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LONDON DEVOLUTION REFERENDUM, 1998

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]

Contents
Results
Government response
External link

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 (%)'
1,230,71572.0478,41328.034.1

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

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