Key to the metropolitan question

By Professor Steve Leach and Howard Davis | 22 May 2015

Thirty years ago, the 1985 Local Government Act was passed, abolishing the Greater London Council (GLC) and the six metropolitan county councils (MCCs).

The latter were unfortunate in that the Government’s primary motive was getting rid of the GLC. The MCCs were included because of the similarity in their role and powers to those of the GLC. All of these authorities, the government argued, constituted ‘a wasteful and unnecessary tier of government’.

But metropolitan government never really went away. Joint boards were established in each of the former MCC areas to deal with police, fire and passenger transport.

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