Title

WHITEHALL

Brokenshire promises a 'hands on approach' to local government

New secretary of state James Brokenshire has declared himself to be ‘a real fan of local government’ and vowed to take a ‘hands on’ approach to his relationship with the sector.

New secretary of state James Brokenshire has declared himself to be ‘a real fan of local government' and vowed to take a ‘hands on' approach to his relationship with the sector.

In an interview with The MJ after just 48 hours in post, he said: ‘Local government does so much good. I have a very positive view of the good local government can do. It has a very hands on approach.'

In a marked move away from the style of his predecessor, Sajid Javid, Mr Brokenshire said he would take a similar ‘hands on' approach in his relationship with the sector and was keen to ‘listen' – but he would not be afraid to challenge local government where it was needed.

The secretary of state claimed his father's career as a former council chief executive, and as a director of the Audit Commission had given him an insight into the ‘focus on good management and good practice' in the sector.

Mr Brokenshire refused to be drawn on whether he would like to see the return of the Audit Commission, but claimed there was ‘already oversight' of councils and added ‘we know there are some fantastic councils'.

‘We are equally looking at some of the devolution deals,' he added. ‘It's all these issues I'm listening intently on.'

As local government awaits news of plans for intervention in Northamptonshire, Mr Brokenshire said he had been listening to views on the consultation over the intervention  in respect of the approach to commissioners and he would review the plans before making further announcements.

He paid tribute to his predecessor, Mr Javid, who was promoted to the role of home secretary this week, suggesting he had done an ‘incredible job' at the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government.

Mr Brokenshire, who was named as the new secretary of state on Monday, said: ‘It is a privilege to be asked to take on the role of secretary of state for housing, communities and local government.'

He said it had been a ‘tough few months with my health issues', following his resignation as Northern Ireland secretary in order to undergo lung surgery at the start of the year. However, he said he it was a pleasure to be returning to government.

WHITEHALL

The challenges, opportunities and risks of devo

By Martin Ford | 29 January 2026

The Government’s drive for devolution is set to radically alter the landscape of local government. The National Audit Office (NAO) and The MJ brought togethe...

WHITEHALL

The NHS 10 Year Plan: Why listening at scale matters for local government

By Ruth Cousens | 28 January 2026

Ruth Cousens outlines what 250,000 voices reveal about prevention, place and the future role of councils.

WHITEHALL

Rising community tensions say council chiefs

By Paul Marinko | 28 January 2026

A new survey of senior council officers has found nearly three quarters (74%) feel community tensions have risen in the past 12 months.

WHITEHALL

Rebuilding the scaffolding to repair communities

By Paul Marinko | 28 January 2026

Community tensions have been rising in the last year, a new survey by Starfish Search has found. Paul Marinko talks to councils about the scale of the challe...

Heather Jameson

Popular articles by Heather Jameson