Northern mayors: 100 days of a new term
Northern mayors: 100 days of a new termArticle
Three in every five people in the north of England, that’s 9.7 million people, are now covered by a mayoral combined authority. In the North, six powerful metro mayors now govern areas with a combined economy worth £227 billion GVA annually, meaning that they represent populations and economies larger than Scotland and Wales put together.
100 days into the second term of England’s relatively new metro mayors, this briefing paper analyses the work of northern metro mayors. It finds that they are working ambitiously, stretching the boundaries of their limited devolution deals and wielding more power– particularly ‘soft power’ – to act on local priorities than many may realise.
Related items
Change you can board: Delivering better, greener buses
The bus services bill is an opportunity to ensure reform really means thriving, green 21st century local bus networks in England.Harry Quilter-Pinner on BBC Radio 4 Today discussing political donations
Modernising elections: How to get voters back
Elections are the defining feature of modern democracy. They are the process by which we express a desired future en masse. It is the mass dimension that matters most; it is the mass dimension that is receding.