Greater London Authority

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
United Kingdom
Image:Her Majesty's Government Coat of Arms.svg

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
United Kingdom


Her Majesty's Government
Sovereign (Queen Elizabeth II)

The Crown
The Privy Council
Cabinet

Prime Minister (Gordon Brown MP)
Chancellor (Alistair Darling MP)
Foreign Secretary (David Miliband MP)
Home Secretary (Jacqui Smith MP)
Justice Secretary (Jack Straw MP)
Full list of members
Parliament
State Opening of Parliament

House of Lords

Lord Speaker (Baroness Hayman)

House of Commons

Speaker (Michael Martin MP)
Leader (Harriet Harman MP)
Prime Minister's Questions

Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition

Leader (David Cameron MP)
Shadow Cabinet
Bureaucracy
Government departments

The Civil Service

Judiciary
Courts of the United Kingdom
Courts of England and Wales
Courts of Northern Ireland
Courts of Scotland

Constitution
Human rights

Constituent countries
Politics of Scotland
Scottish Government
Scottish Parliament

Politics of Wales

Welsh Assembly Government
National Assembly for Wales

Politics of Northern Ireland

Northern Ireland Executive
Northern Ireland Assembly

Politics of England

English Regional Assemblies
Greater London Authority

Reserved matters

Elections
Parliament constituencies

Political parties
Last election
Next election

Other
Foreign relations

Politics of the European Union


Other countries · Atlas
 Politics Portal
view  talk  edit

The Greater London Authority (GLA) is the city-wide governing body for London, England. It consists of a directly elected executive Mayor of London, who is currently Ken Livingstone, and an elected 25-member London Assembly with scrutiny powers.


Contents

[edit] Purpose

The GLA is responsible for the strategic administration of the 1579 km² (610 sq. miles) of Greater London. It shares local government powers with the councils of 32 London boroughs and the City of London Corporation. It was created to improve the coordination between the local authorities in Greater London, and the Mayor of London's role is to give London a single person to represent it. The Mayor proposes policy and the GLA's budget, and makes appointments to the capital's strategic executive such as Transport for London the London Development Agency. The primary purposes of the London Assembly is to hold the Mayor of London to account by scrutiny of their actions and decisions. The assembly must also accept or amend the Mayor's budget on an annual basis. The GLA is based at City Hall, a new building on the south bank of the River Thames, next to Tower Bridge.

The GLA is different from the Corporation of the City of London with its largely ceremonial Lord Mayors, which controls only the square mile of the City, London's chief financial centre. While the GLA has a modern constitution, the organisation of the City of London has barely changed since the Middle Ages and is mainly controlled by City business interests.

[edit] Background

In 1986, the Greater London Council was abolished by the Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher. Many people have surmised that the decision to abolish the GLC was made because of the existence of a high-spending left-wing Labour administration under Livingstone, although pressure for the abolition of the GLC had arisen before Mr Livingstone took over, and was largely driven by the belief among the outer London Borough councils that they could perform the functions of the GLC just as well.

On abolition, the strategic functions of the GLC transferred to bodies controlled by central government or joint boards nominated by the London Borough councils. Some of the service delivery functions were transferred down to the councils themselves. For the next 14 years there was no single elected body for the whole of London. The Labour Party never supported the abolition of the GLC and made it a policy to re-establish some form of city-wide elected authority.

[edit] Creation

Image:Greater London Authority logo.png
The official Greater London Authority logo

The Labour party adopted a policy of a single, directly-elected Mayor (a policy first suggested by Tony Banks in 1990), together with an elected Assembly watching over the Mayor; this model, based on American cities, was partly aimed at making sure the new body resemble the erstwhile GLC as little as possible. After the Labour party won the 1997 general election, the policy was outlined in a White paper entitled A Mayor and Assembly for London (March 1998).

Simultaneously with the elections to the London Borough councils, a referendum was held on the establishment of the GLA in May 1998, which was approved with 72% of the vote. The Greater London Authority Act 1999 passed through Parliament, receiving the Royal Assent in October 1999. In a controversial election campaign, the Prime Minister at the time, Tony Blair, attempted to block Livingstone's nomination and imposed his own candidate. In reaction, Livingstone resigned from the Labour party and in March 2000, was elected as Mayor of London as an independent candidate. Following an interim period in which the Mayor and Assembly had been elected but had no powers, the GLA was formally established on 3 July 2000. That same year the Art Director Gavin Lester designed the official logo for London.

[edit] Powers and functions

[edit] Executive bodies

Areas which the GLA has responsibility for include transport, policing, fire and rescue, development and strategic planning. The GLA does not directly provide any services itself. Instead, its work is carried out by four functional bodies, which come under the GLA umbrella, and work under the policy direction of the Mayor and Assembly. These functional bodies are:

In November 2005, the government published a consultation document reviewing the powers of the GLA, making proposals for additional powers, including waste management, planning, housing, and learning and skills.[1][2] The result of the consultation and final proposals were published by the Department for Communities and Local Government on 13 July 2006.[3]

[edit] Planning

The GLA is responsible for coordinating land use planning in Greater London. The mayor produces a strategic plan, the "London Plan". The individual London Borough councils are legally bound to comply with the plan. The mayor has the power to over-ride planning decisions made by the London Boroughs if they are believed to be against the interests of London as a whole.

[edit] Energy policy

As of 2006, London generates 42 million tonnes of carbon emissions, 7% of the UK's total. 44% of this comes from housing, 28% from commercial premises, 21% from transport, and 7% from industry.[4]

The Mayor's energy strategy[5] plans to cut carbon emission levels by 20% by 2010 and 60% by 2050 (although achieving the first of these targets is unlikely). Measures taken to achieve this have included the creation of the London Climate Change Agency, the London Energy Partnership[6] and the founding of the international Large Cities Climate Leadership Group.

The London Sustainable Development Commission[7] has calculated that for housing to meet the 60% target, all new developments would have to be constructed to be carbon-neutral with immediate effect (using zero energy building techniques), in addition to cutting energy used in existing housing by 40%.

[edit] Political control

After the 2004 elections, Conservatives had the largest representation (nine members) on the Assembly, followed by seven from Labour, five Liberal Democrats, two Greens and two from One London (elected as UKIP, but subsequently changed allegiance).

After Livingstone's re-election as a Labour Mayor, the Labour Assembly members declared that they did not consider it appropriate for them, being of the same political party, to hold him to account. This resulted in the Tories and Liberal Democrats agreeing to alternate the Chairmanship and Deputy Chairmanship of the GLA and of some of its committees, between them. This agreement does not extend to policy matters.

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

cs:Greater London Authority

de:Greater London Authority fr:Greater London Authority it:Greater London Authority no:Greater London Authority simple:Greater London Authority sr:Управа Ширег Лондона

Views
Personal tools

Toolbox