Andrew Guy - Independent for South Tyneside

Andrew Guy - Independent for South Tyneside Former Independent Councillor for West Park, South Shields.

Independent Candidate for Westoe, May 2026 Election.

𝘗𝘳𝘰𝘮𝘰𝘵𝘦𝘥 𝘣𝘺 𝘈𝘯𝘥𝘳𝘦𝘸 𝘎𝘶𝘺 𝘤/𝘰 37 𝘙𝘦𝘢𝘥𝘩𝘦𝘢𝘥 𝘙𝘰𝘢𝘥, 𝘚𝘰𝘶𝘵𝘩 𝘚𝘩𝘪𝘦𝘭𝘥𝘴, 𝘛𝘺𝘯𝘦 & 𝘞𝘦𝘢𝘳, 𝘕𝘌34 6𝘏𝘚.

08/05/2026

What a day for South Tyneside, and the rest of the country.

Unfortunately, I was one of those caught up in the political tsunami, losing Westoe by just 77 votes to Reform. A tough result, but my dear friend and colleague Kate Owens-Palmer has returned with a full four-year term, which is the best news I’ve had all week!

It’s been a privilege representing West Park. I’m proud of the positive change delivered in the ward, and of making sure that proper challenge was brought to every corner of the council.

Thank you to everyone who placed their trust in me. I hope the work that myself and many others have started can continue to head in a positive direction. ❤️

Election results will first be announced here 👉 https://portal.southtyneside.info/elections/LocalGovernment.aspx?id=47Fi...
08/05/2026

Election results will first be announced here 👉 https://portal.southtyneside.info/elections/LocalGovernment.aspx?id=47

First half of the borough has started counting. Turn out is higher compared to the 2024 local election (around 8% - 10%+). So far, rumours from the room suggests heavy losses to independent and labour, losses to greens, and massive gains for Reform. Early indication is suggesting a Reform Council.

🗳️ It's Election Day in South Tyneside! Polling stations are open until 10pm tonight. Please check your poll card before...
07/05/2026

🗳️ It's Election Day in South Tyneside!

Polling stations are open until 10pm tonight. Please check your poll card before you set off, as your local station may have moved.

A few things worth knowing:

1️⃣ You'll need photo ID to vote

2️⃣ You can vote for up to three candidates on your ballot paper

3️⃣ If you have a postal vote you didn't get in the post in time, you can hand it in at any polling station in South Tyneside before 10pm (you'll be asked to fill in a short form, and you can't hand in more than six, including your own)

📅 Results will be called tomorrow in an AM/PM split depending on the ward you are in. Westoe will be called in the afternoon (expected between 3pm and 5pm)

If you live in Westoe, I'd be honoured to have your support today. Whatever you decide, please use your vote! ❤️

06/05/2026

I’ve noticed a pattern this election: ‘promises’ that sound good on the surface, but once you dig into the legislation or the costs, I can absolutely guarantee these will either not be kept, or will push our borough into financial chaos.

Let’s talk about ‘free parking’, because I know why it sounds appealing, and I’ve just been challenged for not supporting it in South Shields.

First, there is no such thing as free parking.

Scrapping parking charges in the town centres and on the foreshore would cost the council around £1.36m a year. That money has to come from somewhere, and the most likely route is a council tax increase of around 1.7%. That is a rise for every household, right across the borough.

The evidence is also clear that free parking does very little for town centres. UK and international studies consistently show that walkability, the quality of the public realm, the retail and leisure mix, and parking turnover are the real drivers of a flourishing town centre. The price of parking has little to no measurable impact.

South Shields is no exception. Our challenges have very little to do with parking, and far more to do with anti-social behaviour, a limited business mix, and changing consumer habits.

Instead of cutting parking charges, we need to be diverting resources into Community Responders as a priority to tackle the ASB, and making sure every policy across the council is pulling in the same direction for our town centres. Any savings the council does find from genuine waste need to be reinvested carefully into the things that actually move the dial, or we stay stuck.

Council finances are not a political game. The financial failure of a local authority has severe consequences for every resident, and that point sadly seems to have been entirely lost in this year’s campaign.

For the record: I completely support freezing parking charges, and I have consistently voted against increases. What I won’t do is bare-faced lie to residents and make promises I know are fiscally irresponsible, or outright impossible, just to win votes. I’d rather lose my seat than be elected on a mandate I know can’t be delivered.

Busy bee this evening, both delivering leaflets and reporting ward issues! 🐝
13/04/2026

Busy bee this evening, both delivering leaflets and reporting ward issues! 🐝

01/03/2026

ℹ️ South Tyneside Council’s Medium-Term Financial Plan (2026–2030) was passed by full council on Thursday, what happened and what’s changing?

This was after 23 councillors voted for (all Labour) and 23 councillors against (all opposition). After it came to a tie, the deputy mayor (Cllr Smith, former Labour and now ungrouped independent) voted to pass the budget.

✂️ The Breakdown of the "Short-Term" Savings:

📚 Children’s Day Care & Family Hubs (-£1,015,000): These services are the frontline of prevention. Reducing capacity here doesn't make the need go away; it just ensures that when those families eventually hit a crisis point, the cost to the taxpayer will be significantly higher.

📈 Connexions (-£80,000) & Adult Learning (-£232,000): In a borough fighting for regeneration, cutting the very services that get young people and adults into the workforce is counter-intuitive. Skilled, working residents grow our tax base. Cutting this is effectively capping our own economic growth.

🚨 Public Protection & Regulatory Services (-£179,000): These teams are already stretched thin. Every £1 spent on regulatory inspections typically saves the community multiple times that in health, safety, and justice costs. Reducing enforcement capacity is an open invitation for ASB and environmental issues to worsen.

🧹 Streetscene & Highways (-£298,000): We see it every year. Cutting maintenance budgets for roads and cleanliness is a "saving" on paper only. The reality? A spike in insurance claims for vehicle damage and personal injury, alongside a decline in the "curb appeal" that brings businesses to our high streets. StreetScene are responsible for keeping our streets clean, and labour have slashed this budget year on year, while simultaneously campaigning for cleaner streets. This should be called out, our streets are not cleaned for free by pixies (if only!).

🔍 The Bottom Line on these ‘Savings’
A budget should be a roadmap for a sustainable future, not just a desperate scramble to balance the current quarter. By slashing the services that keep people healthy, skilled, and safe, we are simply deferring a much larger bill to the next few years.

We are looking at over £1.8m in cuts specifically targeted at prevention and early intervention. From an economic perspective, this is high-risk; you save a pound today only to spend five pounds tomorrow on emergency statutory services.

🫵 The Cost to You
🔺 Council Tax: Up by 4.95% (£3.96m).
🔺 Social Housing Rents: Up by an average of 4.8% (£3.45m).
🔺 Stealth Charges: "Reviews" are currently underway for all areas of the council. We will also see increases in green waste charges, car parking charges, bereavement services, and garage rents. With some of these increases, the amounts are undisclosed.

When any organisation restructures, there should be a clear plan for operational resilience. In this budget, we see:

❌ No clear data on redundancy costs.
❌ No consultation timescales.
❌ No assessment of how these "reviews" will hit our already stretched operational capacity.

⚠️ The Reserve Risk
Without transparency on these internal reviews, we are essentially guessing at the outcome. The "best-case scenario" is that these cuts are only a portion of the real total. The "worst-case scenario" is that we deplete our limited reserves to cover inefficiencies, leaving the Council financially exposed and potentially going bust.

We are being told that the "Fair Funding Review" and broken promises from central government have left us with no choice. While the funding model is indeed broken, hiking taxes without showing a clear, data-driven plan for internal efficiency is not the standard our residents deserve.

Residents are being asked to dig deeper into their pockets during a cost-of-living crisis, but the budget remains remarkably vague on how that extra revenue will be used to improve efficiency within the Town Hall and council operations.

I also want to address the "missing" alternative budget. We have come under fire from the ruling group for not putting forward an alternative set of numbers, but there is a very simple reason for that: You cannot build a responsible budget on a foundation of secrets.

Why there was no amendment:
❌ Refused Access to Data: We were refused access to the financial modelling and the actual line-by-line costs.
❌ Lack of Transparency: The draft budget was kept from us until it entered the public domain just a few weeks ago.
❌ Quality Standards: Any budget based on limited data is simply not the standard our residents deserve. We refused to "tweak" a flawed document just for the sake of political theatre.

The "Bidding War" Failure 😣
A major part of the problem is the current funding model. Councils are forced to "squabble" over small pots of government money with incredibly narrow criteria. This leads to nonsensical outcomes:

🙋‍♂️ We may only need £250k to resurface a crumbling road.
🤷‍♂️ However, the only available government grant might be for £3m to install a bus lane or widen a certain cycle path along the coast road.
🤦‍♂️To get any money at all, the Council is forced to deliver projects that aren't the best value for money or the highest local priority.

The current funding model is fundamentally broken. We need a system that grants councils true autonomy over their budgets, allowing them to reinvest any underspend into new projects rather than being penalised for efficiency. Currently, the "use it or lose it" approach perversely rewards underspending by clawing back the surplus.

This is exactly why cutting department headcount is a strategic error; those funding applications don't write themselves. With departments already stretched to capacity, if bids are low quality, submitted late, or missed entirely due to a lack of officer time, the whole community loses out.

What happened on Thursday 🏛️
What South Tyneside needs isn’t a few minor adjustments to a failing plan; we need a fundamental shift in policy and mindset. That is the job of a ruling party, but when everyone else is cut out of the room, you are left with a budget built in a vacuum.

We could have had a different outcome on Thursday. If the budget had not been agreed, an emergency general meeting would have been scheduled for the following week. This would have forced the ruling group to finally get around the table with the opposition to build something transparent. However, that opportunity was lost when the Deputy Mayor tipped the scales in Labour's direction.

Why didn’t we back the Green Amendment? 🤷‍♂️
So firstly, I noted a number of Labour councillors referring to the Green amendment as an alternative budget, to clear this up, the Greens put an amendment to the substantive budget. Nearly everything I have mentioned in the post was left unchanged. Now every councillor will have their own reasons, but for me, some of the cuts proposed by Labour were simply non-negotiable. When we ran the numbers, the amendment adjusted just 0.093% of the overall budget, meaning we would have accepted over 99.9% of the original proposal in real terms.

Do I blame the greens for this? Absolutely not, they encountered the same issues as we did surrounding information sharing. Although, I do question their motivations on why they risked allowing the majority of the Labour budget to get accepted, even when they later spoke against parts they would have adopted automatically if their amendment had been successful.

📣 Final word
We don’t need "tweaks" to a broken budget; we need a cross-party, transparent approach that values generating revenue through innovation rather than just slashing services and hiking taxes.

South Tyneside deserves a budget built on data and transparency, not silence and best-case scenarios, and that’s why I was one of 23 opposition councillors to vote against our latest budget.

Out delivering leaflets today in the Westoe Ward… spotted some familiar backlane fairies to report as well! 👌
22/02/2026

Out delivering leaflets today in the Westoe Ward… spotted some familiar backlane fairies to report as well! 👌

20/02/2026

🗳️ May 2026 Elections 🗳️

On Thursday 7 May, elections will be held across South Tyneside. Due to the recent ward boundary changes, this will be an all out election, with all 54 councillors standing on the same day.

This matters. A change of administration is genuinely possible in a single night.

In 2024, I moved into the Westoe ward. Although I remain a stone’s throw from West Park, it has understandably been the elephant in the room when deciding whether to stand again in West Park, stand elsewhere, or step back altogether.

In August 2025, Cllr Glenn Thompson, a hardworking councillor, sadly suffered a stroke and made the difficult decision not to stand this year. The Westoe councillors asked whether I would consider standing in Westoe, and after many long conversations, I have agreed.

I am incredibly proud of what we have delivered in West Park, both locally and within the council. With a fantastic team, we have delivered nearly everything we set out to achieve.

Some highlights I am particularly proud of:
• Designing a social housing retrofit scheme that has since been adopted in other wards.
• Delivering park improvements including new lighting, bins, benches, a picnic area now being installed, a ban on glyphosate, and hundreds of new trees and hedges.
• Reporting over a thousand cases of fly tipping, dog fouling, and litter.
• Tackling persistent ASB, and securing additional police presence through scrutiny.
• Consistently voting in line with residents’ wishes, improving consultations, and challenging schemes residents did not support.
• Exposed first class rail travel and civic car use, and pushing for greater transparency around council spending.
• Myself and Cllr Yare resolving a highly complex and emotional Adult Social Care charging case that helped reshape how residents are treated later in life.

And yes, I have never claimed for first class travel.

Until May, I will continue to serve West Park as its councillor, taking on casework and delivering projects already in progress. This page will gradually reflect my campaigning activity in Westoe, while I continue to serve West Park until May.

Looking back over the last four years, it has been a privilege to represent West Park. I have genuinely felt welcomed and supported by so many residents, including some who are sadly no longer with us.

Looking ahead to May, my focus remains exactly where it has always been: working hard for residents, listening properly, and standing up for what is right, even when it is uncomfortable. Thank you to everyone who has placed their trust in me over the last four years. Whatever happens next, that responsibility has never been taken lightly.

More positive news! Remember our vote on which bench you would like to see in the park?! Well, the winning bench is goin...
12/02/2026

More positive news! Remember our vote on which bench you would like to see in the park?! Well, the winning bench is going in! In the dozens! 🥳

This week, albeit a very wet one, all the old tatty benches are being replaced with new ones! And… we have extra benches going in the dog park, along the path closest to Stanhope Road, and by the community garden. 👏

The picnic area is also going in too! 🌳 🧺

A huge thank you to the community for picking such a nice style of bench, Merrik at South Tyneside Council for helping us secure the application and liaise with our contractors. And a massive thank you to our contractors that are not only working through a very wet and cold week, but also went above and beyond and unblocked a drain in the park! ❤️

Hopefully, we will get to use them when the sunshine comes back out ☀️

12/02/2026

❌ Local plan determined to be ‘not sound’ ❌

Campaigners and the opposition fought hard for the local plan to go back to the drawing board and successfully rejected it twice at full borough.

The Labour government decided to ignore the majority of elected members and force it through. Opposition councillors also faced pressure from officers and even a threat from a Labour councillor on the night to submit it anyway.

Today, after the examination in public process, the planning inspectorate came to the same conclusion and has ordered significant modifications to be made.

Although the fight to roll some of the worse parts back is not over, this is a huge step forwards for campaigners.

Updates and more detail:

1. The Brinkburn site has been recommended to go back out to consultation with the following aim: Clarifications regarding on-site retained playing pitch provision.

2. Sewage - Recommendation for the Environment Agency to review permits for CSO’s (Combined Sewage Overflows - these are parts of our stormwater and sewage network that allows sewage to overflow into our environment).

3. A recommendation for decision makers on planning applications has been suggested - “Development proposals should demonstrate that adequate mains foul water
treatment and disposal already exist or can be provided in time to serve the development, or that this can be made available in time for the occupation of the development”.

Address

C/O South Shields Town Hall, Westoe Road
South Shields
NE332RL

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