Birmingham Metropolis Council’s newest price range proposals for 2026/27 ignite fierce debate amongst councillors. The Labour-led authority declares it has closed a £300 million hole, tackled equal pay points, and escaped the ‘bankrupt’ label after years of extreme cuts, council tax will increase, and asset gross sales exceeding £250 million.
Labour Hails Progress
Council chief John Cotton describes the plans as an “essential milestone in our enchancment journey.” He states, “It is a actually essential second for Birmingham, having the ability to shed the ‘bankrupt Birmingham’ tag.” Cotton emphasizes no complacency stays, calling it a constructive step ahead.
The proposed price range allocates an extra £130 million to reinforce providers, prioritizing cleaner and safer streets. Nevertheless, approval later this month would carry a 5% council tax hike and will increase for quite a few council providers.
At a February 10 cupboard assembly, atmosphere cupboard member Coun Majid Mahmood labels it “a price range we will get enthusiastic about.” He provides, “We will now look ahead to delivering the service that the folks of this metropolis want and deserve.”
Opposition Voices Doubts
Conservative opposition chief Coun Robert Alden dismisses the price range as “smoke and mirrors.” He highlights persistent points like the continuing bins strike, the necessity to promote lots of of thousands and thousands in belongings, exploding servicing prices, unresolved equal pay liabilities, and monetary mismanagement. Alden criticizes Labour for slashing providers and elevating taxes.
Liberal Democrats group chief Coun Roger Harmer calls it one other “failed price range from Birmingham Labour.” He notes hovering council tax payments amid crumbling roads, fly-tipping, and disaster after disaster. “Having a council not declare chapter is not more than the naked minimal,” Harmer asserts.
Cotton Counters Critics
Responding in the course of the assembly, Cotton welcomes current funding from the Labour authorities however credit inner robust selections over the previous two years. “It’s unhappy that some appear disenchanted we’ve turned a big nook,” he remarks. He additionally blames prior Conservative austerity for exacerbating deprivation and challenges, praising present investments in authorities like Birmingham.
Equal pay disputes and the Oracle IT undertaking failures fueled the council’s monetary disaster.

