logo
Devolution: Hampshire and Solent part of fast-track initiative

Devolution: Hampshire and Solent part of fast-track initiative

BBC News05-02-2025

Hampshire and the Solent region will be part of the devolution fast-track initiative, the government has announced.The decision to fast-track the application will establish a new Strategic Mayoral Authority for Southampton, Portsmouth, Hampshire, and the Isle of Wight, with elections for the new mayor now likely to be held in May 2026.The decision means the upcoming county council election has been cancelled, something Eastleigh MP Liz Jarvis said was a "disgraceful stitch up".But the leaders of Southampton City, Hampshire County, Portsmouth City and Isle of Wight councils welcomed the move.
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner announced six new potential devolution areas, one of which was Hampshire and Solent, on Wednesday."These places will get a fast-track ticket to drive real change in their area," Rayner told the House of Commons.
Jarvis, the Liberal Democrat MP for Eastleigh, said the postponement of elections would deny voters the chance to remove the Conservatives from power."Liberal Democrats oppose this decision and will continue to fight for voters in Hampshire to be heard," she said.But Portsmouth South's Labour MP Stephen Morgan called it a "momentous day for our city"."We now have the opportunity to bring investment to our communities, create much-needed jobs, and deliver prosperity to Portsmouth," he said.
Additional funding
The councils involved all welcomed the news.Southampton City Council leader Lorna Fielker said being accepted on the fast-track program was a "major step forward"."Devolving powers from Westminster to a regional mayor will mean decisions about our transport network, major infrastructure investment, employment support programmes and more will be made locally," she said.Hampshire County Council leader Nick Adams-King said it was a "fantastic opportunity", adding the fact Hampshire and Solent had been chosen showed the government recognised the area's "substantial devolution opportunities".The leader of Portsmouth City Council Steve Pitt said he had ideally wanted a deal for the Solent area without an elected mayor, but the news was still a good opportunity."We now focus on what we can do to make a positive impact for our area, and one benefit a Mayor would bring is a seat for our region at the government's new Council of Nations and Regions," he said.Phil Jordan, leader of the Isle of Wight Council, said devolution would shift policy-making powers and additional funding to local authorities."This change is expected to provide greater local control over vital areas such as major transport infrastructure, and health services, giving residents more power to shape the things that are important to them and ensuring robust local accountability," he said.
You can follow BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight on Facebook, X, or Instagram.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rough sleeping to be decriminalised
Rough sleeping to be decriminalised

Times

time3 hours ago

  • Times

Rough sleeping to be decriminalised

Rough sleeping is to be decriminalised after the government pledged to get rid of a 200-year-old law against vagrancy. Labour said the Vagrancy Act, which became law in 1824 and criminalises 'idle and disorderly persons, and rogues and vagabonds, in England', will be repealed by next spring. Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, who is also housing secretary, said Labour was 'drawing a line under nearly two centuries of injustice towards some of the most vulnerable in society'. She said: 'No one should ever be criminalised simply for sleeping rough and by scrapping this cruel and outdated law, we are making sure that can never happen again.' Rushanara Ali, the homelessness minister, said the 'archaic' law was 'neither just nor fit for purpose'. She added: 'Scrapping the Vagrancy Act for good is another step forward in our mission to tackle homelessness in all its forms, by focusing our efforts on its root causes.' The government said new 'targeted measures will ensure police have the powers they need to keep communities safe — filling the gap left over by removing previous powers'. These will be brought in through amendments to the Crime and Policing Bill. There will be new offences of facilitating begging for gain and trespassing with the intention of committing a crime. Ministers said that means organised begging by criminal gangs will remain a crime. It will be illegal for anyone to organise others to beg. Homelessness charities hailed the law change. Matt Downie, the Crisis chief executive, said: 'This is a landmark moment that will change lives and prevent thousands of people from being pushed into the shadows, away from safety.' He praised the government for showing 'principled leadership in scrapping this pernicious act'. He said: 'We hope this signals a completely different approach to helping people forced on to the streets and clears the way for a positive agenda that is about supporting people who desperately want to move on in life and fulfil their potential. We look forward to assisting the UK government with their forthcoming homelessness strategy to do exactly that.' Emma Haddad, chief executive of St Mungo's, said the act's repeal 'cannot come soon enough' and called for a 'focus on tackling the health, housing and wider societal issues that are causing homelessness in the first place'. Centrepoint, the youth homelessness charity, warned that a challenge would be 'ensuring that proposed amendments don't have the unintended consequences of punishing people instead of supporting them'.

Reeves set to extend £3 bus fare cap until 2027
Reeves set to extend £3 bus fare cap until 2027

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Reeves set to extend £3 bus fare cap until 2027

Rachel Reeves is set to extend the £3 cap on bus fares until 2027 when she unveils her spending review on Wednesday. As first reported by the Mirror, the Chancellor is understood to be preparing to announce an extension to the cap beyond the end of 2025. Instead, it will continue across England until March 2027 as the Government seeks to ease cost-of-living pressures on the public. The Government has previously said that, without the cap, fares could rise by as much as £12 for a journey between Leeds and Scarborough, or £5.50 for a ticket between Hull and York. A Treasury source said: 'We understand the cost of living is a priority for the British people. That is why we are investing in Britain's renewal to make working people better off.' But the Liberal Democrats criticised the decision not to return to the £2 cap that had been in place between January 2023 and December 2024. The increase in the cap was announced at the budget in October, with the Government arguing the lower rate was not financially sustainable, although some metro mayors decided to fund an extension of the £2 cap in their areas. Lib Dem transport spokesman Paul Kohler said: 'Household budgets are still really feeling the squeeze, so many will be really disappointed to see that the Government is moving to make the bus fare hike permanent. 'This will hit those who rely on public transport to get around to their local high street or to work and school in the pocket. People have been telling them they got this wrong, but Labour clearly isn't listening.'

Rachel Reeves to set out spending plans up to next general election
Rachel Reeves to set out spending plans up to next general election

BBC News

time4 hours ago

  • BBC News

Rachel Reeves to set out spending plans up to next general election

Rachel Reeves is preparing to unveil her highly anticipated spending review, setting out how much money the NHS, schools, police and other public services will get over the next few chancellor will emphasise plans to "invest in Britain's renewal" by spending an extra £113bn on infrastructure, such as energy and transport projects in her speech on some government departments are likely to face real-terms cuts, as the chancellor prioritises health and defence review will take the Labour government up to the next general election, likely in 2029, with day-to-day spending to be outlined for the next three years and investment budgets for the next four. Ministers have been in tense negotiations with the chancellor over the funding settlements for their Secretary Yvette Cooper was the last to agree a deal on Monday, after police chiefs called for more money, while Housing Secretary Angela Rayner reached an agreement on department is expected to receive £39bn for a programme to boost social and affordable housing over the next 10 years.A government source said this investment would help ministers hit their target of building 1.5 million new homes by chancellor will also commit to extending the £3 bus fare cap in England until March a speech last week, Reeves suggested she had turned down requests for cash from ministers and argued a squeeze on funding was a "product of economic reality".The government's spending plans have been impacted by sluggish economic growth, higher government borrowing costs and global her autumn budget last year, the chancellor announced tax rises worth £40bn to fund the NHS and other public is expected to say on Wednesday that her spending plans "are possible only because of the stability I have introduced and the choices I took in the Autumn".But the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) think tank has warned tough choices are "unavoidable", with some departments facing spending cuts, when rising costs are accounted for. Deciding how much money to give the NHS was "one of the most consequential decisions of the spending review," the IFS Department of Health and Social Care's (DHSC) day-to-day budget is planned to be £202bn in 2025–26, or 39% of total day-to-day departmental IFS warned that a big increase in NHS funding would mean either real-terms cuts for other departments or further tax rises to come in the budget this autumn. The chancellor has resisted calls, including from some of her own MPs, to relax her rules on borrowing, or to raise taxes self-imposed rules require day-to-day government costs to be paid for by tax income, rather than borrowing; and to get debt falling as a share of national income over a five year increasing tax on businesses, by increasing employer National Insurance contributions, she has so far stuck to Labour's manifesto commitment not to increase income tax, national insurance or will say on Wednesday: "I have made my choices. In place of chaos, I choose stability. In place of decline, I choose investment. In place of retreat, I choose national renewal."These are my choices. These are this government's choices. These are the British people's choices."She will also highlight infrastructure spending, such as the £14bn for the Sizewell C nuclear power plant and £15.6bn for local transport projects."The priorities in this Spending Review are the priorities of working people," she will tell MPs."To invest in our country's security, health and economy so working people all over our country are better off," she will shadow chancellor Mel Stride accused Labour of "spending money it doesn't have, with no credible plan to pay for it"."That means more borrowing, more debt, and, inevitably, more tax rises in the Autumn budget," he said. "Don't be fooled. We can't afford Labour."The Liberal Democrats urged the the Labour government to take immediate steps to boost economic growth to avoid any spending cuts to public services."From social care to neighbourhood policing, this Labour government is at risk of failing to deliver the change that people were promised," Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson Daisy Cooper said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store