The Star Chamber Podcast Podcast Por Michael Clifford and Marcus Richards arte de portada

The Star Chamber Podcast

The Star Chamber Podcast

De: Michael Clifford and Marcus Richards
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Join Michael Clifford and Marcus Richards - alongside occasional leading guests - for insightful, engaging conversations about the world of local government. Each month, they delve into the key issues shaping the sector, explore its unique quirks and challenges, and share expert perspectives on how it all works behind the scenes. Whether you’re a seasoned local government politician or officer, or simply curious about how local government ticks, this podcast offers a fresh, informed, and occasionally witty take on the forces driving change across the sector.Copyright 2025 Michael Clifford and Marcus Richards Ciencia Política Economía Finanzas Personales Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Episode 7: From Firefighting to Financial Sustainability (with Owen Mapley, CIPFA)
    Nov 6 2025

    In this episode of The Star Chamber Podcast, Marcus and Michael are joined by Owen Mapley, Chief Executive of CIPFA, to explore one of the defining questions facing local government today: how do we shift from short-term firefighting to long-term financial sustainability?

    We begin with the latest sector headlines — from the latest analysis on Exceptional Financial Support and implications of the delay to SEND reform, to expectations ahead of the upcoming Budget. With limited fiscal headroom and rising pressures in areas such as social care and homelessness, we consider what the Budget may mean for local authorities and the wider reform agenda.

    Our deep dive looks at the structural challenges shaping local government finance – the implications of constant firefighting and how authorities are responding to move towards longer term financial sustainability. Owen shares insights on the role of CIPFA’s standards and frameworks in supporting that shift, and the aspects of what a reformed, sustainable funding model could look like in practice.

    Finally, our idiosyncrasy takes us back to the People’s Budget of 1909 — a moment when fiscal policy became a moral battle over the future of the welfare state. With Churchill declaring it a “war Budget” against poverty and squalor, we explore how the tensions of that era, reform vs tradition, redistribution vs restraint, still echo today.

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    46 m
  • Episode 6: Power, Ports and Productivity
    Oct 13 2025

    In this episode, Marcus and Michael take a tour through some of the biggest issues shaping local government today. We reflect on the recent ministerial appointments of Steve Reed, Matthew Pennycook and Alison McGovern, and what their arrival at MHCLG might signal for the sector. We also cover the New Towns Taskforce report — its objectives, the principles underpinning it, and the delivery and cost challenges it presents.

    We then turn to the enduring productivity puzzle: why productivity in local government matters, its chequered history from Compulsory Competitive Tendering through to Michael Gove’s “productivity plans,” and the difficulties of applying traditional measures to complex, people-focused services.

    Finally, we round things off with an exploration of trust ports — the curious, independent harbour authorities that play a surprisingly important role in UK trade.

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    37 m
  • Episode 5: The Net Zero Puzzle: Funding, Fragmentation and the Road to 2050
    Sep 12 2025

    In Episode 5 of The Star Chamber Podcast, Michael Clifford and Marcus Richards are joined by Amardeep Gill of Trowers & Hamlins to unpack local government’s role in delivering the UK’s net zero ambitions. We explore the statutory context, the fragmented and short-term funding landscape, and the legal and financial complexities councils face in turning plans into projects. International lessons — from Nordic municipal energy networks to German KfW lending — bring fresh perspective to the debate on whether net zero should be treated as a core local responsibility.

    We also take stock of the latest news, from the government’s reorganisation plans to Reform’s focus on Local Government pensions.

    And, as always, we close with an idiosyncratic dive into local government’s past — from the Saxon origins of council tax used to pay off murderous Vikings, to the peculiarities of how MPs are permitted to resign.

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    39 m
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