RAC, you told me that you joined your council in Jan 2022,
True
I reasonably took that as a statement of truth
Correct
and since all your tales have come after that time, I've reasonably deduced that this is your only experience to date.
Your reasonable deduction is flawed old chum - this is not my first rodeo );0)
S.O. 25(a)(ii) "Unless duly authorised, no councillor shall issue orders, instructions or directions". You are ordering/instructing/directing a committee that you have a right to be present "as a councillor", but "as a councillor", you have no ability to order/instruct/direct because the council hasn't authorised you to do so.
Nonsense! There is no order, instruction or direction inherent in attendance at a meeting - complete guff! And, there isn't a 25(a) (iii) in the current MSOs.
Your rights and privileges as a Councillor only extend as far as the law permits and as a subset, what the Council is lawfully able to permit via the Standing Orders and previous resolutions. The law side is is mostly wrapped up in the Standing Orders, but there are exceptions. If you can point to a piece of legislation that specifically grants you the privilege you believe you have or an item in your standing orders, then I may well reconsider my position.
Civilisation, generally, depends upon the existence of "rules" which PRECLUDE rather than authorise definable behaviour. It is seldom possible to find relevant example of a rule which enables rather than disqualifies - I suppose the minimum speed permissible on a motorway could be an exception?
However, NALC LTN 5e (Nov 2021), p 75 states:
"A member of the Council who is not appointed to a committee may attend
a committee meeting as a member of the public. They would have no right
to participate in the meeting unless a member of the public also has the
same right and as explained in Legal Topic Note 1 (Councils’ powers to
discharge their functions)."
You can dispute the worth of NALC as much as you like
Thank you
- I do too, but the LTNs do come from legal professionals who have considered all aspects of the law, test cases and other background knowledge/experience. It is explicitly clear a non-committee member of the Council has no right above and beyond that of a member of the public in the given circumstance, so I highly doubt you will find the privilege you think you have written anywhere in law. I'm not even sure on what basis you believe you have that right anyway.
Check out
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Eliz2/8-9/67/section/1, particularly 3A(b).
Your link doesn't work
If the Council/Committee decide no notes/recordings are to be taken (which I think is a reasonable assumption to make if the press are excluded without needing to formally declare such a thing), guess what? No notes/recordings can be taken. Even when you have been advised no notes/recordings can be taken, you've told us you've acted in defiance! That's not my dictation, that's the law. The Committee is the "who" that should be preventing you recording a closed session, and it can enforce this by calling a halt to proceedings until the conditions are complied with. If you don't comply, you are acting against the delegated authority granted to the committee by the Council and as such, in breach of your code of conduct; if the meeting is suspended because you're not doing as you're told, you're preventing the council carrying out it's lawful business as well as potentially bringing it into disrepute.
Hold on - none of that applies to Joe Public and you submit that a Cllr is Joe Public - you can see the difficulty you are getting into here?
It is very much the case that it is your position that is flawed. Being a Councillor doesn't give you any kind of "overlordship" of the Council.
Not sure where that is coming from..... The only reason I would seek to attend a closed session is where I know that inappropriate business is being conducted behind closed doors - yes and that is from the "actual" play book of experience.
Equally, the enduring nature of the Council shows that you are NOT "the Council", even in part. If you and all your fellow councillors quit and if your clerk and RFO also quit, the Council still exists. The Council merely calls on you to help make decisions on it's business. That, in a nutshell, is the brief for the role. You specifically can't even carry out the tasks necessary to effect those decisions unless another decision has been taken to allow you to. Say the Council decided it needed to clean the windows of the Parish Office. You "as a councillor" decide to clean the windows off your own back to save the Council some money. You slip and fall off your ladder. You put in a claim on the council's insurance because you were doing it "as a councillor", you would get nothing. You would not have been acting under the authority of the Council and so you couldn't claim to be working for the Council.
Mostly irrelevant guff
So, I've put an argument for the standing orders on the table to show you how you are wrong.
No you haven't - you have misinterpreted and misapplied SOs.
I've presented to you the considered legal advice of professionals which is published and issued to all councils.
No it isn't
I've even put a piece of legislation out there and given examples of how this "I am the council (at least in part)" idea is wrong.
I have no idea where this thinking is coming from?
How is this stacking up in comparison to your "on the job" experience which you have merely assumed to be carrying out correctly and to date, is solely what your argument is relying on?
Harsh mate, I'm wounded - {but not} maybe its time to just agree to disagree. There is nothing that states there can be no recording, notes or record of a closed session. There is nothing that states a Cllr can be compelled to leave a closed session. You simply don't have a counter argument other than what you want it to be....