Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • The City of London is a unique place -- it's the city in a city (in a country in a country)

  • that runs its government with perhaps the most complicated elections in the world involving

  • medieval guilds, modern corporations, mandatory titles and fancy hats, all of which are connected

  • in this horrifying org chart. Why so complicated?

  • Though the new Skyscrapers might make you think the City of London is relatively young,

  • it's actually the oldest continuous government on the Island of Great Britain.

  • The City of London predates the Empire that Victoria ruled, the Kingdoms Anne united and

  • the Magna Carta that John, reluctantly, signed.

  • While the London which surrounds the city only got to electing its first Mayor in 2000,

  • the list of Mayors who've governed the City of London is almost 700 people long going

  • back more than a thousand years.

  • The City of London's government is so old there's no surviving record of when it was

  • born -- there are only documents, like the Magna Carta, which mention the pre-existing

  • powers the City of London already had at that time.

  • While a government like the United States's officially gets its power from the people,

  • and Parliament gets its power from the Crown, (which in turn gets it from God), the City

  • of London gets its power from 'time immemorial' meaning that the City is so old, it just is.

  • And that age brings with it unusual and complicated traditions, the most notable of these, perhaps,

  • is that in city of London elections, companies get votes.

  • Quite a lot actually, about 3/4th of the votes cast in City elections are from companies

  • with the remaining 1/4th from residents. The way it works is that the bigger a company

  • is the more votes it gets from the City of London. The companies then give their votes

  • to select employees who work, but do not live, within the city and it's these employees who

  • do the actual voting at election time.

  • The result is that the Common Council, the bureaucratic beating heart of the City of

  • London, has about 20 common councilors elected by residents of the city and about 80 elected

  • by companies of the city.

  • The reasoning behind this unusual tradition is that for every 1 person who lives in the

  • City of London, 43 people commute in every day. In total that's 300,000 commuters using

  • City services and whose employment depends on the City of London being business friendly.

  • The man in charge of the common council and who heads The City's government is The Right

  • Honorable, the Lord Mayor of London.

  • Now, suppose *you* want to be Lord Mayor,

  • Surely, just as in that other London all you'll need do is

  • a) Be a British, Commonwealth, or EU citizen, who has

  • b) lived in the city for a year, and who

  • c) wins the election

  • Right? No, in The City of London, that's not nearly enough. Ready for the qualifications

  • list?

  • Before you even run for Lord Mayor you need have been a Sheriff of The City of London.

  • But before you can be Sheriff, you need to be an Aldermen.

  • What's an Aldermen? Well, the City of London is divided into 25 wards, and each Ward elects

  • one Aldermen to represent it on the Court of Aldermen -- a sub-section of the common

  • council.

  • Before you can run for Alderman, you need to gain Freeman Status... and who gives out

  • freeman status? Why none other than the very Court of Aldermen you're trying to get elected

  • to.

  • Which might just seem like a conflict of interest. Luckily there is another way to get the freeman

  • status -- join one of the City's Guilds -- sadly, they aren't called guilds, they're called

  • Livery Companies (a name which is both more boring and less descriptive), but the remnants

  • of medieval guilds many of them are and within the City there are 108 of them to choose from

  • including, but not limited to,

  • The Apothecaries

  • The Fishmongers

  • The Masons

  • The Mercers

  • The Scientific Instrument Makers

  • The Bankers

  • The Shipwrights

  • The Wheelwrights

  • The Butchers,

  • The bakers,

  • *Two* different candlestick makers,

  • and the most exciting of all: The Chartered Accountants!

  • Many of these guilds, like the Fletchers, have become charities, but some are still

  • active, such as the Goldsmiths who test the quality of British coinage and the Hackney

  • carriage drivers who license taxi drivers.

  • To join one of these guilds you'll either need to meet the professional requirements,

  • or for the charities like the Haberdashers you'll need the approval of two existing members,

  • others won't tell you how to become a members.

  • If, you meet none of the Livery Companies membership requirements, but you think you'll

  • be a clever clogs and start your *own* Livery Company and grant *yourself* freeman status,

  • tough luck because new Livery Companies need to be approved by, you guessed it, the Court

  • of Aldermen.

  • But let's assume one way or another you get the official freeman status certificate, now

  • you can finally run for Aldermen of a Ward -- after the Lord Chancellor’s Advisory

  • Committee also approves of you.

  • But, that small barrier passed, you can win election as Aldermen in either one of the

  • 4 wards where people live or the 21 wards where companies live.

  • Once on the court of aldermen to continue your path to the Mayor's Office in Guildhall,

  • you must now be elected as sheriff, but this time it's the members of the Livery Companies

  • who pick the sheriffs.

  • So *if* the Livery Company members elect you as Sheriff, *after* you have successfully

  • completed your term *then* you can finally run for Mayor.

  • But, surprisingly the, residents of the City of London don't vote for the Mayor, our old

  • friends on the Court of Aldermen do.

  • So in summary, once you get freeman status from either the court of aldermen or the livery

  • companies and after your ward elected you as alderman and then the livery companies

  • elect you as sheriff and after your term as sheriff ends but while you're still on the

  • court of aldermen then you can run for Mayor.

  • And -- assuming the other aldermen select you, finally take your place as **The Right

  • Honorable, The Lord Mayor of London** -- for one year, with no salary. And you have to

  • cover your own expenses, which will be quite considerable as your new job consists mostly

  • of making hundreds of speeches a year around the world promoting city business.

  • But you do get that fancy hat, which just might make it all worth while.

The City of London is a unique place -- it's the city in a city (in a country in a country)

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it