Councils
beat mayors
every time
Boris Johnson last week pledged to create directly elected mayors for each individual county. How will this will apply to Cumbria and which councils will survive in the coming local government re-organisation.?
For an answer, perhaps it is useful to reflect on Prime Minister Edward Heath`s disastrous local government re-organisation of 1974 which started it all by igniting many big- is- best changes that still have echoes today.
These changes included killing off the historic counties of Cumberland and Westmorland and killing off hundreds of small town and rural councils.
These included two Penrith councils, two Carlisle councils and councils in Alston, North Westmorland, Keswick and South Westmorland.
The local government re-organisation was indeed a gigantic killing off and shuffling around, concentrating more and more power in Westminster aimed primarily to prepare Britain for the coming great European adventure which until recently dominated all our lives.
As I recall, many of the newly-created district councils were initially not given names but instead were given European numbers to link in with similar numbers and councils across Europe. Happily that never happened.
Today, 40 odd years later, Mr Johnson is trying hard to turn the clock back and to return some of that power to local communities through directly elected mayors based in major towns and cities.
Sadly, transparency and closeness to communities achieved by the hundreds of now abolished small town councils is no longer there.
Elected mayors, despite all Boris Johnson`s spin they are now attracting will never achieve the transparency and closeness of that sort.
PICTURED: London Mayor Sadiq Khan
Carlisle Tenants` and Residents` Federation publishes this blog. Information about the Federation is available on 01228 52227
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