Julie Harris
11 April, 2025
News

Give your views on devolution in Brighton and Hove by 13 April

Have your say on the Sussex-wide consultation on devolution before the deadline this weekend.

Councillor John Hewitt, Brighton & Hove Cabinet Adviser for Devolution

Submit your views on the Sussex and Brighton devolution consultation before midnight on Sunday 13 April on the gov.uk website at gov.uk/sussex-and-brighton-devolution where there is further information, including the full consultation document.

The government-led consultation is asking for views on forming a Combined County Authority with an elected mayor for the local government areas of Brighton & Hove, East Sussex and West Sussex.

Paper copies of the consultation are available in public libraries or can be downloaded from Brighton & Hove City Council's Devolution in Sussex web page.

Councillor John Hewitt, Brighton & Hove’s Cabinet adviser for Devolution and Local Government Reorganisation, said: “As a council we strongly agree that the establishment of a Mayoral Combined County Authority will deliver benefits for our area.

“The proposal will bring powers and funding down from central government to local areas so that decisions can be made locally rather than nationally. Sussex is a diverse county, so being able to make decisions closer to communities and our unique places has the potential to bring economic growth and address inequalities.

“Please take this opportunity to make your voice heard and help shape the future of Sussex.”

What does the Government want to find out?

The consultation is asking for views on establishing a Mayoral Combined authority in the area.

It includes questions on the proposed geography and how the Combined Authority will make decisions, together with questions on the effects of working across this geography through a Mayoral Combined Authority.

More about the Devolution Priority Programme

Brighton & Hove is part of the government’s Devolution Priority Programme (DPP) which means that elections for a Mayor for Sussex & Brighton are due to take place in May 2026.

Devolution involves transferring powers and funding from national to local government, ensuring decisions are made closer to the people, communities, and businesses they affect.

A Mayoral Combined County Authority is made of a group of councils who come together over larger areas that people recognise and work in.

In Sussex and Brighton, it would allow councils to work together in a structured way and take decisions over a wider footprint, with powers and responsibilities being held by the Mayoral Combined County Authority. It does not replace councils but operates strategically across the whole region.