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Posts by Ryan Swift

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Register to vote Register to vote to take part in elections in the UK. Includes how to get on the electoral register and how to update your address on the register.

🗳️It's the last day to register to vote in next month's local elections, taking place across the north!

With 8million eligible citizens unable to vote at the last general election due to being unregistered, signing up has never been more important ⬇️
www.gov.uk/register-to-...

2 days ago 0 3 1 1

As we @ippr.org have set out though, there is still a strong case for capping donations from all sources, including domestic companies and individuals, to take big money from mega donors out of politics and tackle inequalities in influence.

4 weeks ago 1 1 0 0

Great to see further action being taken by the government today to tighten up regulations on money in politics and foreign influence following the Rycroft review.

4 weeks ago 5 1 1 0

The government has set out its decisions on the initial wave of councils going through reorganisation today.

questions-statements.parliament.uk/written-stat...

4 weeks ago 2 1 0 0
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What lies beneath England's allegiances and rivalries? The survey for The English Question, the largest and most comprehensive of its kind ever conducted, reveals something of these hidden ties and bonds.

Yes, I think that’s probably right. This study from a few years ago suggested local identity in England was strongest in Newcastle and Sunderland.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-4432...

1 month ago 1 0 0 5

Both county and regional identities are stronger in more peripheral areas (North and South West).

But where regional identities are weaker, county identities still have some, albeit less, pull (parts of the Midlands and East).

1 month ago 0 0 1 0

Interesting to compare this map on county identity with yougov’s one on regional identity from last year.

1 month ago 2 0 2 0
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'Unitarisation risks weakening local democracy unless communities are put in the driving seat' - LabourList Nearly 30% of England faces local government overhaul. Without safeguards, unitarisation could cut councillors, weaken accountability and distance communities from power.

Great to write in @labourlist.bsky.social today about our latest @ipprnorth.bsky.social report and how local government reorganisation must result in local democracy renewal.

labourlist.org/2026/02/unit...

2 months ago 1 2 0 0
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We cannot afford for devolution not to work. If government want to make devolution its flagship programme, they must put communities in the driving seat, the future of democracy depends on it.

📋Read the full report here: www.ippr.org/articles/mak...

2 months ago 0 1 0 0
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Making the most of it: Unitarisation, hyperlocal democratic renewal and community empowerment | IPPR This report looks at the democratic implications of the government’s agenda for local government unitarisation under the English devolution and community e

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Check out the full report here:

www.ippr.org/articles/mak...

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If devolution is to be a flagship reform and lasting legacy, communities must be firmly in the driving seat.

Power can’t just move from Whitehall to town halls. It has to move from town halls to neighbourhoods.

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Unitarisation will happen whether we like it or not. The question is whether it centralises power locally or if it can be taken as an opportunity to rebuild democracy from the bottom up.

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3️⃣ Make participatory democracy the default with co-production, participatory budgeting and more permanent citizens’ assemblies.

And modernise council decision-making with remote & digital voting.

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2️⃣ Create inclusive neighbourhood boards in every new unitary area as a first phase, with at least 50% community representation.

And give communities the right to request powers from higher authorities — just as mayors can from central government.

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Our report sets out three practical reforms to ensure unitarisation strengthens democracy not weaken it:

1️⃣ Expand & empower hyperlocal councils so democracy exists “within walking distance”.

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So the choice isn’t reform vs a healthy system.

It’s whether structural change hollows out local democracy or becomes a catalyst to renew it from the bottom up.

There is real opportunity here for renewing local democracy if we make the most of it.

2 months ago 2 0 1 0

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Let’s be honest though, the status quo isn’t working great either.
- Turnout is low.
- Political satisfaction is weak.
- Most people feel they have little or no control locally.

Doing nothing won’t revive local democracy.

2 months ago 2 0 1 0
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Here’s the tension:

The government’s English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill aims to push power out of Whitehall.

But without safeguards, unitarisation could pull power upwards within local government and away from neighbourhoods.

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Unitarisation will mean:
- Fewer elections
- Up to 5,000 fewer councillors
- Larger populations per authority
- Decisions made further away — geographically and democratically.

2 months ago 2 0 1 0
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NEW @ipprnorth.bsky.social REPORT

Nearly 30% of England is about to see the biggest shake-up in local government for a generation.

Unitarisation is coming and it will fundamentally reshape how millions are represented.

2 months ago 2 1 1 0
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Update on May 2026 local authority elections We have today issued the below statement for immediate use on the local authority elections taking place in May 2026. An MHCLG spokesperson said: “Following legal advice, the Government has withdrawn ...

I think it's right that the May local elections will be going ahead, even in areas undergoing local government reorganisation. Democracy cannot be a matter of convenience or cost.

mhclgmedia.blog.gov.uk/2026/02/16/u...

2 months ago 2 3 0 0

This should be the first step in rebuilding trust in democracy and improving elections

Going further to limit the role of money in politics with annual donation caps and working to ensure automatic voter registration can be implemented fully before the next general election should be key priorities

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Modernising elections: How to get voters back | IPPR One in every two adults living in this country voted at the 2024 general election. This is the lowest share of the population to vote since universal suffr

It’s great to see many recommendations we made in our Modernisation Elections report in the Bill, including:

- votes at 16
- enhanced politics and citizenship education
- limits on foreign money
- improvements to voter ID
- moves towards automatic voter registration

www.ippr.org/articles/mod...

2 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Representation of the People Bill: Policy summaries These policy summaries provide more information about the Representation of the People Bill, which was introduced in the House of Commons on 12 February 2026.

The government has introduced its Representation of the People Bill

At a time when trust is low, the threat of money in politics growing, and turnout is declining and unequal, action to strengthen our democracy, widen participation and enhance political equality is vital

www.gov.uk/government/p...

2 months ago 1 0 1 0
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'Time for MPs to stop being ‘Super Councillors’ and start being legislators again' - LabourList MPs Are Overstretched as ‘Super Councillors’—Devolution will restore their primary role as legislators says IPPR North's Zoe Billingham.

Devolution is essential for empowering our communities, councillors & mayors - but also our MPs. Read why in my opinion piece for @labourlist.bsky.social✍️

Do you agree?

labourlist.org/2025/11/no-m...

5 months ago 8 4 0 1

Nice piece on the special urban/rural character of the ‘south Pennines’ with its industrial heritage and wild moors and hills.

From my 19thC terraced house in a small mill town it’s just 10 mins to this

5 months ago 5 3 1 0

“Instead of codification and careful planning the Parliamentary Estate is a mess of ‘unwritten’ conventions, which like the constitution are made sense of only through narrative and route-finding.”

Great to see this paper that I worked on with @alexprior.bsky.social and @snfschlee.bsky.social out👇

6 months ago 3 0 0 0
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🚨 | NEW PAPER: Community spaces are vanishing, and with them, the ties that bind us.
A year on from the Southport riots, we explore how the loss of pubs, parks and youth clubs is weakening social connection, and how to rebuild it 👉 ippr.org/articles/places-to-come-together

8 months ago 29 15 2 8
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Young people in the North are being hit twice as hard due to regional inequalities - Ryan Swift The kids aren’t alright. Young people today have grown up in extremely challenging circumstances, enduring austerity, Brexit, economic stagnation, a pandemic and a cost-of-living crisis. Intergenerati...

"Young people in the North are being hit twice as hard due to regional inequalities."

Read @ryanswift93.bsky.social column in @yorkshirepost.co.uk about how deep geographical disparities are harming children in the North of England.

www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/opinion...

8 months ago 3 2 0 0
“Devolution has created the need for a more relationship-based approach to culture delivery at a local level, one that is less top down and more co-created closer to communities.

 “If you keep doing what you’ve always done you’ll get what you’ve always had.

 “Funding and policy making for culture needs to devolve.

 “The centre cannot and should not hold. Growth potential is being stymied by over centralisation.

 “The kids are not alright…

 “IPPR North’s recommendation to ‘devolve responsibilities and funding for culture to combined authorities where the appetite and capacity for this exists’ is underpinned by our work on culture and innovation devolution across all 4 nations of the UK and our earlier work leading the APPG post-covid cultural recovery report on community cohesion”.

“Devolution has created the need for a more relationship-based approach to culture delivery at a local level, one that is less top down and more co-created closer to communities. “If you keep doing what you’ve always done you’ll get what you’ve always had. “Funding and policy making for culture needs to devolve. “The centre cannot and should not hold. Growth potential is being stymied by over centralisation. “The kids are not alright… “IPPR North’s recommendation to ‘devolve responsibilities and funding for culture to combined authorities where the appetite and capacity for this exists’ is underpinned by our work on culture and innovation devolution across all 4 nations of the UK and our earlier work leading the APPG post-covid cultural recovery report on community cohesion”.

“Funding and policy making for culture needs to devolve"

We are grateful to esteemed culture expert Professor Katy Shaw for welcoming our State of the North 2025 report ⤵️

9 months ago 0 1 0 0