Political leadership is provided by the leader of the council. The leaders since 1983 have been:
| Councillor | Party | From | To | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chester Long[19][20] |
Template:Redirect category shell || align=right|1983 || align=right|1999 | |||
| Roy Slack[20][21] |
Template:Redirect category shell || align=right|1999 || align=right|May 2007 | |||
| Pete Edwards[22] |
Template:Redirect category shell || align=right|15 May 2007 || align=right|May 2008 | |||
| Adrian Fullam[23][24] |
Template:Redirect category shell || align=right|13 May 2008 || align=right|Sep 2010 | |||
| Pete Edwards[25][26] |
Template:Redirect category shell || align=right|21 Sep 2010 || align=right|May 2019 | |||
| Philip Bialyk[27] |
Template:Redirect category shell || align=right|14 May 2019 || | |||
Composition
Following the 2025 by-elections, the composition of the council was:[28]
| Party | Councillors | |
|---|---|---|
|
22 | |
|
7 | |
|
4 | |
|
3 | |
|
1 | |
|
2 | |
| Total | 39 | |
The Greens and Liberal Democrats sit together as the "Progressive Group". The next election is due in May 2026.[29]
Premises
Full council meetings are generally held at the city's Guildhall at 203 High Street, which was built around 1470.[30] The council's main offices are at the Civic Centre, a 1970s building on Paris Street in the city centre.[31]
Elections
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Since the last boundary changes in 2016, the council has comprised 39 councillors, representing 13 wards, with each ward electing three councillors. Elections are held three years out of every four, with a third of the council (one councillor for each ward) being elected at a time for a four-year term. Devon County Council elections are held in the fourth year of the cycle when there are no elections to the city council.[32]
Wards and councillors
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The wards of the city for City Council purposes are listed below.[33] Template:Div-col
- Alphington
- Duryard & St James
- Exwick
- Heavitree
- Mincinglake & Whipton
- Newtown & St Leonards
- Pennsylvania
- Pinhoe
- Priory
- St David's
- St Loyes
- St Thomas
- Topsham
Following the May 2022 elections, David Harvey (Pinhoe) left the Labour group, and subsequently sits as an Independent.[34] In January 2025, Cllr Zoë Hughes left the Labour group to sit as an independent over the national party's position on transgender issues.[35]
| Ward | Party | Member | Election | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alphington | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Yvonne Atkinson | 2023 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Bob Foale | 2022 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Rob Harding | 2024 | |
| Duryard & St James | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Liberal Democrats | Kevin Mitchell | 2022 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Liberal Democrats | Michael Mitchell | 2023 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Liberal Democrats | Tammy Palmer | 2024 | |
| Exwick | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour and Co-operative | Phil Bialyk | 2024 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Paul Knott | 2022 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour and Co-operative | Susannah Patrick | 2023 | |
| Heavitree | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Green | Carol Bennett | 2023 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Independent | Lucy Haigh | 2024 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Green | Catherine Rees | 2022 | |
| Mincinglake & Whipton | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Liz Pole | 2024 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Reform UK | Tony Payne | 2025 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Ruth Williams | 2023 | |
| Newtown & St Leonards | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Green | Andy Ketchin | 2023 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Matthew Vizard | 2022 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Green | Lynn Wetenhall | 2024 | |
| Pennsylvania | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Independent[35] | Zoë Hughes | 2024 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour and Co-operative | Josie Parkhouse | 2022 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour and Co-operative | Martyn Snow | 2023 | |
| Pinhoe | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour and Co-operative | Jakir Hussain | 2024 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Mollie Miller-Boam | 2023 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour and Co-operative | Duncan Wood | 2022 | |
| Priory | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Marina Asvachin | 2022 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Jane Begley | 2023 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Tony Wardle | 2022 | |
| St Davids | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Green | James Banyard | 2024 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Green | Diana Moore | 2023 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Green | Tess Read | 2022 | |
| St Loyes | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Conservative | Peter Holland | 2022 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Conservative | Anne Jobson | 2024 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Conservative | Alison Sheridan | 2023 | |
| St Thomas | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour and Co-operative | Deborah Darling | 2024 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Liberal Democrats | Adrian Fullam | 2023 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Laura Wright | 2022 | |
| Topsham | style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Gemma Rolstone | 2024 |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | James Cookson | 2025 | |
| style="background-color: Template:Party color" | | Labour | Matthew Williams | 2023 | |
References
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