Birmingham City Council is the local authority for the city of Birmingham in the West Midlands, England. Birmingham has had an elected local authority since 1838, which has been reformed several times. Since 1974 the council has been a metropolitan borough council, a type of unitary authority. It provides the majority of local government services in the city. It is the most populous local government district in England, serving over 1.1million people. The council has been a member of the West Midlands Combined Authority since 2016. It is based at the Council House on Victoria Square, Birmingham.

The council has been under no overall control since May 2026, with Reform UK being the largest party. A coalition of Green, Lib Dem and independent councillors formed an administration on 5 June, led by Roger Harmer of the Liberal Democrats.

On 6 September 2023, the council declared effective bankruptcy, and central government commissioners were subsequently appointed to run the council under emergency measures.

History

Until the 18th century, Birmingham was governed by manorial courts and its parish vestry. A body of improvement commissioners called the Birmingham Street Commissioners was established in 1769 to provide services in the rapidly growing town. Birmingham was incorporated as a municipal borough in 1838, after which it was governed by a body formally called 'the mayor, aldermen and burgesses of the borough of Birmingham', generally known as the corporation or town council. William Scholefield became the first mayor and William Redfern was the first town clerk. The corporation absorbed the functions of the street commissioners in 1852.

Common seal of the Mayor, Aldermen and Burgesses of the Borough of Birmingham, used 1838–1889

Birmingham was granted city status on 14 January 1889, after which the corporation was also known as the city council. When elected county councils were established in April 1889, Birmingham was considered large enough for its existing council to provide county-level services, and so it was made a county borough, independent from the new Warwickshire County Council, whilst remaining part of the geographical county of Warwickshire. The dignity of a lord mayor was conferred in 1896, with James Smith being appointed the first Lord Mayor of Birmingham.

The city boundaries have been enlarged many times. Notable expansions were in 1891 (Balsall Heath, Harborne, Saltley and Little Bromwich), 1909 (Quinton), 1911 (Aston Manor, Erdington, Handsworth, Kings Norton, Northfield and Yardley), 1928 (Perry Barr), 1931 (Sheldon and parts of other parishes), and 1974 (Sutton Coldfield).

The county borough was abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, being replaced by a metropolitan district of Birmingham, covering the area of the old county borough plus the borough of Sutton Coldfield. The new district was one of seven metropolitan districts within the new metropolitan county of the West Midlands. Birmingham's borough and city statuses and its lord mayoralty passed to the new district and its council.

From 1974 until 1986 the council was a lower-tier authority, with upper-tier functions provided by the West Midlands County Council. The county council was abolished in 1986 and its functions passed to the county's seven borough councils, including Birmingham City Council, with some services provided through joint committees. In 1995, New Frankley and the Kitwell Estate were transferred into the city from the parish of Frankley in Bromsgrove District.

Since 2016 the council has been a member of the West Midlands Combined Authority, which has been led by the directly elected Mayor of the West Midlands since 2017. The combined authority provides strategic leadership and co-ordination for certain functions across the county, but Birmingham City Council continues to be responsible for most local government functions.

Women and minorities

The first woman elected to the council, on 1 November 1911, was Ellen Pinsent. She represented the Edgbaston Ward as a Liberal Unionist. She had earlier been co-opted as a member of the council's Education Committee and served as Chairman of the Special School Sub-Committee. She stood down from the council in October 1913 upon appointment as Commissioner for the Board of Control for Lunacy and Mental Deficiency.

Pinsent's time on the council overlapped with that of Margaret Frances Pugh, who was elected on 22 November 1911 to serve in the North Erdington ward. She resigned in November 1913.

Birmingham's third woman councillor, Clara Martineau, was elected on 14 October 1913 in the Edgbaston ward, and served until 1932, when she died, aged 57. Her father was former Mayor Sir Thomas Martineau, Lord Mayor Ernest Martineau was her brother, and Alderman Sir George Kenrick was her uncle.

Mary Cottrell became the first female Labour councillor in February 1917, when she was elected unopposed to the Selly Oak ward. The first female Lord Mayor, Marjorie Brown, held the post from 1973 to 1974. Theresa Stewart became the first female leader in October 1993, until 1999; and Lin Homer the first female chief executive, was in post from 2002 until 2005.

Bert Carless, a migrant from Jamaica, was elected the City's first non-white councillor in 1979. He was later made an Honorary Alderman.

2023 section 114 finances notice

On 5 September 2023, Birmingham City Council issued a section 114 notice, being the local government equivalent of bankruptcy, stopping all future spending with the exception of money for statutory services, including the protection of vulnerable people. The leader of the Labour authority stated that the notice was a necessary step to get Birmingham back into a sound financial footing. The government subsequently appointed commissioners to oversee the running of the council under emergency measures. The bankruptcy has been ascribed to equal pay liabilities plus a disastrous implementation of an Oracle ERP system.

When the council issued the section 114 notice, it had forecast the reserves would go into a nominal £677.9 million deficit, but when the 2022-2024 accounts were published in July 2025 they showed the reserves had been £784.7 million in credit, more that £1 billion better than forecast. Independent accountants said the forecast had been "based on unaudited and materially incorrect information", and a group of 34 experts in accounting, finance and local government called for a public inquiry to investigate the section 114 notice decision.

As of 3 February 2026, Birmingham City Council is no longer effectively bankrupt, though The Guardian reported the negative effect of the period, which includes raising council tax by 17.5% over two years, cutting services previously provided by the council, and sales of council-owned assets bringing in £750 million. As of February 2026, the council is planning more spending and investment in services.

2025 bin strike

On 11 March 2025, Members of the Unite union went out on strike due to a long-running dispute over the role of waste recycling and collection officer (WRCO) position being removed. The union claims the move will leave about 150 members £8,000 worse off. Birmingham City Council declared a major incident on 31 March 2025, saying the "regrettable" move was taken in response to public health concerns, as picket lines were blocking depots and preventing waste vehicles from collecting rubbish.

Governance

Birmingham City Council provides metropolitan borough services. Some strategic functions in the area are provided by the West Midlands Combined Authority; the leader and deputy leader of the city council sit on the board of the combined authority as Birmingham's representatives. There are two civil parishes in the city at Sutton Coldfield and New Frankley in Birmingham, which form an additional tier of local government for their areas; the rest of the city is unparished.

Political control

Mike Whitby, leader of the council from June 2004 to May 2012
Albert Bore, leader of the council from May 1999 to May 2004 and again from May 2012 to December 2015
John Clancy, leader of the council December 2015 to September 2017, seen in the Council House's 'Crystal Gallery'

The council was under Labour majority control from 2012 to May 2026. After the election of that month, the council was left with no party in overall control, and it was not until 5 June that a coalition of Green, Liberal Democrat (Lib-Dem) and Independent councillors were able to form a minority administration, led by Roger Harmer, the councils first-ever Lib-Dem leader.

Political control of the council since the 1974 reforms has been as follows:

Party in controlYears
Labour1974–1975
No overall control1975–1976
Conservative1976–1979
No overall control1979–1980
Labour1980–1982
Conservative1982–1984
Labour1984–2003
No overall control2003–2012
Labour2012–2026
No overall control2026–present

Leadership

The role of Lord Mayor of Birmingham is largely ceremonial. Political leadership is instead provided by the leader of the council. The first leader of the council after the 1974 reforms, Clive Wilkinson, had been the leader of the old corporation since December 1973. The leaders since 1973 have been:

CouncillorPartyFromTo
Clive WilkinsonLabourDec 1973May 1976
Neville BosworthConservativeMay 1976May 1980
Clive WilkinsonLabourMay 1980May 1982
Neville BosworthConservativeMay 1982May 1984
Dick KnowlesLabourMay 19845 Oct 1993
Theresa StewartLabour5 Oct 1993May 1999
Albert BoreLabour18 May 1999Jun 2004
Mike WhitbyConservativeJun 2004May 2012
Albert BoreLabour22 May 20121 Dec 2015
John ClancyLabour1 Dec 201511 Sep 2017
Ian WardLabour7 Nov 201723 May 2023
John CottonLabour23 May 20237 May 2026
Roger HarmerLiberal Democrats5 June 2026incumbent

Composition

At time of 2026 election

Following the 2026 election the composition of the council was:

PartyCouncillors
Reform23
Green19
Labour17
Conservative16
Liberal Democrats12
Independent13
Workers Party1
Total101

Changes since the 2026 election

  • Rebecca Waters from Rubery and Rednal ward was suspended from the Birmingham Reform UK group following her voting for Roger Harmer to become the Leader of the Council[better source needed].
  • Diane Donaldson from Bromford and Hodge Hill ward resigned from the Labour Party on Sunday 7 June 2026 and sits as an independent.

Elections

Since the last boundary changes in 2018, the council has comprised 101 councillors representing 69 wards, with each ward electing one or two councillors. Elections are held every four years.

Wards and councillors

The wards and councillors are:

WardCouncillorPartyCouncil Service
Acocks GreenRoger HarmerLiberal Democrats1995–2001, 2008–2012, 2014–
Penny WaggLiberal Democrats2003–2011, 2022–
Allens CrossEddie FreemanReform2026–
Alum RockNosheen KhalidIndependent2026-
Shaukat MahmoodIndependent2026-
AstonAbdul Choudhury ShumonIndependent2026-
Mumtaz HussainLiberal Democrats2022–
Balsall Heath WestDuncan AliGreen2026-
Bartley GreenChris SteeleReform2026-
Rajbir SinghReform2026-
BillesleyChris GarghanGreen2026-
Joe PeacockGreen2026-
BirchfieldArshid MahmoodLabour2026-
Bordesley and HighgateAli KaziGreen2026-
Bordesley GreenAdnan HussainIndependent2026-
Bournbrook and Selly ParkJane BastonGreen2026-
Corinne FowlerGreen2026-
Bournville and CotteridgeRoxanne GreenGreen2026–
Nicky BrennanLabour2018–
Brandwood and King's HeathJordan PhillipGreen2026-
Hamzah SheikhGreen2026-
Bromford and Hodge HillDiane DonaldsonIndependent2016–
Majid MahmoodLabour2011–
Castle ValeRay GoodwinLabour2022–
Druids Heath and MonyhullJulien PritchardGreen2018–
EdgbastonDeirdre AldenConservative1999–
Matt BennettConservative2008–2012, 2015–
ErdingtonRobert AldenConservative2006–
Gareth MooreConservative2011–
Frankley Great ParkGemma Louise GuttridgeReform2026-
Garretts GreenSaddak MiahLabour2018–
Glebe Farm and Tile CrossJessica AnkrettReform2026-
Shehryay KayaniWorkers Party2026-
Gravelly HillMick BrownLabour2012–
Hall Green NorthMansoor QureshiGreen2026-
Haroon SalimGreen2026-
Hall Green SouthTimothy HuxtableConservative2002–
HandsworthEd FreshwaterGreen2026-
Handsworth WoodNarinder Kaur KoonerLabour2026–
Randeep Kaur KularLabour2026-
HarborneMartin BrooksIndependent1982–1999, 2022–
Kevin James CarmodyGreen2026-
HeartlandsShafique ShahLabour2005–
Highter's HeathAdam HiggsConservative2018–
HolyheadRinkal ShergillIndependent2022–
King's Norton NorthMartin Derek SmithReform2026-
King's Norton SouthRobert GrantGreen2026-
KingstandingJohn LambertReform2026-
Jex ParkinReform2026-
LadywoodSiobhan Harper-NunesGreen2026-
Raheem HumphreysGreen2026-
Longbridge and West HeathCharles LatchfordReform2026-
Anthony WardReform2026-
LozellsTaj UddinIndependent2026–
MoseleyIzzy KnowlesLiberal Democrats2022–
Philip MillsLiberal Democrats2025–
NechellsMansuur AhmedIndependent2026-
NewtownRasheda BegumLabour2006–
North EdgbastonMarcus BernasconiLabour2022–
Sarina YounasLabour2026–
NorthfieldGeorge HallReform2026-
OscottGraham GreenReform2026-
Martin McAuleyReform2026-
Perry BarrJames HintonLiberal Democrats2026-
Jan MorriamLiberal Democrats2017–
Perry CommonSue WillettsReform2026-
Pype HayesDanny Brian CarterReform2026-
QuintonSam ForsythIndependent2022–
Nagu PenakacherlaReform2026-
Rubery and RednalRebecca WatersReform2026-
Shard EndAlan FeeneyReform2026-
SheldonDarren CollingReform2026-
Rachel ConaghanReform2026-
Small HeathShaukat Ali KhanLiberal Democrats2026-
Mohammed SaeedLiberal Democrats2026-
Soho and Jewellery QuarterShuranjeet SinghLabour2026-
Su BrooksLabour2026-
South YardleyZaker ChoudhryLiberal Democrats2006–2010, 2014–
Sparkbrook and Balsall Heath EastJamil KhanIndependent2026-
Raihaan AbbasIndependent2026-
SparkhillRashad MahmoodLabour2022–
Bushra BiLabour2022-
StirchleyKamel HawwashGreen2026-
Stockland GreenAmar KhanIndependent2022–
Manni ButtReform2026-
Sutton Four OaksRaaj ShamjiConservative2026-
Sutton Mere GreenMeirion JenkinsConservative2012–
Sutton ReddicapRichard ParkinConservative2022–
Sutton RoughleyHarmendra ParmarConservative2026-
Sutton TrinityDavid PearsConservative1987–1991, 1992–1996, 2004–
Sutton VeseyJohn CooperConservative2026-
Anja PawsonConservative2026-
Sutton Walmley and MinworthJohn PerksConservative2026-
Ken WoodConservative2008–2012, 2014–
Sutton Wylde GreenAlex YipConservative2015–
Tyseley and Hay MillsAtikur RahmanGreen2026-
Ward EndHarris KhaliqIndependent2026-
Weoley and Selly OakGlyn MarstonReform2026-
Cherie WaddinghamReform2026-
Yardley EastDeborah HarriesLiberal Democrats2021–
Yardley West and StechfordBaber BazLiberal Democrats2018–

Premises

The council meets and has some offices at the Council House on Victoria Square in the city centre. The building was first completed in 1879 for the old borough council and has been extended several times since. The council has several other office buildings, notably at 10 Woodcock Street, completed in 2011. There are two customer services centres, at 67 Sutton New Road in Erdington and at 1a Vineyard Road in Northfield. The possible closure and sale of some of the council's buildings is being considered as part of addressing the council's financial difficulties following the issuing of the Section 114 notice in 2023.

Chief executives

Mark Rogers in 2014

Past chief executives have included:

  • 1994(1994) – 2001(2001): Sir Michael Lyons
  • 2002(2002) – 2005(2005): Lin Homer
  • 2005(2005) – 2014(2014): Stephen Hughes
  • 2014(2014) – 2017(2017): Mark Rogers
  • 2017(2017) – 2017(2017): Angela Probert (Acting)
  • 2017(2017) – 2018(2018): Stella Manzie (Interim)
  • 2018(2018) – 2019(2019): Dawn Baxendale
  • 2019(2019) – 2020(2020): Clive Heaphy (Acting)
  • 2020(2020) – 2020(2020): Chris Naylor (Interim)
  • 2021(2021) – 2024(2024): Deborah Cadman
  • 2024(2024) – 2024(2024): Graeme Betts (Acting)
  • 2024(2024): Joanne Roney (as "Managing Director")

Services and facilities

Notable services provided and facilities managed by Birmingham City Council include:

The city's museums were transferred to the independent Birmingham Museums Trust in 2012. The council sold its Ogwen Cottage Outdoor Pursuits Centre, by auction, in October 2014.

Highways

In 2010, Birmingham City Council agreed a 25 year deal with Amey plc to manage the city's highways, but, after allegations of sub-standard repairs to roads and pavements, the council invoked penalty clauses and entered into a prolonged legal dispute. In December 2018, Amey parent Ferrovial put the business up for sale, after allocating €237m for losses on Amey's highway maintenance contract with the Council. In February 2019, Amey was close to a deal to exit its Birmingham contract, liabilities from which were preventing the company's sale by Ferrovial. A £215m deal to terminate Amey's Birmingham contract was confirmed in July 2019. The council was set to receive £160m in 2019 with a further £55m paid over the next six years, with services continuing on an interim basis until September 2019, and potentially until March 2020. However, in February 2020, it was announced the Birmingham contract would end in March 2020; Kier Group was appointed as interim contractor for 15 months while the council sought a permanent replacement for Amey. In February 2022, the city council formally began the process of identifying a contractor to deliver £2.7 billion of works over 12 years, and invited Kier and Canadian firm SNC-Lavalin to tender for the city’s restructured highways PFI contract, covering more than 2,500km of road and 5,000km of footway. However, in October 2023, the council claimed the government was preparing to "pull the plug" on £600m of highways funding. Kier were awarded the restructured contract, set to start in February 2024, but the deal was subject to government approval. The Department for Transport pulled support for the restructured business case, forcing the council to switch to a fully publicly funded model, and in November 2025, the Council invited bids on a new deal to deliver highways and infrastructure worth around £1bn over eight year across the city and wider Midlands.

See also

External links

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