Judge me on my record, council leader, 18, says

An 18-year-old acting leader of a county council has urged people to judge him on his actions rather than his age.
George Finch took temporary charge of Warwickshire County Council after the Reform UK leader stood down on Wednesday. He now oversees a local authority with £1.5bn of assets and a revenue budget of about £500m.
The unusual situation has sparked debate, with his party calling it a proud moment and Labour and the Conservatives questioning his experience.
Finch, a councillor for Bedworth and the local Reform UK chairman, has not ruled out running for the top job on a permanent basis. He said his track record was pretty good.

Reform made unprecedented gains in Warwickshire in May's local elections, mainly at the expense of the Conservatives. They became the largest party and formed a minority administration.
Rob Howard, who had been leader for 41 days, said he was quitting as council leader with "much regret" due to health reasons.
Finch had been his deputy and will serve as interim until a new leader has been chosen, as per the council's constitution.
Finch, who also serves as portfolio holder for children and families, said he hoped people would be able to see past his age.
"The people of Bedworth Central elected me with a thumping majority of 1,100," he told the Local Democracy Reporting Service.
"Don't judge me on my age, judge me on what I do. At the moment, my track record is pretty good.
"As party chairman I got 13 out of 13 candidates elected.
"All of the things we needed to do to prepare for the elections, they speak volumes."

Jaymey McIvor, an Essex county councillor and Reform UK local government spokesperson, praised Finch for taking over and getting on with the job.
He said Warwickshire councillors were focused on issues such as fixing potholes and improving access to skills in deprived areas.
"I was able to see councillor Finch in action," he told the BBC's Politics Midlands programme.
"He was very professional.
"I think we should actually be quite proud that a young British man, who has been elected to office to represent his community, has found himself in a very senior position."
Labour MP for Birmingham Edgbaston Preet Gill said the people of Warwickshire "frankly deserve better".
"This is not work experience," she said. "This is not about learning on the job.
"With all due respect, at 18 you will not know how to deliver adult social care, children social care [and] SEND services."

Mike Wood, the Conservative MP for Kingswinford and South Staffordshire, was more apprehensive.
He said he had previously been a local councillor, and it was a tough job.
"It really would take a quite remarkable 18-year-old to go straight from sixth form to running a large local authority with a half a billion pound budget with no previous experience," he said.
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