Martin Winter | |
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1st Mayor of Doncaster | |
In office 3 May 2002 – 5 June 2009 |
|
Preceded by | New Office |
Succeeded by | Peter Davies |
Personal details | |
Born | 1962 Doncaster |
Political party | Independent/Unaffiliated |
Website | www.doncaster.gov.uk |
Martin Winter was the first elected mayor of Doncaster, England. He was elected mayor in 2002 and successfully defended his position in 2005, then was forced to complete his final term as an independent after leaving his party in disgrace.
In April 2015 he published his biography "fall out - loved and trusted... hated & abused..." the memoirs of a mayor [ISBN No: 9780993249013] which was first serialised in the Mail on Sunday on 18, 25 January and 1 February.
Martin Winter was a professional Rugby League player and the son of a local newsagent proprietor and property developer. He went on to win election to Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council.
Doncaster became one of the first authorities to adopt the new system for directly elected mayors. In this position, he appoints his own cabinet from among the Councillors.
Winter won re-election in 2005 on the day of the General Election against a split opposition.
Following his fall and removal from the party in disgrace, Winter declared that he would govern as an independent mayor, with the support of two of his cabinet members. The Labour Party gave him an ultimatum to back down. The situation then became further confused as he signalled his intention to remain in the Labour Party, but not in its Council group. At the same time, the Council was faced with two reports from government inspectors, accusing it of serious failures.
On 29 May 2008, Winter and one other councillor were expelled from the Labour Party. Only the leader of the three-member Community Group and one Liberal Democrat, who was suspended from that party, joined his new cabinet. The members of Doncaster Council supported a motion of no confidence in Mayor Winter on 14 July 2008 by 42 votes to 8 with 7 abstentions. However, Mayor Winter refused to resign and pledged to see out his term of office.
Further calls for Winter's resignation followed in January 2009 after the Authority was deemed to be seriously failing in its delivery of social services following the deaths of seven children that were on the local "At Risk" register. The Social Services Department had been understaffed and overextended for some time, and several leading officers had resigned. Winter has again refused to resign following the loss of another "no-confidence" motion.