The 'Mayor of London' is an elected politician in
London. The role, created in 2000, was the first
directly-elected mayor in the United Kingdom. The
Mayor of London is also referred to as the 'London Mayor', a form which helps to avoid confusion with the
Lord Mayor of London, the ancient and now mainly ceremonial role in the
City of London. The Mayor of London is mayor of
Greater London, which has a population of over 7.5 million while the City of London is only a small part of the modern
city centre and has a population of less than 10,000. The first, and current, elected Mayor of London is
Ken Livingstone, who was re-elected in
2004.
Role
The Mayor is responsible for budgeting and strategic planning of some governmental functions across the whole of the
London region. The plans of the mayor are scrutinised by the
London Assembly and actioned by the
Greater London Authority. Responsibilities include
transport, the
police,
fire and
emergency services,
cultural strategy and
economic development.
Additional powers
The
Department for Communities and Local Government announced its final proposals for new powers for the Mayor on Thursday
13th July 2006.
[1] These provide for a strengthened role over planning in the capital; and additional strategic powers in a wide range of policy areas including waste, culture and sport, health, climate change and appointments to the boards of the functional bodies.
Elections
The Mayor of London is elected for a fixed term of four years, with the first election held in May 2000. As with most elected posts in the UK, there is a deposit, in this case of £10,000, which is returnable on the candidate's winning at least 5% of the first-choice votes cast.
2000
Main articles: London mayoral election, 2000
The 2000
campaign was incident-filled. The eventual winner, Ken Livingstone, went back on an earlier
pledge not to run as an
independent after losing the
Labour nomination to
Frank Dobson. He had earlier indicated in
1998 that he would seek only one term (which he confirmed during the 2000 campaign) when he said in response to the GLA
white paper ''"If I am lucky enough to be elected as London's first mayor ... I would not want to serve more than one term"''.
The
Conservative Party had to replace
Lord Archer of Weston-super-Mare as their candidate when he was charged with
perjury;
Steven Norris was selected as his replacement despite
tabloid revelations about his many extra-marital
affairs. The
Liberal Democrat candidate was
Susan Kramer.
2004
Main articles: London mayoral election, 2004
In
2004, the
second election was held. After being re-admitted to the Labour Party, Ken Livingstone was their official candidate. He won re-election after second preference votes were counted, with Steven Norris again coming second.
| London Mayoral Election Results 2004 |
|---|
| Name | Party | 1st Preference Votes | % | 2nd Preference Votes¹ | % | Final | %² |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ken Livingstone | Labour | 685,541 | 35.7 | 250,517 | 13.0 | 828,380 | 55.4 | |
| Steven Norris | Conservative | 542,423 | 28.2 | 222,559 | 11.6 | 667,178 | 44.6 |
| Simon Hughes | Lib Dem | 284,645 | 14.8 | 465,704 | 24.3 | N/A | |
| Frank Maloney | UKIP | 115,665 | 6.0 | 193,157 | 10.0 | N/A | |
| Lindsey German | RESPECT | 61,731 | 3.2 | 63,294 | 3.3 | N/A | |
| Julian Leppert | BNP | 58,405 | 3.0 | 70,736 | 3.7 | N/A | |
| Darren Johnson | Green | 57,331 | 2.9 | 208,686 | 10.9 | N/A | |
| Ram Gidoomal | CPA | 41,696 | 2.2 | 56,721 | 2.9 | N/A | |
| Lorna Reid | IWCA | 9,542 | 0.5 | 39,678 | 2.1 | N/A | |
| Tammy Nagalingam | Independent | 6,692 | 0.4 | 20,391 | 1.1 | N/A | |
¹Second preference votes are only used to elect the mayor if no single candidate receives more than 50% of the vote. The top two candidates then receive the second preference votes from their eliminated opponents.
²Percentage figures are not officially used on the final votes, they are produced here for illustration and are calculated by the candidates final vote divided by the total of final votes.
2008
Main articles: London mayoral election, 2008
Mayors
Initiatives
Initiatives taken by Ken Livingstone as Mayor of London include the
Congestion charge on private vehicles using Central London on weekdays, the creation of the
London Climate Change Agency, the London Energy Partnership
[2] and the founding of the international
Large Cities Climate Leadership Group.
They have also included the
London Partnerships Register which was a voluntary scheme without legal force for same-sex couples to register their partnership, and paved the way for the introduction by the United Kingdom Parliament of
civil partnerships. Unlike civil partnerships, the London Partnerships Register is open to heterosexual couples who favour a public commitment short of marriage.
Salary
The mayor of London's salary is one that ranks along that of a government cabinet minister's. The current salary is £137,579 per year
[3].
See also
★
Deputy Mayor of London
External links
★
Mayor of London website
★
Mayor of London's Cultural Strategy Group
★
Page about the process of nomination
★
Page about Ken Livingstone's relationship with Labour