Warwickshire County Council leader George Finch survives vote of no confidence by one vote

The vote followed concerns from Green Party leader Councillor Jonathan Chilvers over Finch’s conduct

Councillor George Finch, leader of Warwickshire County Council
Author: Andy Mitchell, Local Democracy Reporting Service Published 17th Mar 2026

The leader of Warwickshire County Council has survived a vote of no confidence by one vote despite a Conservative breaking ranks to vote against him. 

Councillor George Finch (Reform UK, Bedworth Central) received crucial backing from six out of the seven Tories present and two Reform-supporting independents while Restore Britain’s two ex-Reform councillors opted against voting either way, resulting in a 27-26 victory for the leader.

A full house of 57 councillors was expected but apologies were sent by two from the Conservative group – Councillor Chris Mills (Kineton & Red Horse) and Councillor Dean Richards (Admirals & Cawston) – that on Friday had called for the Green Party’s attempt to force change to be withdrawn.

However, Councillor Jan Matecki (Con, Budbrooke & Bishop’s Tachbrook), who quit as his group’s deputy leader on Friday but insisted it had not been over its stance on this, went against his party, alleging that Cllr Finch’s leadership had too often been mired in “controversy and distraction”, putting the council in the spotlight “for all the wrong reasons”.

But despite that bolstering, the Greens, Liberal Democrats, Labour and two other independent councillors – Councillor Judy Falp (Whitnash Residents’, Whitnash) and ex-Green Councillor Sam Jones (Warwick North) – saw the motion fall.

All 19 Reform UK councillors turned out and backed their leader alongside Councillor Luke Shingler (Galley Common), who stood on a Reform platform before discovering his work role precluded him from standing for a party, and Councillor Ed Harris (Baddesley & Dordon), who gave up the Reform whip after issues related to properties that he rents out came to light. 

Restore’s Councillor Luke Cooper (Studley) and Councillor Scott Cameron (Coleshill South & Arley) abstained from the ballot as planned, their reservations about Cllr Finch’s leadership usurped by the prospect of a coalition of the left coming to power and that proved pivotal in the end.

Cllr Finch’s opponents highlighted his conduct and public comments about council staff and those who represent partner organisations such as Warwickshire Police. Reform councillors hit back, saying the motion was about a power grab and targeting the leader individually, trying to overthrow the will of the electorate. 

There were around 20 people in the public gallery with, much like the council chamber itself, a half-and-half split of opinions based on the speeches that they applauded.

Hear all the latest news from across the UK on the hour, every hour, on Greatest Hits Radio on DAB, smartspeaker, at greatesthitsradio.co.uk, and on the Rayo app.