English regions will become eligible for London-style devolution deals, as Government sets out an ambitious agenda to reset how the public sector works to tackle 12 new 'national missions' over the next eight years.
At the heart of this new way of making and implementing policy will be 12 bold, national missions - all quantifiable and to be achieved by 2030.
These missions are the policy objectives for levelling up, and thus form the heart of the government’s agenda for the 2020s. They will be given status in law in a flagship Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill.
The government recognises that if it tries to level up the UK alone, it will fail. That is why the White Paper details the largest devolution of power from Whitehall to local leaders across England in modern times.
Touting the success of mayors like Andy Street, Ben Houchen and Andy Burnham, the government has proposed that this ‘devolution revolution’ will be a new model for England.
Nine local authorities are among the first wave to be invited to agree new county devolution deals - Cornwall, Derbyshire & Derby, Devon, Plymouth and Torbay, Durham, Hull & East Yorkshire, Leicestershire, Norfolk, Nottinghamshire & Nottingham, and Suffolk.
The White Paper announces negotiations for a new Mayoral Combined Authority deal for York and North Yorkshire and expanded Mayoral Combined Authority deal for the North East, as well as negotiations for ‘trailblazer’ devolution deals with the West Midlands and Greater Manchester to extend their powers - with these deals acting as blueprints for other Mayoral Combined Authorities to follow.
By 2030, every part of England that wishes to have a ‘London-style’ devolution deal will have one.
The missions will be underpinned by a suite of public metrics to track progress and monitor the evolution of spatial disparities.
The government will legislate such that it has a statutory duty to publish an annual report updating the public on the progress of these missions, with a new Levelling Up Advisory Council including members such as Sir Paul Collier, renowned economist at Oxford’s Blavatnik’s School of Government, providing further support and constructive analysis.
Other parts of the ‘system change’ include: all policy across Whitehall being aligned with the levelling up agenda and therefore subject to spatial analysis, and a transformation of the government’s approach to data and evaluation - with a new independent body created to improve transparency of local government performance.