Summary
1 May 2012
London first voted for a mayoral figurehead in the year 2000. Since then the idea has spread and now ten more major English cities are to vote in a series of referendums on whether to do the same.
Reporter:
Rob Broomby
Listen
Click to hear the report
Report
A decade ago when London chose its first directly elected mayor some feared it would become a shallow political beauty contest. But the idea has taken off. 16 authorities now elect or are about to elect their mayor; ten more British cities are about to decide.
This is Birmingham's so called Council House built with some grandeur in the nineteenth century to run Britain's second largest city. If voters say yes, they could scrap the traditional council here and choose an executive mayor. But one recent poll suggested the idea is unpopular and voters here remain divided.
Some experts want to go further and give mayors control of local health and policing, though that remains highly controversial. Many democracies around the world already have directly or indirectly elected mayors and in mainland Europe it's common.
So a 'yes' vote in a large number of British cities could be followed by more; in a decade local government will have been transformed.
Listen
Click to hear the vocabulary
Vocabulary
- directly elected
voted for by the people
- feared
worried
- shallow
superficial, not serious
- beauty contest
competition based on the way people look and speak, not what they say
- taken off
become popular
- grandeur
magnificence
- scrap
get rid of, abolish
- executive mayor
leader of a city with great personal power
- poll
survey
- highly controversial
greatly disputed