The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Leader admits administra­tion ‘precarious’ after councillor­s’ suspension.

Authority leader calls for meeting to determine job status of two men after IBJ chaos in July

- JAMIE BUCHAN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

The leader of Perth and Kinross Council has admitted his decision to suspend two councillor­s has left his administra­tion in a precarious position.

Murray Lyle has called an extraordin­ary meeting to decide the future status of councillor­s Colin Stewart and Callum Purves.

The pair were removed from the Conservati­ve-led administra­tion, after complaints were made about their “conduct and behaviour” to the Standards Commission.

It followed a chaotic meeting of the Integratio­n Joint Board (IJB) in July.

Now both men face being ejected from the board. Mr Lyle will make a motion at a special meeting on Monday, calling for the pair to be taken off the IJB and replaced. His plea is expected to be challenged by other councillor­s.

“I have asked them on two occasions to resign from the IJB and they have not accepted that offer,” Mr Lyle said.

“I don’t know what is going to happen on Monday, but if an amendment is raised against my motion, it will go to a vote.

“Bearing in mind, by suspending these councillor­s we have moved ourselves into a minority administra­tion, it is going to be a totally different ball game for us.

“Potentiall­y, if councillor­s Stewart and Purves brought a motion to bring down this administra­tion, it might be supported. I don’t suspect that will happen, however.”

Mr Purves said he was left “somewhat perplexed” by Mr Lyle’s remarks.

“It almost seems as if he wants an excuse to vacate the administra­tion of Perth and Kinross Council,” he said.

“We remain Scottish Conservati­ve and Unionist Party councillor­s, although we are now a group of two. We are not in a formal alliance with any other group – nor do we intend to be.”

The IJB meeting was held to discuss an independen­t inquiry report by Dr David Strang regarding the mental health provision across Tayside.

The public meeting was cancelled at the last minute, with mental health groups who had turned up to hear Dr Strang asked to leave the council chambers.

Mr Purves and Mr Stewart argued against the meeting being held in private at the last moment.

Mr Stewart said: “We shall continue to vote in the best interests of our constituen­ts and in line with the commitment­s we made in the local elections, our local government manifesto and national party policy.

“We shall support proposals from any other groups where our objectives align, as our constituen­ts would expect us to.”

We shall continue to vote in the best interests of our constituen­ts. COUNCILLOR COLIN STEWART

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