Elected county councils were created in 1889 under the
Local Government Act 1888. In Kent the
administrative county differed from the
historic county. After the first elections to the county council in January 1889 and after
county aldermen had been appointed, the council formally came into being on 1 April 1889, on which day it held its first official meeting at the
Sessions House in
Maidstone. With
Lord Brabourne in the chair,
Sir John Farnaby Lennard, 1st Baronet, was elected as the first chairman of the council.
Boundary changes The county council's duties at first were few, but gradually it absorbed school boards, the rural
highway boards and the boards of guardians. The county council adopted the Sessions House as its meeting place. In 1965, the
London Government Act 1963 abolished the existing county of London and replaced it with a larger administrative area called
Greater London, which took over the
Bexley and
Bromley areas from the administrative county of Kent. In 1974, the
Local Government Act 1972 saw Kent re-classified as a
non-metropolitan county and it gained the formerly independent county borough of Canterbury. Until 1974 the lower tier of local government had comprised numerous
boroughs,
urban districts and
rural districts. As part of the 1974 reforms, the lower tier was reorganised into fourteen
non-metropolitan districts. In 1998 the districts of
Gillingham and
Rochester-upon-Medway were removed from the non-metropolitan county of Kent to become a new
unitary authority called
Medway, whilst remaining part of the
ceremonial county of Kent.
Local government reorganisation In December 2024,
deputy prime minister Angela Rayner announced proposals for local government reorganisation (LGR). In February 2026, KCC and Medway Council encouraged Kent's almost two million residents to respond to an LGR consultation which will see all 14 existing councils abolished and replaced by a smaller number of larger unitary authorities, with a three or four council set-up the likely outcome.
Reform UK administration (2025–26) In the
2025 Kent County Council election,
Reform UK won outright control of the council and
Linden Kemkaran was elected leader. After being elected she said “we will simply put the people of Kent at the heart of everything we do”. One key policy is a new cabinet role, held by Gravesham Councillor Matthew Fraser Moat, inspired by the
Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) as promoted by
Elon Musk. The council will not fly the
rainbow flag for
Pride Month. She said she saw having a
Ukrainian flag in the council chamber as a "distraction". Kemkaran also said she intends to reduce the impact of illegal migration on residents in Kent. In July, Kemkaran shared a social media post claiming Reform had removed books containing transgender themes from the county's libraries with immediate effect. This was later found to be untrue with the challenged book simply moved from a display at the entrance to an adult section. Kent Libraries went on to post a statement that they would no longer allow displays of transgender books to be in areas accessible by children.
Suspensions and defections In August 2025, councillor Daniel Taylor was suspended from the party after threatening to kill his wife. In September, councillor Amelia Randall defected from Reform UK to UKIP, but in March 2026 left UKIP to establish her own party, Better Way Of. In October, councillor Robert Ford was suspended from Reform UK after allegations of misconduct from several women. In the same month, the council faced scrutiny after leaked footage of an August meeting showed Kemkaran shouting down other councillors using profanities, apparently over disagreements regarding the council's response to national plans for local government reform. Kemkaran said those who leaked the video were "weak" and "foolish", and accused them of "treachery". On 20 October, Reform UK announced that four councillors were being suspended: Paul Thomas, Oliver Bradshaw, Bill Barrett and Maxine Fothergill. On 27 October, Barrett, Bradshaw, Ford and Thomas, plus Brian Black, were expelled from Reform UK. On 29 October 2025, Barrett announced a new KCC grouping named the Independent Reformers or Independent Reform Group, consisting of him and Ford; Bradshaw, Black and Thomas continued to support Reform UK and said they would not join the group. On 5 November, councillor Isabella Kemp was listed as an independent on the KCC website, having left Reform UK 10 hours before KCC was to meet. On 8 January 2026, she announced that she had joined the Independent Reformers, after being in talks to join the
Liberal Democrats. On 18 February 2026, Black, Bradshaw, Ford, Fothergill, Kemp and Thomas, plus Dean Burns, joined
Restore Britain, making it the third largest party on the Council.
By-elections On the 10th of April the
Greens won the Cliftonville by-election, with Rob Yates replacing imprisoned councillor Daniel Taylor, as a
Green gain from
Reform. ==Council structure==