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Encyclopedia > Government of Birmingham, England
Birmingham


shown within West Midlands

Image:WMids-Birmingham.png

This page is about the Government of Birmingham, England.

Contents

Local Government

History

Most of Birmingham was historically a part of Warwickshire, though the modern city also includes villages and towns formerly in Staffordshire or Worcestershire.


Until the 1760s Birmingham was administered by manorial and parish officials, most of whom served on a part-time and honourary basis. By the 1760s the population growth of Birmingham made this system completely inadquate, and salaried officials were needed. In 1768 a body of "Commisioners of the Streets" was established who had powers to levy a rate for functions such as cleaning and street lighting. They were later given powers to provide policing and build public buildings.


The Reform Act of 1832 gave Birmingham its first representation in Parliament innitially with only two MP's but this has been gradually expanded.


Birmingham gained the status of a borough in 1838 and gained its its first elected town council which took over the functions of the Street Comissioners. In 1889 it became a county borough (unitary authority) and a city. This remained unchanged until 1974 when Birmingham became a metropolitan district of the newly-created West Midlands county under the West Midlands County Council. The county council was abolished in 1986 and Birmingham effectively reverted to being a unitary authority although sharing some services with other authorities in the county.

Geography
Status: Metropolitan borough, City (1889)
Region: West Midlands
Ceremonial County: West Midlands
Area:
- Total
Ranked 169th
267.77 km²
Admin. HQ: Birmingham
ONS code: 00CN
Demographics
Population:
- Total (2003 est.)
- Density
Ranked 1st
992,100
3,697 / km²
Ethnicity: 70.4% White
19.5% S.Asian
6.1% Afro-Carib.
Politics
Birmingham City Council
http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/
Leadership: Leader & Cabinet
Executive: Conservative + Liberal Democrats

City Council

Birmingham City Council is the largest local authority in the UK with, following a reorganisation of boundaries in June 2004, 120 councillors representing just under one million people, in 40 wards.


After the election of 10 June 2004, there is no overall control, with the 120 seats being divided between the Labour, (53 councillors), Conservative (39) and Liberal Democrat ("Lib-Dem", 28) parties.


There is a Conservative/ Lib-Dem coalition, with Conservative group leader Mike Whitby as Leader of the council and Lib-Dem group leader John Hemming as Deputy Leader.


Wards

Following the June 2004 reorganisation, Birmingham's wards are:

Districts

From 5 April 2004, responsibility and budgets for a number of services were devolved to 11 district committees, as part of a growing trend in the UK to use area committees for large councils. These are:

Each comprises three or four wards. They are not identical to the Parliamentary constituencies mentioned below, as the districts are composed of whole wards, whilst, following ward boundary changes in June 2004, the 11 constituencies split wards.


Parishes

Birmingham is nearly entirely unparished. Its only civil parish, New Frankley, was established in 2000 in an area transferrred from Bromsgrove in 1995, which had previously been part of the Frankley parish.


National Government

Birmingham's eleven constituencies are represented in the House of Commons by one Conservative and 10 Labour MPs.


Image:BirminghamNumbered.png

# Constituency MP Party
1 Birmingham, Edgbaston Gisela Stuart Labour
2 Birmingham, Erdington Siôn Simon Labour
3 Birmingham, Hall Green Stephen James McCabe Labour
4 Birmingham, Hodge Hill Liam Byrne Labour
5 Birmingham, Ladywood Clare Short Labour
6 Birmingham, Northfield Richard Burden Labour
7 Birmingham, Perry Barr Khalid Mahmood Labour
8 Birmingham, Selly Oak Dr Lynne Jones Labour
9 Birmingham, Sparkbrook and Small Heath Roger Godsiff Labour
10 Birmingham, Yardley Estelle Morris Labour
11 Sutton Coldfield Andrew Mitchell Conservative

External links

  • Birmingham City Council (http://www.birmingham.gov.uk)
  • District Committees (http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/devolution)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Government of Birmingham - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (575 words)
Until the 1760s Birmingham was administered by manorial and parish officials, most of whom served on a part-time and honourary basis.
Birmingham gained the status of a municipal borough in 1838 and gained its its first elected town council which took over the functions of the Street Comissioners.
Birmingham's eleven constituencies are represented in the House of Commons by one Conservative, one Liberal Democrat and nine Labour MPs.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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