Yorkshire’s mayors must learn to co-operate; it’s the only way – Yorkshire Post Letters

From: Peter Judge, Rastrick, Brighouse.
Are rival leaders in Yorkshire capable of working with each other?Are rival leaders in Yorkshire capable of working with each other?
Are rival leaders in Yorkshire capable of working with each other?

WHOEVER is elected as mayor of West Yorkshire next May, the key to their success will be to take a co-operative approach.

It goes without saying that they will need to co-operate with the leaders of Bradford, Calderdale, Kirklees, Leeds and Wakefield Councils. But they will also need to co-operate with Dan Jarvis, elected mayor of South Yorkshire, a county facing so many of the same issues that we face in West Yorkshire. And that co-operation will need to extend also to the leaders of councils in York, North Yorkshire and East Yorkshire; not least in order to create a Council of Yorkshire as a precursor of a genuinely democratically elected Yorkshire Assembly.

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But guess what? It doesn’t stop there. The new West Yorkshire Mayor will have to take a co-operative approach to working with Andy Burnham, the elected mayor of Greater Manchester, and Steve Rotheram, the elected Mayor of what is called the Liverpool City Region, if only so that between them, they can seize control of the joint regions’ rail network; and get electrification done “tomorrow”. Of course, the new Mayor will have much other work to do, but by taking a co-operative approach with neighbouring authorities in the northern region, they will be able to achieve so much more.

West Yorkshire's leaders with Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Simon Clarke, the Local Government Minister, when the area's devolution deal was signed.West Yorkshire's leaders with Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Simon Clarke, the Local Government Minister, when the area's devolution deal was signed.
West Yorkshire's leaders with Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Simon Clarke, the Local Government Minister, when the area's devolution deal was signed.

From: Nigel Bywater, Oak Grove, Morley, Leeds.

IN response to letters about parish councils being the last tier of local Government and how they should take on more responsibilities – in my area, the parish councillors are also city councillors. The problem is that they block real parish councillors from doing good work locally. The role of local authorities needs a root and branch review. Unfortunately, our Conservative government is looking at major reform of the Electoral Commission, the very body that are the experts in this area.

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Thank you

James Mitchinson

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