Core Cities Group

Last updated

Core Cities Group
Established1995
Headquarters Manchester Town Hall
Region served
United Kingdom
Director
Stephen Jones
Chair
Bev Craig
Staff
4
Website www.corecities.com

The Core Cities Group (also Core Cities UK) is a self-selected and self-financed collaborative advocacy group of large regional cities in the United Kingdom outside Greater London and Edinburgh. The group was formed in 1995 and serves as a partnership of eleven city councils: Belfast, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle, Nottingham and Sheffield.

Contents

The Core Cities Group has wide-ranging interests, encompassing transport and connectivity, innovation and business support, skills and employment, sustainable communities, culture and creative industries, climate change, finance and industry, and governance. During 2012, the first wave of city deals recognised the eight cities as "the largest and most economically important English cities outside of London". [1] The group in 2020 featured a combined population of over 6 million within eleven of its cities. [2] It has been considered one of the most powerful political lobbying groups in the country. [3]

History

The group formed in 1995 and membership was made up of eight local authorities with city status; of which six are metropolitan borough councils and two are unitary authorities in the English local government system. These cities were: Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle, Nottingham and Sheffield. The local authorities came together to challenge the centralised nature of the British state [4] by advocating for the devolution of greater freedom and controls. [5] The eight city councils are also members of the pan-European Eurocities network, a group co-founded by Birmingham City Council.

In 2003, the Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott addressed the Core Cities Group, advocating "choke-off growth in the economic powerhouse of London and the south-east" in order to stimulate growth and productivity within the Core Cities. [6]

With the exception of Bradford and Hull, the initial members of the group mirrored the first county boroughs, that is the 10 English cities "dealt with as separate counties" under the Local Government Act 1888. Since 2010, several British cities outside England began discussions for incorporation into the group. In August 2014, Glasgow joined the group as the first non-English city, [7] followed by Cardiff in 2014 [8] and Belfast joined in 2019. Though Edinburgh has taken part in meetings and was approached about membership, it has never officially been a member of the group. [9] [10]

In 2018, Bristol hosted the first meeting of Core Cities Group leaders with combined authority mayors. [4] In October 2018, the group published a report titled "Cities 2030: Global Success, Local Prosperity", arguing for the economic potential of British cities where they lag behind international counterparts combined with a vision for cities. [5]

Government lobbying and issues

Devolution and greater powers

The Core Cities Group (CCG) have published research on the utilised benefits of more powerful cities that have greater economic control, particularly in growth and productivity. [11] [9] During the passage of the Localism Act 2011, the group promoted the 'Core Cities amendment' to allow for bespoke decentralisation to its members, which was successfully incorporated. [12] Several of the 'City Deals' subsequently agreed between the Cabinet Office/Department for Communities and Local Government in 2012 included enhanced powers and city regional working at their core, including new combined authorities, thanks to the provision. [13] The introduction of directly-elected mayors to combined authorities in England and the devolution of housing, transport, planning and policing powers to them were provisions contained in the Cities and Local Government Devolution Act 2016. [14]

In 2015, the CCG published a report calling for devolution to England that gives powers similar to those of Scottish Parliament and to give the city-regions greater fiscal devolution by 2025. [15] In 2016, Core Cities and Key Cities, together representing 36 of the UK's largest cities, issued a joint statement calling for greater powers to deliver a more inclusive economy. [16] In 2020, the 11 councils of the CCG and the 32 London Boroughs within the London Councils group agreed to lobby for greater fiscal devolution, including "the right to introduce a tourism tax, borrow against future revenue and reforms to business rates and council tax." [2] [17]

Other issues

An interest of the group is the High Speed 2 project to interlink the larger British cities faster. [18] Believing it will bring an economic advantage to the core cities. [19] In 2019, Judith Blake, chair of the Core Cities Group and leader of Leeds City Council wrote "HS2 is more than just a railway line, it will unlock future jobs, training and regeneration opportunities that will benefit many of our 20 million citizens. Core Cities UK believes HS2 is a game-changer for the Midlands and the north". [20]

The Core Cities Group has attempted to establish a dialogue with the European Union and the British government in the negotiations to leave the European Union, following the 2016 EU referendum. The combined electorate of the ten core cities saw 56% vote for remain. [21] It was noted by Cardiff council leader Huw Thomas that EU investment out-weight the British Government's city deals. [22] Because of this, the group has lobbied the government to maintain EU regeneration schemes in negotiations [23] The group has also met chief European negotiator Michel Barnier. [22] In 2019, the leaders of the cities in the group sent a letter to Prime Minister May asking her to avoid a no-deal Brexit. [24] The Core Cities Group cities were beneficiaries of the UK Shared Prosperity Fund (UKSPF), an investment program designed to maintain town and city investment after Brexit. [25] The group criticised the government for the amount and asked that the fund be doubled to £4bn to lead to its work reaching £28bn by 2026. [26]

During the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom the Core Cities Group advocated City Recovery Deals and a Cities Recovery Fund to facilitate good finances for cities following the pandemic and its subsequent lockdown. [27] In May 2020, the CCG reported their councils had £1.5bn collectively and advocated financial support from the gov. [28]

Membership

CityCountryLocal authorityLeader
(political affiliation)
City populationUrban area populationMetro area population [29]
Belfast Ulster Banner.svg Northern Ireland Belfast City Council Ryan Murphy345,006- 799,000
Birmingham Flag of England.svg England Birmingham City Council Chamam Lal1,142,494 2,440,986 3,683,000
Bristol Flag of England.svg England Bristol City Council Marvin Rees 471,117 617,280 1,041,000
Cardiff Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Wales Cardiff Council Huw Thomas359,512 447,287 1,097,000
Glasgow Flag of Scotland.svg Scotland Glasgow City Council Susan Aitken 635,130 1,209,143 1,395,000
Leeds Flag of England.svg England Leeds City Council James Lewis809,036 1,901,934 2,302,000
Liverpool Flag of England.svg England Liverpool City Council Joanne Anderson 484,488 864,122 2,241,000
Manchester Flag of England.svg England Manchester City Council Bev Craig 549,853 2,553,379 2,556,000
Newcastle Flag of England.svg England Newcastle City Council Nick Kemp298,264 774,891 1,599,000
Nottingham Flag of England.svg England Nottingham City Council David Mellen319,566 729,977 1,534,000
Sheffield Flag of England.svg England Sheffield City Council Terry Fox554,401 685,368 1,569,000

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