CW&C Lib Dems Condemn “Culture-War” Motions Ahead of 9 February Council Meeting
Cheshire West and Chester Liberal Democrats have criticised three motions due to be debated at the Council meeting on 9 February, accusing their proposers of misrepresenting the facts, stoking fear, and distracting from the real crises facing the borough.
Storyhouse targeted with misleading claims
One of the motions centres on a children’s event at Storyhouse which has been wrongly portrayed as inappropriate or sexualised. In reality, the event simply helps children understand that families come in different forms - a basic fact of modern life and something explicitly covered by the National Curriculum.
Children encounter classmates from a wide range of family backgrounds every day. Helping them understand that difference exists is about inclusion and safeguarding, not sex education.
Schools are already required to teach about different family structures, and Storyhouse is supporting that work at a time when schools are under severe financial pressure. Rather than attacking a valued cultural institution, councillors should be thanking it for stepping in where resources are stretched.
Had the Reform UK and Independent councillors proposing the motion spoken to the organisers, they would have known this. Instead, they have chosen to rely on dog-whistle politics to create the false impression that children are being taught about sexual relationships.
Scaremongering over changing rooms
The two further motions should not be debated at all. They are based on speculation rather than evidence, exploiting the absence of clear national guidance to whip up fear.
There is no evidence of offences occurring in public changing rooms in Cheshire West and Chester, nor are Liberal Democrats aware of any mixed-sex changing facilities on council-run premises. Raising alarmist claims without facts does nothing to improve safety - it simply targets a minority group for political gain.
Publicly elected representatives have a responsibility not to use their platform to vilify people or manufacture threats where none exist.
Call for a named vote
Given the seriousness of the claims being made and the potential harm they cause, the Liberal Democrats are calling for a named vote on all three motions.
Residents deserve to know which councillors are engaging in culture-war politics — and which are focused on holding the Labour administration to account for the real issues affecting people’s daily lives: deteriorating roads, unacceptable delays in EHCPs, and a deepening crisis in SEND provision.
Comment from the Liberal Democrats
Rob Herd, Chair of Cheshire West & Chester Liberal Democrats, said:
“This council should be focused on fixing potholes, supporting schools, and making sure children with SEND get the help they are legally entitled to - not attacking a children’s event at Storyhouse or spreading fear about problems that don’t exist.
Storyhouse is doing exactly what the National Curriculum expects, and doing it well. What we’re seeing instead is political theatre - using dog-whistle language to divide communities rather than solve problems.
We’re calling for a named vote so residents can see clearly who is serious about improving Cheshire West and Chester, and who would rather play culture-war games.”