The United Kingdom constitution – a mapping exercise
A briefing paper which "maps" (or summarises) the main elements of the United Kingdom's uncodified constitution.
This briefing paper explains the status of directly-elected mayors in English and Welsh local government, and the routes to establishing them, including the use of local referendums. It also includes an up-to-date list of elected mayors and statistics on previous referendums.
Directly-elected mayors (438 KB , PDF)
A directly elected mayor and a cabinet is one of three different ‘political management arrangements’ available to local authorities. The others are a leader and cabinet, and the traditional ‘committee system’, where decisions are made by policy committees and approved by full council.
Local authorities may establish directly-elected mayors in England and Wales, but not in Scotland or Northern Ireland. Mayoral authorities do not have additional powers compared to non-mayoral authorities.
Initially, an elected mayor could only be created following a referendum in favour in the relevant local authority. Since 2007, English local authorities have also been able to create an elected mayor by resolving to do so in full council.
The majority of referendums on creating elected mayors have resulted in ‘no’ votes. As of May 2024, 13 local authorities, all in England, have elected mayors.
This figure does not include the Mayor of London or metro-mayors, in Greater Manchester and other areas, which are covered by separate legislation and have different powers from local authority mayors.
The Library has also published briefing papers on the Mayor of London and the Greater London Authority, and on ‘metro-mayors’ in Devolution to Local Government in England.
Directly-elected mayors (438 KB , PDF)
A briefing paper which "maps" (or summarises) the main elements of the United Kingdom's uncodified constitution.
A briefing on the Non-Domestic Rating (Multipliers and Private Schools) Bill 2024-25
This briefing examines the way that Parliament scrutinises the Government's proposals for taxation, set out in the annual Budget statement.