Published on 13 May 2025
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A more collaborative way of governing? Why the UK’s Council of the Nations and Regions matters

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The Council of the Nations and Regions represents an opportunity to foster better relations between the key players in the territorial government of the UK – the UK’s central government, its devolved governments and the English regional mayors. And, if well-designed, it could also have a positive impact on the development of effective policy and the quality of governance across the UK," says new report from the Bennett Institute for Public and PolicyWISE.

One of the first acts of the Starmer government, after its election in July 2024, was to establish a potentially landmark innovation in the UK’s model of territorial government: the Council of the Nations and Regions. 

This report and executive summary – both a collaboration between the Bennett Institute for Public Policy and PolicyWISE, provides the first substantial examination of this flagship intergovernmental initiative.

We argue that the new Council is an important innovation, with real potential to improve relationships between and across the UK government and the devolved governments and English mayors.

Depending on how it is developed, it could lead to a new form of collaborative territorial governance, bringing about a culture change in how our governments work in partnership to achieve shared policy goals.

This matters in the context of increased political diversity and the way in which the UK’s devolution settlements have developed, because none of its governing authorities can achieve their key priorities without collaboration with others.

To make the Council work will require flexibility from all its participants, including the UK Government. We make a series of recommendations.

Key messages

The Council can improve relationships, and help all governments and regional authorities achieve better outcomes:

  1. Better collaboration

The newly established Council of the Nations and Regions could be a major improvement in collaborative working between governments across the UK. In the past, collaboration between the UK, Welsh, Scottish and Northern Ireland governments has faced various challenges – this new forum offers a promising opportunity for greater knowledge sharing and more joined-up working.

  1. Representing England

There’s wide support for including England’s regional mayors in this new structure. But the UK Government also needs to be clearer about the two roles it plays: one as the government for the whole UK, and one as the government for England specifically.

  1. A clear mission

The Council should focus on big, long-term issues that affect everyone. It should aim to work in partnership, learning from each other, with governments contributing equally and working toward shared goals. This culture change is necessary for achieving key priorities across the UK.

  1. Working across boundaries

Governments should come together to tackle common problems, whether those issues are officially managed at the UK level or devolved to national and regional governments. More understanding and cooperation between governments would lead to better outcomes.

  1. Learning from international examples

The UK is unusual in how it structures ‘central’ and devolved governments, but international examples can provide useful pointers for how to organise the relationships between different orders of government and facilitate collaboration. 


Read the report

Read the executive summary

Read the news release

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