Mayors should be given major new powers, according to a report by the Starmerite thinktank Labour<\/a> Together, which comes as officials put the finishing touches to a devolution paper due in the coming weeks.<\/p>\n The report<\/a> recommends using city and regional mayors to road-test new public sector schemes before they are rolled out nationally, and giving them more control over their budgets and allowing them to commission more local public services.<\/p>\n If adopted, it would put elected city leaders, most of whom represent Labour, at the forefront of delivering public sector improvements across a range of areas including health, social services and welfare. It would further cement the status of mayors such as Sadiq Khan in London and Andy Burnham<\/a> in Greater Manchester as some of the most powerful politicians in the country.<\/p>\n The former Michael Gove adviser Sam Freedman, who wrote the report, said: \u201cBritain is one of the most centralised countries in the world, and by trying to manage everything, Whitehall is struggling everywhere. The mayors are the best way to build new capacity, while also increasing understanding of local needs in the way services are delivered.\u201d<\/p>\n The report recommends giving mayors more power over health, education and employment by allowing them to commission local services directly. In regard to health, Freedman recommends allowing mayors or their deputies to chair commissioning boards, which are currently run by a mix of doctors, academics and former politicians.<\/p>\n In several areas of government, Freedman suggests letting mayors run one-off programmes or pilot schemes, which are often commissioned by central government and run by outsourcing companies.<\/p>\n In 2021, for example, the Department for Education contracted the Dutch recruitment agency Randstad to run its programme to extend tutoring to pupils who had fallen behind during the Covid pandemic. The scheme was beset by failures<\/a> however, including low participation rates, and the company was axed from the programme.<\/p>\n Freedman also suggests giving mayors more power over budgets, including giving them pots of money to use for whichever local public services they think most need it.<\/p>\n