Now, one of the features of the local elections earlier this month was the very lively contest for a series of Metro mayoralties around the country. Ben Houchen, the conservative, narrowly held on to the Teesside mayoralty. Andy Street another conservative lost the West Midlands mayoralty, and Labour surprised a lot of people by winning the new North Yorkshire mayoralty, which includes the parliamentary seat of the current Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak.
00:30:23:01 - 00:30:52:17
But there's an interesting issue around all these powerful local figures, however big their profile is locally wants the scrutiny and arrangement around the billions of pounds of taxpayers money that they will control. What can be done to keep tabs and make sure that there aren't scandals or complaints of abuse of public funds in the future? It seems like a bit of a job for Parliament, but Parliament can't easily keep its finger on the pulse of the increasingly number of Metro mayoralty.
00:30:52:17 - 00:31:12:16
So coming in to talk to us about that is Jack Newman, research fellow at the University of Bristol and one of the authors of a report on local democracy. Jack, first of all, what's your impression of the existing arrangements for scrutinizing these incredibly powerful figures with all this public money at their disposal? Okay. Yeah. Thanks for having me on.
00:31:12:18 - 00:31:37:12
Maybe first I'll take issue with the idea that they're immensely powerful. I think they have some power. And that power is likely to increase in the years to come. So the scrutiny question is going to become more and more important. And at the moment, I'd say that the scrutiny arrangements are unsatisfactory. So the principal mechanism through which they're held to account at the local level is through a scrutiny committee in each mayoral combined authority.
00:31:37:14 - 00:31:56:24
But these are widely acknowledged to be ineffectual. They're made of councilors, many of whom don't have the time, aren’t funded, often they don't attend. These committees lack the kind of powers or funding to really hold the mayor properly to account, and therefore much of the scrutiny of mayors has come from the center, through the Treasury and other controls over their spending.
00:31:57:01 - 00:32:31:19
But this creates a problem, really, because for mayors to really be effectual and mayoral combined authority to really realize their potential, they need flexibility and freedom over their spending. And this means that there's going to need to be a new mechanism holding them to account, other than the current funding restrictions that exist. And one of the things that happens at the moment is that the mayors make individual kind of bespoke deals with central government for particular aspects of their policy, what they're going to do about training, what they're going to do about boosting growth in their region, what they're going to do about infrastructure.
00:32:31:21 - 00:32:52:14
And those are one off issues between the mayor and government ministers. And parliament doesn't get much of a look in the other. Local councils don't necessarily get that much of a look in either. Yeah, they're quite secretive arrangements rarely negotiations really. They happen behind closed doors, so to speak. A lot of the public don't really know they're happening or don't have a say themselves either.
00:32:52:16 - 00:33:13:03
And these tend to be deals struck between the leaders of local councils and members of the government. This is quite unique, really. You look across the world and most systems that have a strong regional tier government that's embedded in their constitution, and these regional institutions have a kind of constitutional footing and a set of responsibilities and rights that are unique to them.
00:33:13:05 - 00:33:33:07
And in England, we've got this emerging system where a number of bespoke deals are being struck between the central and local leaders. And I think what we can see this has really is it's a stepping stone to a stronger regional tier government in this country. What's interesting is whether that journey is going to continue or whether it's going to slow after the next election.
00:33:33:09 - 00:33:59:08
Clearly, one option is greater strengthened scrutiny at the local level. But obviously, given the amount of money and however much a next government is committed to decentralization and devolution and so on, Parliament itself and as an institution is going to want to have some scrutiny over these bodies as well, particularly if they're going to become more powerful, if they're going to have more money, and that if we have a new Labour government, that seems to be the direction of travel.
00:33:59:10 - 00:34:17:23
What Labour's dubbed a taking back control bill as possibly being the first bill out of the box. And, you know, kind of almost 100 days achievement and trying to get that onto the statute book. So what are the options for Parliament? Because, I mean, Michael Gove has been discussing this as the sort of lead minister in the leveling up department.
00:34:18:00 - 00:34:37:06
What are the options? I mean, what's being mooted at the moment is a situation where you basically have a committee of MPs that in many ways mimic the select committees for each of the mayoral combined authority, starting with the most advanced ones in Britain, Manchester in the West Midlands. And these MPs, yeah, they perform the kind of main scrutiny function.
00:34:37:08 - 00:35:02:20
There are a number of problems with this. I mean firstly you've got the question, the fact that MPs are already notoriously busy people who have a role in Parliament, who have a role of their constituents, who have a role within that party. The second one is that there seems to been a history in local and regional government in England, where we look to the center to try and resolve problems at the local level, or we look to the center to keep an eye on what's going on in local government.
00:35:02:22 - 00:35:25:16
And we've had this traditional top down view of accountability, where local and regional politicians are ultimately answerable to Parliament. But they, of course, have their own mandate. They're elected at to local authority elections and increasingly, these mayoral candidates have their own direct mandate through to mayoral elections. So we need to think about other ways in which we can hold these new local leaders to account.
00:35:25:21 - 00:35:50:17
One of those ways is through improving arrangements within mayoral combined authority for better scrutiny committees to get that right. And the other angle is to think about local democracy. When we in a report that I did with Mike Kenny about local governance in England, we compared local turnout between England and comparative countries. England's turnout in local elections is much lower than comparative countries and decreasing.
00:35:50:23 - 00:36:12:00
And then in this new report that you mentioned at the start with the productivity Institute, we look at the local media situation. Local media is decreasing as well across England. So you've got this kind of broken and breaking scrutiny mechanism where the local public should hold local leaders to account. So I think fixing that is the solution, rather than trying to add another burden on MPs.
00:36:12:02 - 00:36:31:02
But it's what the government has suggested so far, almost as sort of a halfway house, because, as I understand it, these MP sessions that are being mooted, the idea is that they actually don't sit in Westminster, that they actually send the MPs off to the regions and hold the sessions there, which brings into play a whole set of questions about how that would work.
00:36:31:08 - 00:36:54:16
Is it a proceeding in Parliament? What are the travel arrangements? Does that mean MPs who've got other business sort of missing votes? How do you make the logistics of it work? Yeah, they're all interesting and important questions that haven't really been properly answered yet. And I think this opens quite a interesting question, because traditionally MPs have been understood to have their role with their constituents and have their role in Parliament.
00:36:54:17 - 00:37:20:16
And through both of these, they have a role within their political party. And this seems to be a whole new dimension to what MPs are expected to do, which is to directly hold local leaders to account in that area. So I think there are all sorts of potentially unforeseen issues to arise with this. And one of the just to raise briefly is if you look at the boundaries of parliamentary constituencies and you look at the boundaries for local authorities, the two do not align or they do in a handful of places.
00:37:20:22 - 00:37:40:09
So you will have all sorts of questions about these overlapping and not quite aligning, which I think will also create issues here as well. One of the issues is its political balance, because in some of these regions, obviously they skew more to one party than the other. And on a normal sort of parliamentary committee, you'd expect political balance that's required under the standing orders.
00:37:40:11 - 00:38:13:04
So is the proposal that only the MPs from that particular region are appointed to these MP sessions for the metro mayoral areas, or would it be MPs from across the country? Yeah, I mean, the idea is that it is the MPs within the area of the Mayoral Combined Authority. But as you say, that raises questions over balance. And I maybe, maybe broaden this out into a bigger question for scrutiny of the mayors, which is the in the British political tradition, we are used to the idea of a governing party and an opposition party. Mayoral combined
00:38:13:04 - 00:38:36:13
Authorities operate very differently. The mayor, one of their main roles is to build consensus among the local authority leaders, and therefore the idea is to reduce opposition, to build consensus. When you add that to the fact that many of these male combined authorities are completely dominated by one party. South Yorkshire, Liverpool, West Yorkshire, for example, all Labour, Greater Manchester, all Labour except one of the seats.
00:38:36:15 - 00:38:56:18
When you combine these two things, a lack of an opposition and the single party dominance, you have this big gap where there should be a scrutiny mechanism. So this is a concern for the proposal about having a committee of MPs, but it's also a concern for other kind of traditional scrutiny arrangement that you might envisage. So this is one of the big challenges that I think we need to face up to.
00:38:56:22 - 00:39:20:06
There's another dimension to this as well, though, isn't there? Which is accountability outward, if you like. What is the best way for the mayoral to the regions to influence central government? Because central government's policies could be very, very important to those regions. And they might be formulated in a way that those regions don't like. Yeah, absolutely. And we talk about top down accountability, which is central government holding local leaders to account.
00:39:20:06 - 00:39:48:10
We talk about inward accountability, which is now scrutiny arrangements within mayoral combined authorities, outward accountability, the way in which mayors and local leaders are accountable to local people and by the local media. But there's this fourth dimension that's that's often ignored in the UK and in England specifically, which is bottom up accountability, which is where local leaders or in this case, mayors have some sort of role at the center, some sort of say in what happens at the center, especially when it pertains to their own remit.
00:39:48:12 - 00:40:06:16
If you look at other countries, if you look at Germany, for example, they have the Bundesrat, where the regional governments are represented, Belgium, Austria, many of the countries have this as well. We have nothing like this in the UK. So this is the kind of missing dimension really. And I think this will emerge in the years to come.
00:40:06:16 - 00:40:25:22
But it's going to take time. There were examples of people, for example, Ben Houchen, that the Teesside mayor is a peer. Dan Jarvis, when he was mayor of the South Yorkshire mayoralty, was still a member of Parliament, was sitting in the Commons as well. So there are occasions when people have kind of their tendrils into the Westminster set up.
00:40:25:24 - 00:40:45:08
Yeah, they were kind of ad hoc arrangements. There was an informal pressure as well. I mean, look at HS2, the way in which the mayors responded to that or look at Andy Burnham during the Covid lockdowns. Mayors increasingly have this informal power where they're able to put pressure on central government, and they're able to exercise a kind of informal bottom up accountability.
00:40:45:10 - 00:41:13:22
What is yet to emerge is some sort of institutional framework that deals with that, and, and provides a kind of formal space in which local leaders and central leaders can negotiate and come together. There's maybe something that exists between central government and the devolved nations through intergovernmental relations that could be replicated in England. But we're yet to see this, really, and there are a number of different options on the table about how this might be done, but no agreement or real strong political direction to put these into action.
00:41:13:24 - 00:41:43:12
Given that we're now into a general election period and given the polls, it looks likely that Labour will probably win. But if the Labour Party side on this with Labour's plans, the Mayoral Combined Authority, I think there is a very strong rhetoric about the desire to continue the approach that's been taken to finish the map of devolution, so that everywhere has a male combined authority and to further empower them, especially in areas like skills and Labour market activation policies and planning.
00:41:43:14 - 00:42:08:10
But what there has been much less of is really facing up to the intricacies of the kind of institutional framework in which all this sets. So thinking about how this looks as a system, how does this new tier regional government look as a system, how does it fit in with the existing constitutional arrangements? Those questions are actually very complicated and technical, and Labour haven't yet given any clear indication of where they might go.
00:42:08:12 - 00:42:33:11
What we have so far is we we have some indications in Gordon Brown's review of the Constitution, which flagged up this idea of replacing the House of Lords with the chamber of the Nations and Regions. That looks very unlikely to happen. But also in that report was this idea of a Council for England, which would bring together kind of local leaders into one body, but how that would look, how it would be composed, what it functions, would be, etc. is yet to be decided.
00:42:33:13 - 00:42:42:02
Clearly an issue that's going to dog the next government. Jack Newman, thanks very much for joining us on the pod. Thanks so much.
00:42:42:04 - 00:43:05:01
So, Mark, we've had a few questions in from our listeners. So I thought we'd go through these. some of them touch on issues that we've already talked about a little bit, wanting a few more specifics. So Julia Cushman, who is the policy and advocacy manager at my society that we've mentioned on the podcast before, she's a regular listener and she says, what, if anything, will happen in Parliament
00:43:05:01 - 00:43:24:17
between state opening on the 17th of July and the House rising on the 23rd of July. Now, we touched on that earlier. We're not sure that the House will rise on the 23rd. We think that's doubtful. But she's particularly interested in what will happen with things like the registration deadlines for the Register for members interests, for all party parliamentary groups.
00:43:24:23 - 00:43:44:07
Will that happen after recess? And essentially, we're looking at MPs spending the summer setting up their offices and the real business kicking off in September. Well, as we were saying earlier, I think that a bit of real business may well get done before MPs rise for the summer, but there's also be as she's rightly talking about, there, quite a lot of bureaucracy for MPs to get through.
00:43:44:07 - 00:44:05:23
They all have to do their submissions to the Register of Members interests so that we know what their interests are, and they can steer clear of any kind of conflict of interest in their parliamentary activities. Setting up All-Party Parliamentary Groups. I suspect that those groups won't really get going until possibly into the autumn, and then a register of them will doubtless emerge.
00:44:05:23 - 00:44:29:10
But I think that there will be so much to do at the start of a new Parliament. And getting APPGs together is low down most people's priorities at the moment. Yeah. And then we've had another question from A1 bloke on Twitter, no idea who that is. And he says, is it possible to cancel the dissolution of Parliament? Well, theoretically, yes.
00:44:29:12 - 00:44:48:01
Practically I think anything much short of canceling the dissolution because World War Three is broken out would make Rishi Sunak look pretty silly. You would need an enormously important, major reason that the public could sympathize with for that to happen. And then you would need to get His Majesty to sign a new order in council, essentially canceling the previous one.
00:44:48:03 - 00:45:07:23
So it's a very, very, very big ask and the politics around it. You know, Rishi Sunak can't wake up tomorrow morning saying, oh, maybe not such a good idea to have an election. Yeah, it has to be. It has to be done through a new royal proclamation of you didn't go through all of that process. And as you say, ultimately the King acts on the Prime Minister's advice as his constitutional adviser.
00:45:08:00 - 00:45:30:02
But it would be a very, very high bar. And this ridiculous story about conservative MPs trying to mount a last minute leadership coup to call off the election. I mean, the politics of that are even more absurd, and the practicalities of that are non-existent. I just don't think it can practically be done in the time where enough conservative MPs bonkers enough to attempt it.
00:45:30:04 - 00:45:54:07
So we've had a couple of questions about purdah and about this period of sensitivity for the government, for the civil service. One is from Fiona McIlroy, who is a strategic comms adviser used to work in Whitehall, according to her Twitter profile. And she says what happens if high profile, sensitive commercial contracts reach a point that doesn't fit with the parliamentary cycle for announcements, but still need to go ahead regardless of who's in government?
00:45:54:07 - 00:46:12:22
Can they be announced during purdah if a contract is signed during that time? And we had a similar one asking us about the timetable. This is from Daniel, also on Twitter. Got an interest in the modernizing support Green paper in relation to disability benefits, and he's asking what will happen to the green paper in the consultation.
00:46:12:22 - 00:46:34:10
Does the end of the parliament on the election period mean that the consultation is closed down, delayed, canceled? I think it's very much for the incoming government to decide whether it wants to pick up that consultation, whether perhaps it wants to consult on a different range of options or do something entirely different. All bets are off when you've got an election, and a government may change if the conservative government's reelected.
00:46:34:11 - 00:46:50:07
Maybe they'll just want to pick up where they left off with that consultation. If you've got an incoming Labour government, they might want something completely different. Disability benefit reform is clearly something everybody's got to try and find an approach to. But it may be that the Labour one is quite different to what the current conservative government is offering.
00:46:50:12 - 00:47:12:19
Yeah. And of course, Mark, there's also that question about sensitive contracts and whether they can still be awarded and completed during election period. And the answer I think is depends what the nature of the contract is, how much it's for and the hang time sensitivities. If it is time sensitive, then yes, it could be concluded, but if it's of a sufficient scale, it may well be something that the minister has to consult his or her opposite number him.
00:47:12:21 - 00:47:40:24
I think that's probably all we've got time for this week. Yes, we will of course, be reporting on election issues and particularly on any proposals that emerge for the reform of Parliament to try and make the creaking machinery of Westminster work a little better. And we've also got a special edition of this podcast coming up, which takes a look at one very specific area new proposals to reform the law around dealing with health emergencies, the kind of legal framework that involves the lockdown and restrictions on people's movements.
00:47:41:03 - 00:48:01:08
We've been talking to Adam Wagner, who's a member of the commission, looking at how those laws could be improved. He's the author of a book, Emergency State, which detailed exactly how the powers work during Covid 19. We'll look forward to that. Fun. We'll see you soon. Bye for now.
00:48:01:10 - 00:48:21:08
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