The 'London referendum of 1998' was a
referendum held in the
Greater London area on Thursday, May 7, 1998 asking whether there was support for the creation of the
Greater London Authority, consisting of a directly elected
Mayor of London and a separately elected
London Assembly. Unlike the
referendum in Scotland, there was no proposal for the assembly to have legislative or tax varying powers. There was a very low
turnout for the referendum - only about a third of Londoners voted.
[1]
Results
The
electorate were asked to vote yes or no to the question:
'Are you in favour of the Government's proposals for a Greater London Authority, made up of an elected mayor and a separately elected assembly?'
| 'Yes votes' | 'Yes votes (%)' | 'No votes' | 'No (%)' | 'Turnout (%)' |
| 1,230,715 | 72.0 | 478,413 | 28.0 | 34.1 |
There was a majority in favour of 'yes' in every individual
London borough. There was generally more support in
Inner London boroughs than
Outer London ones. The lowest support figures were 60.5% (
Havering) and 57.1% (
Bromley), the greatest were 83.8% (
Haringey) and 81.8% (
Lambeth).
Government response
The government passed the
Greater London Authority Act 1999, creating the
Greater London Authority. Elections for the
mayor and
assembly were held in May 2000.
External link
★
MayorWatch London Elections Guide