Oldham West, Royton and Chadderton MP Jim McMahon has confirmed that the words “levelling up” have been “firmly Tippexed out” of the government department responsible for housing and communities.
Mr McMahon, who was appointed as a minister for the department, said it was going to be renamed in an effort to "refocus" on local government.
The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) was given that name by Boris Johnson in 2021 as the then-prime minister sought to highlight his commitment to the “levelling up” agenda.
But with a change of government has come another change of name, with the department reverting to its identity as the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG).
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Mr McMahon was speaking to BBC this morning, Tuesday, where he said the old name had been "firmly Tippexed out of the department".
He added: "Why that is important for me is levelling up was only ever a slogan, it wasn’t a thing that people felt in their communities."
'It was firmly tippexed out of the department'
— BBC Breakfast (@BBCBreakfast) July 9, 2024
Local Government Minister Jim McMahon told #BBCBreakfast 'Levelling Up' has been scrapped from the Government department as it was 'never more than a campaign slogan'https://t.co/EjmqV0wWKL pic.twitter.com/TeBxsruno6
The change is the fourth in the department’s history, having started as the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister in 2001, before becoming the Department for Communities and Local Government in 2006, MHCLG in 2018, DLUHC in 2021 and now MHCLG once again.
Earlier today, Tuesday, Angela Rayner, the Deputy Prime Minister and the Secretary of State in charge of the department, said: “A government of public service means fixing the fundamentals to deliver for the British people.
“No more gimmicks and slogans, but the hard yards of governing in the national interest.”
Before the election, Labour figures had suggested the party would ditch the “levelling up” title if it won power, with Ms Rayner telling the Financial Times she was focused on “fundamentals” and not “a slogan”.
Former Conservative communities secretary Sajid Javid welcomed the move, tweeting: “Whether housing, social care or community cohesion, local government has a big role to play in tackling policy challenges.
“A small change, but a welcome signal of intent.”
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