Independents for Frome
Independents for Frome (ifF) is a local political grouping based in Frome, Somerset, UK. It is known for its independent and non party-political approach and for its espousal of a series of ideas that have become known as "flatpack democracy". Independent councillors elected under the banner of ifF have been in control of Frome Town Council since 2011.
Independents for Frome | |
---|---|
Leader | Richard Ackroyd |
Founded | 2011 |
Headquarters | Frome |
Political position | Localism Conservation |
Slogan | I'm for Frome |
Frome Town council seats | 17 / 17
|
Website | |
iffrome.org.uk | |
Independents for Frome's development of the town council has been credited with being the 'crucible' of a new independent approach to local government, and is reported as having been directly responsible for the election successes of a number of similarly independent groups elsewhere in England.
The grouping, and the way in which it has run the town council since 2011, has been the focus of several academic research studies. One study reviewed how the council has used techniques of normative social influence to increase political diversity. Others have assessed its wider importance, concluding that Frome is becoming increasingly renowned for its thriving independent political and economic identity, and that it is becoming a mentor for other places that seek to replicate conditions for independent, post-party politics.
Establishment
Independents for Frome was established in January 2011 by a group of Frome residents who had become disenchanted with what they considered the institutional wrangling and party-political self-interests within the town council,[1] and the extent to which the controlling party-based politicians had become walled in by bureaucracy and protocol.[2]
A decision was made to field candidates for all the seats on the council at the 2011 local elections under a new non-partisan independent grouping, politically diverse but unified by a common set of values[1] including a codified way of working that acknowledged the inevitability of disagreement, and an understanding that there would be no whipping on council votes.[2]
The group was immediately successful, taking 10 of the available 17 seats and thus control of the town council.[1]
Flatpack democracy and its influences
The ideas that lead to the establishment of Independents for Frome were described as "flatpack democracy" by Peter Macfadyen, one of the group's founders and first town councillors. In 2014 the ideas were developed in booklet form as Flatpack Democracy: A DIY Guide to Independent Politics.[2] Flatpack democracy was reported in 2015 as having been directly responsible for the election successes of similarly independent groups in Arlesey, Bedfordshire and in Buckfastleigh, Devon.[2] A further book, Flatpack Democracy 2.0: Powertools for reclaiming local politics, followed in September 2019.[3]
Independents for Frome's flatpack democracy approach has been credited with being the 'crucible' of a new independent approach to local government.[4] Local successes were reported by 2019 in places in South-West England, Yorkshire and County Durham, and in New Zealand.[4] Specific examples in addition to Buckfastleigh include Dartmouth, Devon, Queen's Park, London and Alderley Edge, Cheshire.[4]
Academic studies
There have been several academic studies that focus on Independents for Frome.
In 2019, Amy Burnett of the University of Reading completed her PhD study of the town and its local politics following the election of Independents for Frome councillors in 2011. Burnett found that ifF had cultivated a new identity that was not previously reflected by local politics and organisations.[5] Its projection of Frome's independence as a self-sufficient market town, framed around sustainability issues, created a strong level of identity in some of the survey respondents, and the group's relocalisation and independent politics generated a self-identity that has filtered the type of person attracted to the town.[6] ifF's success at cultivating diversity and welcoming of different perspectives could, the author argued, be well placed for replication at the national level.[7]
In June 2020 Emil Husted of the Copenhagen Business School published research analysing how Independents for Frome has made use of normative control techniques to reduce homogenizing norms.[8]
In March 2021 Burnett and Richard Nunes, also from the University of Reading, published a journal article reporting the results of an in-depth study[9] of Independents for Frome and its flatpack democracy model. They considered ifF to be a "notable example of a potential political 'transition' where local voters rejected adversarial party-politics" and they argued that Frome's case is important in that the key protagonists were a group of independent councillors seeking to encourage inclusion and diversity.[10]
The authors reported evidence that ifF has contributed to an increase in local political engagement, and argued that a growing interest in the concepts of flatpack democracy nationally may be behind an unprecedented rise in the number of independent councillors elected at town and district level in the 2019 English local elections.[11] Elected representatives of several different local government tiers are, they stated, turning to independent non-partisan policies as a means of cultivating a shift in local politics.[11]
Burnett and Nunes concluded that Frome is becoming increasingly renowned for its thriving independent political and economic identity,[11] and that it is becoming a mentor for other places that seek to replicate conditions for independent, post-party politics.[12]
Electoral performance history
Frome town council elections, 2011
Party | Members elected | |
---|---|---|
Conservative | 2 | |
Liberal Democrats | 5* | |
ifF | 10 | |
Total | 17 |
*One of the Liberal Democrat councillors defected to UKIP prior to the 2015 election.
Frome town council elections, 2015
At the town council elections on 7 May 2015, Independents for Frome contested and won all seventeen available seats.[13]
Party | Members elected | |
---|---|---|
ifF | 17 | |
Total | 17 | |
References
- Reading, Nick (13 November 2012). "What a democratic revolution in the Somerset town of Frome could teach our political class". The Independent. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
- Harris, John (22 May 2015). "How Flatpack Democracy beat the old parties in the People's Republic of Frome". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
- Macfayden, Peter (2019). Flatpack Democracy 2.0: Powertools for reclaiming local politics. Eco-Logic Books. ISBN 978-1-899233-27-4.
- Harris, John (12 June 2019). "How to take over your town: the inside story of a local revolution". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
- Burnett 2019, p. 311.
- Burnett 2019, p. 310.
- Burnett 2019, p. 314.
- Husted 2020, abstract.
- Burnett & Nunes 2021, abstract.
- Burnett & Nunes 2021, section 1.
- Burnett & Nunes 2021, section 3.
- Burnett & Nunes 2021, section 7.
- "Results for Parish Council Elections 2015". Retrieved 11 May 2015.
- "Election Results for Parish Elections 2019". Retrieved 17 June 2015.
- "Election Results for Parish Elections 2022". Retrieved 29 June 2022.
Bibliography
- Burnett, Amy (2019). Planning for transitions? A case study of Frome, Somerset (UK) (PhD thesis). University of Reading.
- Husted, Emil (4 June 2020). "Alternative organization and neo-normative control: notes on a British town council". Culture and Organization. 27 (2): 132–151. doi:10.1080/14759551.2020.1775595. ISSN 1475-9551. S2CID 219913654.
- Burnett, Amy; Nunes, Richard (9 March 2021). "Flatpack democracy: Power and politics at the boundaries of transition". Environmental Policy and Governance. Wiley. 31 (3): 223–236. doi:10.1002/eet.1931. eISSN 1756-9338. ISSN 1756-932X. S2CID 233640866.