A council leader is facing a standards investigation after a recording emerged in which he apparently threatened not to spend money on roads and pavements in wards in which Labour weren’t ‘successful’ at May’s local elections.

Councillor Allen Brett took over as the Labour leader of Rochdale council after Richard Farnell’s resignation last December.

In a statement issued after an audio file was made public, councillor Brett said he was disappointed that his ‘off-the-cuff remarks’ about spending at a private meeting were recorded and leaked.

He said his comments were ‘not meant to be threatening or taken seriously’.

Opposition leaders in Rochdale however have called for him to face sanctions.

Labour Party sources said he was likely to be referred to the council’s standards committee.

The recording was published on the community news website Rochdale Online.

Councillor Brett is heard saying £12m has been ‘put into roads and pavements in Rochdale’ - cash which he says would be split between Rochdale’s four townships.

He says he’s been given an ‘indicative list’.

He then goes on to say, according to the audio clip: “But I am not releasing it (the money) because, I’ll deny I’ve said this and I’m very reluctant to say it even in this room. If we don’t do successful (sic) in one ward, I might not spend any money in that ward.

“You can work that out but I’ll deny I’ve said it. I will.

“Because I’m not having it...like I was canvassing yesterday to be told in Milnrow that...” The audio then cuts out.

It’s not known who recorded the clip, but it’s believed to have been made at a local Labour Party meeting earlier this year.

A spokesman for the Labour Party said councillor Brett’s comments ‘fall short’ of the standards it expects of its elected representatives.

When approached by the M.E.N about the recording and his comments, he said: “It’s disappointing that one of the Labour Group felt the need to record my off-the-cuff remarks at what was a private meeting and then pass them onto the media.

“My remarks were not meant to be threatening or taken seriously.

“I intend to act upon what I see as a blatant breach of trust and confidentiality. Group members need to feel they are able to discuss any issues with fellow Party members without fear of being recorded illicitly.”

In a statement, a Labour Party spokesman said: “The Labour Party demands high standards of its elected representatives and the comments expressed here fall short of those standards.”

Andy Kelly, leader of the Liberal Democrats and a ward councillor in Milnrow and Newhey told the M.E.N he has lodged a formal complaint against Councillor Brett with the council’s chief executive, adding: “There’s an attitude of shrugging this off and that just doesn’t wash.”

Rochdale council meanwhile said a complaint or referral hadn’t been received as yet and a spokesman said decisions on funding allocation for road and pavement repairs would be made at township forums.

The spokesman added: “The council’s capital programme was agreed at a meeting of the full council on February 28. Decisions on how funding for the roads and repair programme will be allocated will be taken by the council’s four township committees and based on the condition of roads and footpaths. Complaints against councillors are dealt with through the council’s standards process.”