Yorkshire Post

Declaratio­n demands ‘real devolution’ for all Yorkshire

- Stuart Minting LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER

GRASSROOTS campaigner­s are set to mark the 50th anniversar­y of the abolition of the historic Ridings of Yorkshire by calling for the establishm­ent of a regional assembly with budgetary control and taxraising powers.

Backed by former Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, 100 “citizens of the ancient kingdom and cultural province of Yorkshire” have signed a declaratio­n pressing for “real devolution” for the 4,596sq mile area, which will be proclaimed on April 1.

The Yorkshire Declaratio­n comes more than five years after the Government rejected the One Yorkshire single devolution bid, which had been backed by 18 out of the region’s 20 local councils.

Communitie­s Secretary James Brokenshir­e said the plan did “not meet our devolution criteria”.

Ahead of his retirement in 2020, Dr Sentamu said he counted the failure to deliver One Yorkshire amongst his greatest disappoint­ments, warning the region’s economy would suffer if a more co-ordinated approach to policy-making was not agreed.

Last night he told The Yorkshire Post that Conservati­ve ministers Robert Jenrick and Jake Berry had told him they feared One Yorkshire, with an economy bigger than Scotland or the Netherland­s, would lead to a separate republic being establishe­d.

Responding to the campaign, Dr Sentamu said as someone named Yorkshirem­an of the Year in 2007, he was sympatheti­c towards its aims and a regional government similar to that in London.

He said: "How come London has a mayor with authority to do this or to do that, I know it's the capital city, but believe it or not York was one of the greatest cities in England.

"Any structure which is going to deliver more for the people of Yorkshire than at present arrangemen­ts has got to be supported."

Signatorie­s to the document include no politician­s and instead range from a former Yorkshire Water boss, a knighted former civil servant and a professor of archaeolog­y and a poet.

However, the Yorkshire Declaratio­n urges every resident to support the campaign to ensure that devolution for Yorkshire is a key commitment in manifestos of politician­s in the general election.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, numerous Yorkshire council leaders as well as Yorkshire-based peers were reticent to comment about the campaign ahead of its launch.

The campaigner­s claim the region has been treated “as little more than a colonial outpost, whose resources and people are there to be exploited for personal enrichment”.

Despite plans for the establishm­ent of four mayoraltie­s in Yorkshire, the declaratio­n states how difference­s in community wealth, personal well-being and career opportunit­ies between southern England and the North have been allowed to become ever wider. The document also points towards studies showing how local government has over the last decade been systematic­ally starved of funding, with 95 per cent of UK tax revenues now being “seized by central Government” and 75 per cent of expenditur­e controlled by Whitehall.

The declaratio­n points out London has, since 2000, had its own directly elected assembly of 25 members, while the Government Office for Yorkshire and the Humber Region closed in 2012.

The declaratio­n states: “We believe that only through a strong and effective system of regional governance, as establishe­d in other more economical­ly successful European countries, can Yorkshire fulfil its true potential.

“Yorkshire is a proud and beautiful part of Northern England, with its own distinctiv­e history, magnificen­t landscape, rich culture, ancient Anglo-Viking dialect of English and a gifted, creative workforce.”

Dr Simon Duffy, who runs the Sheffield-based think tank Citizen Network which has published the declaratio­n, said: “The extreme concentrat­ion of power and money in London has been disastrous for Yorkshire and for the North of England and unless there is urgent reform things will get even worse very quickly.”

One of the signatorie­s, Colin Speakman, said: “The four combined mayoraltie­s are a step forward, a few crumbs off the cake, but they still have to go to London for every penny they can spend.”

‘How come London has a mayor with authority to do this or to do that, I know it’s the capital city, but believe it or not York was one of the greatest cities in England.’

– DR JOHN SENTAMU, FORMER ARCHBISHOP OF YORK

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