Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Nick Statham

'I thought I would have had one more year': Ousted leader's 'disappointment' over being ditched after steering council through pandemic

Rochdale council’s ousted former leader has spoken of his disappointment at being ditched by his group after steering the authority through the pandemic.

Councillor Allen Brett was deposed as Labour chief at the weekend following a successful challenge by environment boss Coun Neil Emmott.

Coun Emmott was the comfortable victor in a secret ballot of the borough’s Labour councillors, which saw him emerge with nearly half the votes.

It came just days after the party tightened its already iron grip on the authority at last week’s local elections.

While Coun Brett technically continues as council - though not Labour - leader until the annual council meeting on May 19, it effectively brings to an end his three-and-a-half years at the helm.

But the 75-year-old says he made it known he planned to stand aside next year - and is disappointed not to be given another 12 months.

“I would have stepped down anyway,” he said.

“I was planning to step back from both the role of leader and representing Milkstone and Deeplish next May.

“Everyone knew this. I thought I would have had one last year as leader.”

Coun Brett said it was especially disappointing given he had been at the helm for during the Covid crisis.

“I was asked to do another year because of the pandemic and thought they would have allowed me to continue now we are coming out of it,” he added.

There had been rumblings of a move against Coun Brett for some time with Labour sources intimating a ‘growing discontent’ among members.

However, Coun Brett - who does not use social media - believes this could have been resolved under normal circumstances.

“I think it’s a bit sad I have not been able to meet people face to face,” he said.

“If I had been able to meet people face to face I would not have had the problems I had.”

The former teacher says he will continue as ward councillor for Milkstone and Deeplish - a seat he successfully defended for Labour in the local elections.

That will take him up to next May, where there will be an ‘all out’ election in Rochdale, where all 60 council seats - three per ward - will be up for grabs.

“Whether I stand in the all-outs is very unlikely,” said Coun Brett.

“If I did it would probably be a return to Milnrow if, perhaps, we need a candidate if we need to find three in the all-outs.

“But I’m still a long-standing Labour Party member and I’m supporting them, we will see what happens.

“I will stand if the party wants me, but not in Milkstone and Deeplish. But I will continue to represent them and continue to do my best for them.

“That would have been the plan anyway, even if I had not lost the leadership.”

Coun Brett said he was saddened that not to be overseeing the ongoing regeneration of the town but hoped the plans would come to fruition.

“I’m disappointed but democracy is democracy. I just hope everything I have set up continues as well as all the other things he [new leader Coun Neil Emmott] says [he will do].

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.