Nandy vows to end 'party politicisation' of public appointments

Lisa Nandy at Labour Party Conference 2022
25 Jul 2024

The Culture Secretary said that 70% of DCMS appointees hail from London and the South East, which means a 'wealth of talent and experience' is being missed.

Nandy sets out priorities as Culture Secretary

18 Jul 2024

In her first interviews as Culture Secretary, Lisa Nandy has indicated she will work to support arts and culture across the country and said the Labour government is committed to a review of Arts Council England.

Education Secretary launches school curriculum review

Image of Bridget Phillipson
18 Jul 2024

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has previously said that the curriculum will be amended 'so art is woven into everything our children learn'.

King's Speech: What's in it for the arts?

King Charles III in parliament
17 Jul 2024

While the Labour government's legislative plans do not feature anything explicitly related to the arts, a number of proposals are likely to have an impact on the sector.

Devolution from the ground up

Mural painted on a wall
17 Jul 2024

A new government means new strategies. But if they are to respond truly to what’s required at the local level, it’s up to the sector to make itself heard, says Jason Jones-Hall.

Serota moots early education 'Arts Start' programme

15 Jul 2024

Arts Council England Chair Nicholas Serota says the 'moment of transition' provided by a change of government offers the opportunity to make the case for arts and culture.

ACE embarks on arts investment lobbying drive

HM Treasury building in London
12 Jul 2024

Funding body says sector can help Labour government achieve its aim of boosting economic growth if investment is forthcoming.

Labour drops Conservatives' levelling up agenda

Angela Rayner
12 Jul 2024

Labour government looks set to devolve more decision making in areas including culture, while offering multi-year budgets rather than competitive bidding processes to local communities.

Arts funding policy under the new government

10 Jul 2024

In a period of fast change, financial pressures, despair about public service provision and political upheaval in the UK and abroad, Michelle Wright considers how policy will impact arts funding in the years to 2030.

Bryant becomes DCMS Minister of State

Chris Bryant smiles in front of a grey background
09 Jul 2024

Former Shadow Minister for Creative Industries and Digital Chris Bryant will join DCMS alongside new Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy.

Nandy pledges 'hard work' on arrival at DCMS

Lisa Nandy meeting members of staff at DCMS
08 Jul 2024

Former Shadow Minister for International Development says it is an 'unbelievable privilege' to become Culture Secretary.

Lisa Nandy made Culture Secretary

Lisa Nandy, a woman with long dark hair
05 Jul 2024

Former Shadow Minister for International Development is handed the culture brief by Prime Minister Keir Starmer after Thangam Debbonaire loses her seat.

Review of dance ecology in Wales to launch

Dancers from National Dance Company Wales on a dark stage
04 Jul 2024

Arts Council of Wales says the country's dance ecology has been 'fragile' since before the Covid pandemic.

Labour’s first 100 days

a giant dragon puppet handled by multiple puppeteers
04 Jul 2024

A change of government! Hurray. A chance for a new approach to running the country, to tax and spend, reflecting the wants and needs of everyone. Congratulations. Now the hard work begins, says David Micklem

Arts sector responds to Labour election victory

Prime Minister Keir Starmer outside 10 Downing Street
04 Jul 2024

Arts and culture leaders urge Labour government to address a range of issues affecting the sector following landslide general election victory.

Debbonaire and Frazer lose seats

Labour Leader Keir Starmer and Thangam Debbonaire during the election campaign
04 Jul 2024

Labour's Thangam Debbonaire had been widely expected to become Culture Secretary had she retained her Bristol Central seat.

Making the case for cultural devolution

03 Jul 2024

All parties seem to agree that devolution is a good thing but the details about how culture will feature are scant. Anne Torreggiani and Patrick Towell discuss why and how we need to build the evidence base.

UK theatres at risk of becoming 'too unsafe to use'

Theatre Royal Plymouth exterior
01 Jul 2024

The Society of London Theatre and UK Theatre have urged the next government to be 'systematic and strategic' in investment in theatre buildings, as research reveals many are in danger of closure.

Leading cultural figures urge electorate to vote Labour

27 Jun 2024

More than 100 leading actors, directors and artists have signed a letter calling for voters to end the “political chaos of recent years” by backing Labour.

The letter, published in The Times, said a Labour victory would bring economic stability "so that the creative industries can make secure long-term investments and grow their business”.

Signatories include Director Sir Nicholas Hytner, actress Imelda Staunton and actor Sir Patrick Stewart.

"We want a government that will value the creative industries and put them at the heart of the drive for growth," the letter states. 

"Our industry would benefit from the ambition of a Labour government. That means ensuring a creative education for every child and transforming the apprenticeship levy.

"Labour has shown that it wants to work with every part of the creative industries with a bold and sensible strategy for the creative industries sector."

Welsh government accepts Cadw review but warns of 'financial implications'

26 Jun 2024

The Welsh government has accepted the majority of recommendations from a report into the role of its conservation service Cadw but has repeatedly warned that some have “financial implications” that would be “challenging to deliver in the current financial climate”.

In the government’s official response, Cabinet Secretary Lesley Griffiths welcomed the recommendations as “helpful and supportive” in intention and pledged to begin work to implement those that could be taken forward short term, “taking account of the difficult budgetary environment, which is unlikely to improve in the near future”.

Commissioned in December 2022, the review was set up to examine the success of a 2017 decision for Cadw to remain as an internal agency in the Welsh government, while benefiting from increased operational and commercial freedoms.

Led by Roger Lewis and published last year, the report made 29 recommendations grouped into six themes, including clarifying the role of the Cadw board and modifying how Welsh government processes and procedures apply to Cadw, particularly regarding HR.

The report called for changes in senior roles, including the reinstatement of an Additional Accounting Officer - suspended early in the pandemic - to be held by the Head of Cadw, whose title would change to Chief Executive Officer.

Griffiths supported the recommendation and the report's call for a specific budget to be set up in addition to Cadw’s existing funding to advance the proposals, including the hiring of more staff, but added that the plan needed to be “fully costed and affordable” given the “challenging financial context we are currently operating in”.

The recommendations also call for a closer relationship between the board and government, including holding twice yearly meetings with the Deputy Minister for Arts, Sport and Tourism and redefining the board’s role as “more strategic” and “advisory”, which Grithiss accepted in “in principle”.

Issues surrounding the recruitment, promotion and retention of Cadw staff and the ability to appoint emergency cover were also highlighted, with the report noting that many employees are “hands-on, technical craftspeople who have very little in common with the wider civil-service ways of working”.

Griffiths recognised that civil service processes and procedures “can be seen as a barrier” to working in “an efficient and timely manner” and may “appear to restrict the flexible and agile way in which Cadw needs to operate”.

However, she added that senior government officials would need to consider these recommendations further as Cadw must “act responsibly” and “be able to demonstrate value for public money”. 

“It is important the civil service principles around equality, fair and open processes are retained, underpinned by Welsh government values of creativity, fairness, partnership and professionalism,” she said.

Responding to the suggestion to establish a Welsh school of heritage and conservation skills, Griffiths said she could “see the merit” but that, “given current financial constraints,” it was “unlikely to be achievable in the short term without significant external partnership funding.” 

Elsewhere, the Culture Minister said she was “not convinced” that a separate cultural tourism strategy is currently necessary beyond the Culture Strategy for Wales that the government is currently consulting on or that Cadw should be allowed greater freedoms and flexibility in “all aspects of the press, PR, marketing and website activities of Cadw”.

Speaking about a recommendation that Cadw should embrace the Welsh government’s Economic Action Plan, in part by selling Welsh products in its shops and promoting Welsh companies to run the cafes at sites, Griffiths cautioned she was “mindful this has to be undertaken in the context of procurement rules and obtaining best value for public money”.

She added there could be merit in investigating the creation of a standalone, arm's-length charity that could benefit Cadw by applying for grants and receiving bequests and confirmed that an audit and review of access to Cadw sites for disabled people would be conducted.

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