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Elected mayor for Bristol - previous council leaders 'too safe'

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Thursday, May 03, 2012
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The Bristol Post

The people of Bristol today go to the polls to decide whether to have a directly elected mayor for the city.

Debate has been raging in the city since the referendum was announced to decide whether Bristol wants an elected civic leader.

  1. Above, the audience listens to the debate at the Bristol UWE's Frenchay campus  Photograph: Barbara Evripidou BRBE20120502A-004

    The audience listens to the debate

A former Labour city councillor told a debate on elected mayors that previous council leaders in Bristol had been "too safe".

David Johnson, who represented Southville ward for several years but now works as a town planning lecturer at Bristol UWE, said when council leaders were chosen, it was usually because they were regarded as "a safe pair of hands" – not because they were more likely to make decisions which were best for the city.

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He said: "It seems to me that a directly elected mayor is more likely to take a long term view and tackle the big issues instead of getting bogged down with the detail."

The debate, at the Bristol UWE's Frenchay campus, saw two academics put forward the arguments in favour and against an elected mayor for the city.

Dr David Sweeting, a lecturer in urban studies at Bristol University, said there were three main reasons why Bristol should have an elected mayor – they would be more democratic, more accountable and more effective.

He said the current council leader was chosen by a small group of councillors behind closed doors and therefore it was never clear what criterion was used to pick them.

Yet if an elected mayor was not liked, then voters could make sure they were kicked out of office after four years.

He said an elected mayor would be more widely known among the electorate and this would help to make them more accountable.

He said there had been seven council leaders in 14 years in Bristol which prevented stable governance with such a large and complex organisation as the city council.

Professor Alex Marsh, also from the School of Policy Studies at Bristol University said it would need a big leap of faith for people to vote in favour of an elected mayor when it was not clear what their powers would be.

He said an elected mayor would be more effective if they had power for the region, not just Bristol, but it was not clear how this might be achieved.

He said there was a danger that an elected mayor might be divisive because they were not obliged to have a consensual arrangement with councillors.

He said if voters picked the wrong person to do the job, then there was nothing they could do about it for four years.

He said: "Some people might argue that desperate measures are needed to bring better governance to Bristol.

"But it's a leap in the dark and a step too far."

There were only 13 people in the audience, nine of whom were in favour of an elected mayor, one against and three abstentions.

● South West Tory Euro MP Ashley Fox has spoken out in favour of an elected mayor for Bristol.

Mr Fox, a former city councillor, said an elected mayor would fundamentally change the way in which the city was governed.

He said: "If we reject the mayor model, then we are stuck with the current system, whereby the leader of council is chosen by a handful of councillors behind closed doors. The current system isn't accountable and isn't stable either – we have had five leaders in the last 10 years.

"The leader of council wields enormous power, is meant to provide a strategic vision for our city, is our ambassador to the world, and yet almost none of the 317,000 voters in Bristol have had a say on who this person is. This cannot be right in a modern democracy.

"A mayor for Bristol would be democratically elected by the people. They would be accountable to the whole city just a handful of councillors. They would have a stable four-year term to provide leadership and vision, based on a plan that we will have voted for."

● THE Tory councillor for St George East spoke out against having an elected mayor.

He said: "There are many times in life when the expression 'a change is as good as a holiday' is apt. This is not one of those situations.

"My reason for not supporting an elected mayor for the city and county of Bristol are apolitical. I do not feel in my heart that it is what this city needs.

Instead of abandoning our current system, we should fight to better it, strive to rejuvenate it and not simply declare it "not fit for purpose".

In all surrounding authorities, the traditional structure delivered strong and consistent governance for years and yet the same system is not good enough for the city which is the hub of all those authorities, creating the jobs and other major provisions on which they are to differing degrees, dependent.

I too want to see change, I will support that change, I will encourage that change, but I will not support an elected mayor.

FACTFILE:

What? A referendum to decide whether Bristol should have a directly elected mayor to replace the existing leader of Bristol City Council. Bristol is one of ten major cities across the country that are being given the choice.

When? Today

Why? The coalition government are pushing for elected mayors as a way of giving local people more power. Supporters of elected mayors say they would help raise the profile of cities like Bristol, with one figure who could get things done. Opponents believe it puts too much power in one person’s hands and is a waste of money that could be better spent elsewhere.

Who? That’s what we don’t know yet. If Bristol says yes to an elected mayor next month, an election wouldn’t take place until November. That gives potential candidates months to come out of the woodwork and declare they are running for the position.

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  • Profile image for snowymalone

    by snowymalone

    Saturday, May 05 2012, 10:17AM

    “@ AJT77

    "If you want a good reason to vote no look at what happened in Doncaster over the time they have had a mayor. Article is on Bristol Says No website under 'message from Doncaster'."

    And yet they voted to keep their elected mayor.

    @ georges1974

    "Somebody with a god damn big stick to hit everyone around the head that sits in the self electing council would be good"

    Which is why I voted yes. I said on another thread, I've no idea how it'll work out, but I'm sick of the present set-up. It's a self-perpetuating cabal, that nevertheless seems to spend most of its time squabbling with itself. At least if there's one person in static, time-limited, overall charge, you have a viable target if they don't live up to promises, as opposed to having a little re-shuffle after each booboo and thinking "that's that sorted, then, X b*ggered up transport / neighbourhoods / whatever, lets see how they get on in education..".”

  • Profile image for candypop2011

    by candypop2011

    Saturday, May 05 2012, 9:52AM

    “NO TO AN ELECTED MAYOR.”

  • Profile image for AJT77

    by AJT77

    Thursday, May 03 2012, 2:42PM

    “If you want a good reason to vote no look at what happened in Doncaster over the time they have had a mayor. Article is on Bristol Says No website under 'message from Doncaster'.”

  • Profile image for AJT77

    by AJT77

    Thursday, May 03 2012, 2:29PM

    “Vote no, look at Doncaster, you can't get rid of them. Council leaders can be voted out but mayors can't. If a system in the future with more safeguards can be proposed, we can vote again, but until that lets reject this rushed idea.”

  • Profile image for Bristolexpat

    by Bristolexpat

    Thursday, May 03 2012, 11:41AM

    “Everyone vote for................what YOU want!”

  • Profile image for Tody123

    by Tody123

    Thursday, May 03 2012, 10:26AM

    “everyone vote YES foe mayor!”

  • Profile image for georges1974

    by georges1974

    Thursday, May 03 2012, 10:21AM

    “@Pogo_T_Clown

    Somebody with a god damn big stick to hit everyone around the head that sits in the self electing council would be good”

  • Profile image for PJ1979

    by PJ1979

    Thursday, May 03 2012, 10:19AM

    “A Mayor!”

  • Profile image for Pogo_T_Clown

    by Pogo_T_Clown

    Thursday, May 03 2012, 10:03AM

    “The Tories want a mayor.
    The right wing media want a mayor.

    What do YOU want?”

  • Profile image for DennisB2012

    by DennisB2012

    Thursday, May 03 2012, 9:19AM

    “Who promoted this meeting and is a turn out of 13 in the audience representative.

    Time the (E)P stopped thinking that this sort of stunt actually represented a reflection of the opinion of Bristolians.

    Pity the (E)P could not make a clear case for what their paymasters want Bristol to do. Facts were hard to find - only opinions.

    Time for the (E)P to drop its evening edition - if not all of its editions - and just e-mail their last few friends who like their own ideas reinforced by faceless "reporters"....

    Time to vote NO to an elected mayor.”

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