49. The strange death of municipal England

Published: July 5, 2017, 3:01 p.m.

b'A hundred years ago, England\\u2019s municipal governments were the envy of the world. Every city ran its own trams, power and water systems, and the town hall was often the best looking building in town. Today, CityMetric\\u2019s excitement about the rise of the metro mayor notwithstanding, England is one of the most centralised countries in the western world. So what went wrong? To take us on a whistle stop history of municipal England, I\\u2019m joined by self-professed local government nerd Emma Burnell. Our conversation takes in everything from Joseph Chamberlain to Clement Attlee to Derek Hatton to the Grenfell fire.After that, we ask the audience: what\\u2019s the strangest local government name/boundary/job title you\\u2019ve come across? From the responses, incidentally, I am delighted to see that we\\u2019ve accidentally made the Tees Valley\\u2019s own Sue Jeffrey into a meme.PS: if you\\u2019d like to give us a nice review on iTunes, it\'d help other people discover the show, which we\'d, y\'know, like. So, thanks.Skylines is the podcast from the New Statesman\'s cities site, CityMetric. It\'s hosted by Jonn Elledge.


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