Although parts of this are the kind of thing that London people always say if they move to somewhere else and discover that it is not London, Luke Akehurst writes:
Whatever
the outcome of September’s referendum on Scottish independence, there needs to
be a radical change to the relationship between Westminster and Whitehall and
the regions and cities of England.
We have muddled through now for a
decade and a bit with an extremely asymmetric model of devolution – relatively
big powers for Scotland, some for Wales, a little bit for London and the old
centralised model for the rest of England once John Prescott’s regional
devolution schemes were rejected in the north.
This leaves England as the most
centralised system of government in Europe.
The
situation has got worse rather than better under the Tories as Eric Pickles’
rhetoric about localism has turned out to be nothing but hot air.
Pickles
himself has interfered at a micro level in local councils, dictating to them
whether they can publish free newspapers to inform residents about services.
Immediately on taking office he axed plans to create more unitary councils, i.e., powerful single councils rather than the duplicatory system of having
both county and district councils in some areas).
He has shown utter contempt
for councillors themselves with petty attacks such as removing their pension
rights, making it more difficult for cabinet members overseeing hugely important
services and budgets to do this full time.
Michael Gove’s Free Schools have
accelerated the erosion of the role of local education authorities, so that an
increasing number of schools are answerable only to him as Secretary of State
and to no one elected in the area the school serves.
Most importantly, local government has borne the brunt of
four years of coalition austerity.
Because other spending departments have been
protected and Pickles was either unable or unwilling to stand up for councils
in the spending round process, the cuts to local authority budgets have been
devastating and have left many councils left only able to deliver statutory
services and having to abandon many discretionary services which are vital to
the quality of life of local residents.
The axe has fallen heaviest on the
councils in the poorest areas of the country, where services are most needed,
because Pickles has rigged the formula used to allocate funds so that it
favours Tory areas.
Labour controlled councils have lost 16.9% of their budgets on average since 2010
whilst Tory councils have only lost 6.6%.
The
ten poorest areas have suffered even more, with Liverpool and Hackney seeing
27% of their funding cut whilst Wokingham and Surrey Heath have actually seen
their funding increased!
Cynically,
the Government has assumed that disproportionately cutting local councils
compared to central government departments, and within that cutting the
Labour-run areas the most, would mean voters might blame local Labour councils
for the cuts and Labour would descend into infighting over the tactical
response to this as it did in the 1980s when the most left wing councils tried
to confront Thatcher by refusing to set a legal rate.
This hasn’t worked
because voters are not that gullible and Labour councillors have been
remarkably united and disciplined.
This is not a sustainable model
if Scotland becomes independent. The rump UK is likely to have a Tory dominated
Parliament far more frequently than now if there is no anti-Tory contingent of
MPs from Scotland.
Areas in the big cities and North that are virtually
Tory-free will be condemned to perpetual Tory government making all the big
decisions that affect them with no local mandate.
That’s a recipe for civil
unrest.
Nor is it sustainable if Scotland
stays in the UK but with devo-max, a big extension of devolved powers.
Why
should Scotland get to make key decisions about the scale and shape of local
services while the West Midlands or the North East have to implement cuts
designed in Whitehall by Tory ministers from the Home Counties?
Labour needs to be campaigning
for and designing a proper pattern of regional and local devolution for
England.
This needs to be based on the
principle of subsidiarity.
Power should be devolved to the lowest, most local
level, nearest the people, at which it can be effectively exercised.
The test
should be “is there an overwhelming reason why this needs to be decided in
Whitehall and Westminster and not at a lower level?”
Principally, this should mean
devolution of power to councils.
Elected local councillors should be empowered
to take key decisions regarding configuration and provision of all the key
public services that serve their area.
For instance, when we talk about a
middle layer of support and accountability in education between schools and
Whitehall, why reinvent the wheel when we already have an elected tier called
local councils.
Proper local democratic oversight of the NHS should also be
introduced – if councils can be trusted to oversee public health services, why
not all health services, rather than just the scrutiny function they currently
have? If councils want to delegate service delivery decisions further to local
communities (“double devolution”) that should be for them to decide locally, it
shouldn’t be imposed by Whitehall.
At the same time we should
deliver the most obvious saving there is in public services and abolish all the
remaining two tier (county and district) councils so that every part of England
has one powerful unitary council which is clearly accountable to residents for
all local services.
It is absurd that there are swathes of the country with two
sets of councillors (often actually the same people claiming two sets of
allowances), two sets of council back office functions, and total confusion for
residents about who delivers and is accountable for what.
The situation we have
in my new home town Oxford is unacceptable.
The key big budget services like
schools and social services are run by Tory and Independent county councillors,
none of whom are elected from wards in the city. This is profoundly
undemocratic and unaccountable.
The city council meanwhile, with not a single
Tory councillor, has no power over some of the services that residents most
care about.
In areas where council housing has been transferred en bloc to a
registered social landlord, some district councils are little more than a
planning committee plus filling in the entry form for the annual Anyshire in
Bloom competition.
And why should people in Dover or Margate have decisions
about their schools taken by a County Council based in Maidstone, over 30 miles
away and a town many of them have never visited – feeding a disengagement and
bitter sense of neglect?
It was the same when I was parliamentary candidate in
Castle Point, people in South Essex thought that the County Council
persistently neglected them at the expense of the more rural Tory areas.
If we are going to devolve power
we also need to devolve control over the money needed to pay for services.
The
funding formulas need to be reviewed so they properly support the needs of the
most deprived communities.
Legal safeguards need to be introduced to stop a
future Eric Pickles rigging the formula so that it produces perverse outcomes
like a funding boost for affluent Surrey Heath in the middle of a savage round
of cuts.
We should look at ways of ring-fencing parts of the local government
budget so that proper funding of local services has statutory protection from
the kind of excessive share of central government austerity it has taken in
recent years e.g. a statutory guarantee that each local authority will receive
a certain minimum level of per capita funding.
Regional government should be
introduced for each English region but on a slimline model with a small
regional assembly like the 24 member GLA responsible only for those services
such as policing, transport and strategic planning and economic development
that need to be coordinated across several local authorities.
I am agnostic
about whether such assemblies should be directly elected or elected indirectly
by and from the councillors in their region.
If we are going to stick with an
unelected House of Lords let’s ensure all the nations and regions have a voice
there by allocating seats automatically to the leaders of the largest city
councils and the new regional assemblies.
The re-empowerment of local
government needs to start in our own party.
Historically local government has
been the second pillar of Labour in the country alongside the trade unions. Yet
it has no direct representation at Annual Conference, a handful of seats on the
National Policy Forum and only two on the NEC.
The fact that there is a
currently a seriously contested election for these two seats, between Simon
Henig and Jim McMahon and between Ann Lucas and Alice Perry, is great, but
actually all four would be excellent NEC members and at a minimum there should
be four local government reps on the NEC.
There should be greater
representation of councillors on the party’s regional boards (some have only
one councillor rep) and council Labour Groups should have delegates and the
right to submit motions to regional and national party conferences.
The changes brought in under
Refounding Labour mean the levy paid by councillors is now one of the main sources
of funding for the national party. It was already a major source of funding for
many CLPs.
Yet we don’t hear the party having to listen to what councillors
want in policy or organisation or candidate selection in the way that the
unions get their voice heard.
Thirty years ago local government
was an albatross round Labour’s neck, with the “loony left” epithet applied by
the press and Tories to councils which were more interested in having their own
foreign policy, creating nuclear free zones, or confronting the Tory government
in a doomed municipal Charge of the Light Brigade than collecting the bins and
improving schools.
Even 15 years ago a succession of failing local authorities
embarrassed the Labour government, let down residents and opened a second front
where the Lib Dems started to make inroads in inner city areas.
Now Labour’s councils are a
source of pride for the party and an example to the electorate of what Labour
in power can achieve. Labour councillors are the backbone of the party’s campaigning.
Isn’t
it time we gave local councils the powers and funding they need to truly
represent and deliver for their residents, and councillors the voice they
deserve in our own structures?
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