Title

Soapbox by Mark Rogers

In the aftermath of the Trojan Horse findings, the Birmingham City Council chief executive outlines the authority's commitment to child-centred, values-based leadership.

These are testing times here in Birmingham. 

The city is presently the focus for a highly charged debate about the meaning and prevalence of extremism.
 

Prompted by the alleged "Trojan Horse plot", what started with a relatively straight-forward need to investigate concerns about suspected abuses of school governance by religious conservatives has since metamorphosed into a contentious war of words about where the threshold of extremism should be drawn - crudely caricatured as lying somewhere between the crocodiles and the whole swamp - and whether or not some schools have crossed an, at best, I'll-defined red line. 

But, most challengingly of all, the ensuing and ongoing furore has spotlighted Islam and, with only the odd exception, Islam alone. 

As someone who holds a politically restricted post what I truly think about these deeply politicised issues will have to wait for my memoirs (working title "The Graveyard Is Full Of Irreplaceable Town Clerks"). But what I believe I am entitled to talk about is the moral imperative we all share to remember the children in all this. 
 
There are occasions when it seems that dome of those who are pursuing agendas can end up appearing detached from those who are actually caught up in them.
 
Regulators can be distracted by the (futile) pursuit of the infallible inspection; legislators, similarly, can drive up the cul-de-sac named Perfect Policy Place. And, meanwhile, on the ground the presumed beneficiaries of all these efforts can get more and more overlooked and, if we're not careful, seriously distressed. 
 
Which is where the very best of local government leadership can - and must - come into its own. So, here in Birmingham, on the back of the city council's commitment to deliver a unified, credible and sustained leadership that is putting children and young people back at the centre of the efforts to improve safeguarding, so that same leadership (endorsed by Lord Warner) has also vowed to tackle these further challenges - not for their own sake, but for the sake of those for whom we are either elected or appointed to serve.
 
And, as a highly visible demonstration of that commitment, now that we have the mass inspection phase out of the way (and, by the way, what is the correct collective noun for multiple Ofsteds? No, don't tell me), we are preparing to conduct a city-wide initiative that takes the revolutionary step of asking pupils themselves what they think an excellent, inclusive and truly contemporary British education looks like. 
 
Child-centred, values-based leadership. Novel, eh?

Mark Rogers is chief executive of Birmingham City Council 

The pressure of reshaping the sector

By Mark Bearn | 25 June 2026

With many local government figures currently fighting on three fronts, Mark Bearn outlines the challenge of leading effectively while being pulled in differe...

Coming to terms with political balance

By Colin Mellors | 24 June 2026

Sixty-four councils had indecisive election outcomes in May. Colin Mellors considers the complexities of negotiation, the politics behind enhanced scrutiny, ...

Norfolk's vision pays off for children

By Sara Tough | 24 June 2026

Norfolk CC has received the top Ofsted grading for its children’s services department, with outstanding judgements across the board, marking a dramatic turna...

EXCLUSIVE: Government reorganisation plan 'on track' despite Starmer resignation, McGovern insists

By Paul Marinko | 23 June 2026

Ministers have insisted they are ‘on track’ to announce the next tranche of reorganisation decisions before the middle of next month despite Keir Starmer’s r...

Mark Rogers

Popular articles by Mark Rogers