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How metro mayors are getting things done — even if they have limited money and power

The word “mayor”, in the English governance landscape, refers to many different roles. Until the turn of the 21st century, it mostly described non-partisan ceremonial leaders of towns and boroughs in England and Wales, most often elected by councillors. The further ceremonial title of Lord Mayor was conferred by royal letters patent on the leaders of the nation’s biggest cities. Directly elected Mayors, by contrast, are a new phenomenon. The first, introduced in 2000, was the Mayor of London – currently Sadiq Khan – who is responsible for the Greater London Authority, a collection of 19 local authorities. Two distinct types of elected mayor have since emerged. Local authority mayors, like Marvin Rees in Bristol and Paul Dennett in Salford, are put in place by voters within the boundaries of a single local authority. Metro mayors– of which there are now nine – are voted in by residents of all the local authorities of a combined authority. In May 2021, elections for Metro Mayors saw a reported 10 million people around England head to the …

The post How metro mayors are getting things done — even if they have limited money and power appeared first on Skeptic Society Magazine.



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How metro mayors are getting things done — even if they have limited money and power

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