Liverpool City Council Explained

Liverpool City Council
Logo Res:120
Coa Pic:Coat of arms of Liverpool City Council.svg
Coa Caption:Coat of arms
Coa Alt:Arms of Liverpool City Council
House Type:Metropolitan borough council
Leader1 Type:Lord Mayor
Leader1:Richard Kemp
Party1:
Liberal Democrat
Election1:15 May 2024[1]
Leader2 Type:Leader
Leader2:Liam Robinson
Party2:
Labour
Election2:17 May 2023[2] [3]
Leader3 Type:Chief Executive
Leader3:Andrew Lewis
Election3:June 2023[4]
Seats:85 councillors
Structure1:United Kingdom Liverpool City Council 2023.svg
Structure1 Res:250
Structure1 Alt:Liverpool City Council composition
Political Groups1:
Administration (61)
  • Labour (61)
    Other Parties (24)
  • Green (3)
  • Community Ind. (3)
  • Liberal (3)
  • Joint Committees:Liverpool City Region Combined Authority
    Term Length:4 years
    Voting System1:First-past-the-post
    Last Election1:4 May 2023
    Next Election1:6 May 2027
    Session Room:Town Hall, Liverpool.jpg
    Session Res:240px
    Meeting Place:Town Hall, High Street, Liverpool, L23SW
    Motto:Latin: Deus Nobis Haec Otia Fecit |translation=God has granted us this ease

    Liverpool City Council is the local authority for the city of Liverpool in Merseyside, England. Liverpool has had a local authority since 1207, which has been reformed on numerous occasions. Since 1974 the council has been a metropolitan borough council. It provides the majority of local government services in the city. The council has been a member of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority since 2014.

    The council has been under Labour majority control since 2010. It meets at Liverpool Town Hall and has its main offices at the Cunard Building.

    History

    Liverpool was an ancient borough, having been granted its first charter by King John in 1207.[5] [6] It had a mayor from at least 1292.[7]

    Municipal borough

    Liverpool was reformed to become a municipal borough in 1836 under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835, which standardised how most boroughs operated across the country. It was then governed by a body formally called the 'mayor, aldermen and burgesses of the borough of Liverpool', generally known as the corporation or town council. As part of the same reforms, the borough boundaries were enlarged to match the larger Liverpool parliamentary constituency, which had been expanded in 1832 to include the neighbouring parishes of Everton and Kirkdale and part of West Derby.[8] [9] [10] The corporation created a police force in 1836.

    Liverpool was granted city status in 1880, after which the corporation was also known as the city council. When elected county councils were established in 1889, Liverpool was considered large enough to provide its own county-level services, and so it became a county borough, independent from the new Lancashire County Council, whilst remaining part of the geographical county of Lancashire.[11] In 1893 the city was granted the right to appoint a lord mayor.[12]

    The city boundaries were enlarged on several occasions, notably gaining Wavertree, Walton and parts of Toxteth and West Derby in 1895, Fazakerley in 1905, Allerton, Childwall and Woolton in 1913, the rest of West Derby in 1928, and Speke in 1932.[11]

    Liverpool's first female councillor was Eleanor Rathbone, elected in 1909. Eighteen years later, Margaret Beavan became the first female Lord Mayor in 1927.[7]

    Metropolitan borough

    The city was reformed to become a metropolitan district in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972. It kept the same boundaries as the former county borough (which had last been adjusted in 1956) and became one of five metropolitan districts within the new metropolitan county of Merseyside.[13] Liverpool's borough and city statuses and its lord mayoralty passed to the reformed district and its council.[14]

    From 1974 until 1986 the council was a lower-tier authority, with upper-tier functions provided by Merseyside County Council. The county council was abolished in 1986 and its functions passed to Merseyside's five borough councils, including Liverpool, with some services provided through joint committees.[15]

    During the 1980s, the Militant group gained control of Liverpool's Labour Party. Under their leadership the council attempted to challenge the national government on several issues, including refusing to set a budget in 1985. The leadership of the national Labour Party was drawn into the controversy, ultimately expelling members of Militant, including the council's deputy leader, Derek Hatton, in 1986.[16] [17]

    In 2012 the council introduced the position of Mayor of Liverpool as a directly elected mayor to serve as the council's political leader instead of having a leader of the council chosen by the councillors. The position was separate from the more ceremonial role of the Lord Mayor. The directly elected mayor position was abolished in 2023 and the position of leader of the council was reinstated.[18]

    Since 2014 the council has been a member of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority, which has been led by the directly elected Mayor of the Liverpool City Region since 2017. The combined authority provides strategic leadership and co-ordination for certain functions across the region, but Liverpool City Council continues to be responsible for most local government functions.[19] [20]

    The council's chief executive, Ged Fitzgerald, was suspended in 2017 and subsequently resigned in 2018 following an investigation by Lancashire Constabulary into financial irregularities relating to a joint project between Lancashire County Council and British Telecom (BT) during Fitzgerald's tenure as chief executive of the county council.[21] [22] [23] The police investigation subsequently widened to investigate alleged criminality at the city council and the Merseyside pension fund too. In 2020, it was reported that the city council's accounts since 2015 had not been signed off by its auditors on account of the 'complex ongoing police investigation'.[24]

    In December 2020, the elected mayor, Joe Anderson, was arrested as part of an anti-corruption investigation. The Labour Party suspended Anderson on news of his arrest.[25] [26] He did not resign as mayor but stood back from active duties, handing effective control to the deputy mayor, Wendy Simon, for the remainder of his term of office to May 2021. As of April 2024 no charges had been brought against him, but the investigation had yet to conclude.[27]

    On 24 March 2021, the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, Robert Jenrick, announced that he was appointing commissioners to oversee some of the authority's functions for at least 3 years. This was following an investigation, commissioned in December 2020 that found there were "multiple apparent failures" and a "deeply concerning picture of mismanagement" in the council.[28] [29] [30]

    The commissioners remained in post until June 2024. Following improvements in the council's performance and management, the intervention was then scaled back to less direct supervision, due to last until March 2025.[31]

    Governance

    Liverpool City Council provides metropolitan borough services. Some strategic functions in the area are provided by the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority; the leader of Liverpool City Council sits on the combined authority as Liverpool's representative.[32] There are no civil parishes in the city.[33]

    Political control

    The council has been under Labour majority control since 2010.

    In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the council was run by the Conservatives. Labour councillors were first elected to the council in 1905, but Liverpool was one of the last major cities in the UK in which the Labour Party gained control, which first occurred in 1955.[34]

    Municipal borough

    Party in controlYears
    1835–1841
    1841–1892
    1892–1895
    1895–1955
    1955–1956
    1956–1962
    1962–1963
    1963–1967
    1967–1971
    1971–1972
    1972–1974

    Political control of the council since the 1974 reforms has been as follows:[35] [36] [37]

    Metropolitan borough

    Party in controlYears
    1974–1983
    1983–1992
    1992–1996
    1996–1998
    1998–2010
    2010–present

    Leadership

    The role of Lord Mayor of Liverpool is largely ceremonial role. Political leadership is instead provided by the leader of the council. Between 2012 and 2023 the council had a directly elected Mayor of Liverpool (a separate post from the Lord Mayor) instead of a leader. The directly elected mayor position was abolished in 2023 and the position of leader reinstated. The leaders since 1918 have been:

    County Borough leaders

    Councillor Party From To
    Charles Petrie[38] 4 Nov 1918
    Archibald Salvidge[39] 18 Nov 1918 11 Dec 1928
    Thomas White[40] [41] 7 Jan 1929 25 Jan 1938
    Alfred Shennan 1938 1955
    Jack Braddock 1955 1961
    Maxwell Entwistle 1961 1963
    Jack Braddock May 1963 Nov 1963
    1963 1967
    1967 1972
    1972 31 Mar 1974
    The last leader of the council before the 1974 reforms, Bill Sefton, went on to be the first leader of Merseyside County Council.

    Metropolitan Borough leaders

    Councillor Party From To
    1 Apr 1974 1975
    Bill Smythe 1975 1976
    1976 1978
    1978 1983
    1983 Nov 1986
    Tony Byrne[42] Nov 1986 Mar 1987
    Mar 1987 May 1987
    Harry Rimmer May 1987 Oct 1987
    Keva Coombes 1987 1990
    Harry Rimmer 1990 1996
    Frank Prendergast 1996 1998
    May 1998 25 Nov 2005
    Dec 2005 May 2010
    May 2010 6 May 2012

    Directly elected mayors

    Mayor Party From To
    7 May 2012 Dec 2020
    Dec 2020 9 May 2021
    10 May 2021 7 May 2023

    Metropolitan Borough leaders

    Councillor Party From To
    Liam Robinson17 May 2023

    Composition

    Following the 2023 election the composition of the council was:[43]

    PartyCouncillors
    61
    15
    3
    3
    3
    Total85
    The next election is due in 2027.

    Elections

    Since the last boundary changes in 2023, 85 councillors have been elected from 64 wards, with each ward electing one, two or three councillors. Elections are held every four years.[44] [45]

    These are the wards since the 2023 local elections.[46]

    1. Aigburth
    2. Allerton
    3. Anfield
    4. Arundel
    5. Belle Vale
    6. Broadgreen
    7. Brownlow Hill
    8. Calderstones
    9. Canning
    10. Childwall
    11. Church
    12. City Centre North
    13. City Centre South
    14. Clubmoor East
    15. Clubmoor West
    16. County
    17. Croxteth
    18. Croxteth Country Park
    19. Dingle
    20. Edge Hill
    21. Everton East
    22. Everton North
    23. Everton West
    24. Fazakerley East
    25. Fazakerley North
    26. Fazakerley West
    27. Festival Gardens
    28. Garston
    29. Gateacre
    30. Grassendale & Cressington
    31. Greenbank Park
    32. Kensington & Fairfield
    33. Kirkdale East
    style=class="toccolours"
    1. Kirkdale West
    2. Knotty Ash & Dovecot Park
    3. Mossley Hill
    4. Much Woolton & Hunts Cross
    5. Norris Green
    6. Old Swan East
    7. Old Swan West
    8. Orrell Park
    9. Penny Lane
    10. Princes Park
    11. Sandfield Park
    12. Sefton Park
    13. Smithdown
    14. Speke
    15. Springwood
    16. St Michaels
    17. Stoneycroft
    18. Toxteth
    19. Tuebrook Breckside Park
    20. Tuebrook Larkhill
    21. Vauxhall
    22. Walton
    23. Waterfront North
    24. Waterfront South
    25. Wavertree Garden Suburb
    26. Wavertree Village
    27. West Derby Deysbrook
    28. West Derby Leyfield
    29. West Derby Muirhead
    30. Woolton Village
    31. Yew Tree

    Premises

    Council meetings are held at Liverpool Town Hall at the junction of High Street, Dale Street and Water Street, which was built between 1749 and 1754. The council's main administrative offices are located in the Cunard Building at Pier Head, which had been completed in 1917 as the headquarters of the Cunard Line. The council bought the building in 2013.[47] [48]

    From 1868 until 2016 the council's main offices were the Municipal Buildings on Dale Street. The Municipal Buildings were sold in 2016 after the council decided they were too large and costly to maintain and following the transfer of most offices to the Cunard Building.[49]

    Coat of arms

    Year Adopted:1797
    Escutcheon:Argent a Cormorant in the beak a Branch of Seaweed called Laver all proper.
    Crest:On a Wreath of the Colours a Cormorant the wings elevated in the beak a Branch of Laver proper.
    Supporters:On the dexter Neptune with his Sea-Green Mantle flowing the waist wreathed with Laver on his head an Eastern Crown Gold in the right hand his Trident Sable the left supporting a Banner of the arms of Liverpool on the sinister a Triton wreathed as the dexter and blowing his Shell the right hand supporting a Banner thereon a Ship under sail in perspective all proper the Banner Staves Or.
    Motto:'Deus Nobis Haec Otia Fecit'[50]

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. News: Humphreys . David . Liverpool Council veteran Richard Kemp becomes city's Lord Mayor . 19 May 2024 . Liverpool Echo . 15 May 2024.
    2. Web site: Labour chief vows to 'finish the job' of fixing Liverpool Council . 5 May 2023 .
    3. Web site: Council minutes, 17 May 2023 . Liverpool City Council . 4 May 2024.
    4. News: Whelan . Dan . Liverpool CEO reflects on six months in post . 4 May 2024 . Place North West . 29 November 2023.
    5. Book: Report of the Commissioners Appointed to Inquire into the Municipal Corporations in England and Wales: Appendix 4 . 1835 . 2691 . 6 June 2024.
    6. Book: A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume 4 . 1911 . 1–4 . 6 June 2024.
    7. Web site: Former Mayors and Lord Mayors . Liverpool Town Hall . 6 June 2024.
    8. Book: Youngs . Frederic . Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England . 1991 . Royal Historical Society . London . 0861931270 . 680.
    9. Book: Parliamentary Boundaries Act . 1832 . 349 . 6 June 2024.
    10. Book: Municipal Corporations Act . 1835 . 457 . 6 June 2024.
    11. Web site: Liverpool Municipal Borough / County Borough . A Vision of Britain through Time . GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth . 6 June 2024.
    12. Book: A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume 4 . 1911 . Victoria County History . London . 38–41 . 6 June 2024.
    13. act. Local Government Act 1972. 1972. 70. 1. 30 May 2024.
    14. Web site: District Councils and Boroughs . . 30 May 2024 . 28 March 1974.
    15. act. Local Government Act 1985. 1985. 51. 5 April 2024.
    16. News: Naughtie . James . Labour in Bournemouth . 7 June 2024 . The Guardian . 2 October 1985.
    17. News: On this day, 12 June 1986: Labour expels Militant Hatton . 7 June 2024 . BBC News.
    18. News: Vinter . Robyn . Liverpool council votes to scrap three-mayor system . 8 June 2024 . The Guardian . 21 July 2022.
    19. si. The Halton, Knowsley, Liverpool, Sefton, St Helens, Sefton and Wirral Combined Authority Order 2014. 2014. 865. 5 June 2024.
    20. Web site: Understand how your council works . gov.uk . 30 May 2024.
    21. News: Liverpool City Council boss Ged Fitzgerald suspended amid fraud probe. BBC News. 18 September 2017.
    22. Web site: Liverpool council chief Ged Fitzgerald RESIGNS with immediate effect. Liam. Thorp. 14 May 2018. Liverpool Echo.
    23. Web site: Liverpool council chief executive Ged Fitzgerald arrested. Marc. Waddington. 22 May 2017. Liverpool Echo.
    24. Web site: Liverpool council's accounts not signed off for five years. Tom. Duffy. 28 June 2020. Liverpool Echo.
    25. Web site: I'm cooperating fully with police, says Liverpool mayor Joe Anderson. 5 December 2020. The Guardian.
    26. News: Liverpool Mayor Joe Anderson arrested in bribery probe. BBC News. 12 April 2020.
    27. News: Humphries . Jonny . Hamilton . Claire . Ex-mayor 'like a recluse' since police probe . 8 June 2024 . BBC News . 19 April 2024.
    28. Web site: Secretary of State statement: Liverpool City Council. 2021-03-24. GOV.UK. 24 March 2021 . en.
    29. News: 2021-03-24. Liverpool City Council: Commissioners to oversee authority. en-GB. BBC News. 2021-03-24.
    30. Web site: Liverpool City Council: Best Value inspection report (publishing.service.gov.uk). 15 August 2023.
    31. News: Coleman . Jenny . Liverpool City Council handed back decision-making powers . 7 June 2024 . BBC News . 8 May 2024.
    32. Web site: Committee details . Liverpool City Region Combined Authority . 5 June 2024.
    33. Web site: Election Maps . Ordnance Survey . 30 May 2024.
    34. Jeffery. David. 2017-08-01. The strange death of Tory Liverpool: Conservative electoral decline in Liverpool, 1945–1996. British Politics. en. 12. 3. 386–407. 10.1057/s41293-016-0032-6. 1746-918X. free.
    35. Web site: Compositions calculator . The Elections Centre . 10 August 2022.
    36. News: Liverpool . 2010-05-07 . . 2009-04-19.
    37. News: Defection confusion in Liverpool . 2010-02-17 . 2008-05-02 . BBC News Online.
    38. News: Sir C. Petrie: A surprise resignation from city council . 29 August 2022 . Liverpool Echo . 4 November 1918 . 3.
    39. News: Sir Archibald Savidge elected Tory leader in the city council today . 29 August 2022 . Liverpool Echo . 18 November 1918 . 3.
    40. News: Sir T. White elected council leader: Unanimity at today's meeting . 29 August 2022 . Liverpool Echo . 7 January 1929 . 9.
    41. News: The passing of Sir Thomas White . 29 August 2022 . Liverpool Echo . 25 January 1938.
    42. News: We'll tame rebels yet . 29 August 2022 . Liverpool Echo . 21 November 1986.
    43. Web site: Local elections 2023: live council results for England. The Guardian.
    44. si. The Liverpool (Electoral Changes) Order 2022. 2022. 1365. 7 June 2024.
    45. Web site: New electoral arrangements for Liverpool City Council Final Recommendations . Local Government Boundary Commission for England . 25 June 2023 . 49 . September 2022.
    46. Web site: Ward Maps . liverpool.gov.uk . Liverpool City Council . 25 June 2023.
    47. News: Cunard Building purchase plan agreed by Liverpool Council . 6 June 2024 . BBC News . 11 October 2013.
    48. Web site: Council agenda, 24 June 2022 . Liverpool City Council . 29 August 2022.
    49. Web site: Houghton. Alistair. Remembering Liverpool's Municipal Buildings. Liverpool Echo. 1 January 2017. 31 December 2016.
    50. Web site: Liverpool (England). Heraldry of the World . 26 January 2024 .