Mayors from across England will meet with the Prime Minister today as the government accelerates its drive to kickstart growth.

Bringing together mayors of all political stripes, the meeting will focus on maximising the opportunities of devolution and the key issues that matter to local people, from building more homes and infrastructure, to taking control of local transport.
Where projects have stalled or been watered down, the government will back mayors to push them through – unlocking homes, infrastructure and jobs, particularly for younger generations.
This includes challenging Enfield Council’s refusal to support a proposed New Town in an area with significant housing need, which is near to an under-used train station. The Prime Minister is clear that decisions on new towns will be taken in the national interest alone, because it will be the next generation that suffers from inaction.
He will also confirm action to deliver the public transport services that new homes rely on.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:
“For too long, Britain has been held back by a system that says no, delaying projects, blocking growth and leaving communities behind.
“We’re turning that on its head by backing our mayors to get Britain building again, with spades in the ground and more jobs across the country. There will always be the naysayers and the blockers, but we cannot afford to give into them - because it will be the next generation that suffers.
"This government is backing mayors with the biggest devolution drive in a generation, putting real power in the hands of local leaders, because those with skin in the game know best what their communities need. That is the right thing to do for communities, and it's the right thing to do for growth."
Thanks to new devolved powers, mayors will be urged to go further and faster, with a clear message: where local leaders bring forward credible plans to drive growth, the government will back them and get projects built.
Today’s discussions at the Mayoral Council come alongside a wider shift of power out of Westminster and into the hands of local leaders, including the first ever ‘Right to Request’ process – allowing mayors to propose new devolved powers to drive growth in their areas.
The Council will play a central role in driving this agenda by ensuring local leaders have the power, backing and certainty they need to deliver at scale, at pace, and for the long term.
It follows the ‘devolution revolution’ set out in the government’s manifesto, where devolution now covers 67% of England. Mayors have been handed multi‑year funding settlements, ending the ‘begging bowl culture’ and freeing up time and resource to focus on improving their communities.
Crucially, due to reforms the government has made through the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Act, mayors now have real delivery powers – including the ability to intervene in major planning decisions, unlock stalled sites, and coordinate housing and infrastructure across their regions.
Supporting this drive, the Prime Minister will additionally confirm a package of major transport investments across England to improve journeys and drive growth.
Projects include a new mass transit system for West Yorkshire, expansion of the Birmingham Metro, and reopening the Cowley branch rail line between Oxford city centre and the new Science Park. As part of the Right to Request process, the government has also committed to devolving Transport and Works Act Order approvals so all Mayors can approve their own mass transit systems going forward.
The plans will deliver faster connections between city centres, homes, jobs and key sites – including stadiums – while unlocking investment and regeneration.
This is on top of government action which is already showing delivery. In the Mayoral Council, the PM is expected to tell mayors that his government will always work with local leaders through the powers supplied by the landmark English Devolution and Community Empowerment Act.
Progress to date includes:
- £725 billion long‑term infrastructure investment backing growth across the UK
- Major reforms to planning rules, investment in skills and planning capacity, and streamlined regulation helping get projects moving faster
- Commitment to fast-track at least 150 major planning decisions this Parliament – nearly triple the previous Parliament – and establish a new Mass Transit Taskforce to speed up delivery.
Government to continue roll out of Lead Environmental Regulator model
Environmental regulators are now meeting or exceeding key planning timeliness targets – giving developers greater certainty and helping infrastructure projects move faster. Provisional results show that in 2025/26, the Environment Agency responded to 98% of planning consultations on time (up from 88%), while Natural England handled 95% of major infrastructure applications within agreed timescales.
The Environment Agency’s Priority Tracked Service is also supporting 63 major projects, providing a single point of contact and end-to-end permitting support to help complex schemes progress more quickly while maintaining strong environmental standards.
To go further, the government is continuing to roll out the Lead Environmental Regulator model – replacing a merry-go round of overlapping bodies with a single coordinating regulator for major projects to cut duplication and speed up approvals.
Alongside this, the government is taking action on judicial review to make sure meritless challenges cannot be used to stall vital infrastructure.
These reforms are intended to ensure that unmeritorious cases are dealt with quickly, while protecting the right to challenge where it is justified – striking the right balance between accountability and delivery.
To support the development of these proposals, Lord Banner KC will also be providing expert advice building on his previous work on the review of legal challenges to Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects, which the government acted on last spring.
Natural England will be the Lead Environmental Regulator for aspects of the National Grid’s ‘The Great Grid Upgrade’, while the Environment Agency will be the Lead Environmental Regulator for Cornish Lithium.


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