Origins The term "levelling-up" was first used in the
House of Commons in 1868 in relation to equality between
Catholicism and the
Church of England, with
Charles Robert Barry, the Solicitor General for Ireland, saying "If religious equality were attempted in England, it must be either by levelling up or levelling down."
Conservative Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli responded by noting the phrase to be one which "seems to be a very favourite one with Hon. Gentlemen opposite" and said that he should "very much like to have their views as to the distinct meaning they attribute to the phrase". In
his diaries, published in 1993, Tory Minister
Alan Clark quoted colleague
Michael Jopling's remark that "...the trouble with
Michael (Heseltine) is that he had to buy his own furniture and he occasionally whines about the Servant Problem. It's because of
death duties and the 'levelling up' of standards of the lower classes. Why, poor Jane had to drain and clean the swimming pool herself." The phrase was also used in the
2004 BBC dramatisation of Clark's diaries. As a newly elected MP, future Prime Minister
Theresa May used the term during an education debate in the
House of Commons in 1997. She described
socialism as "levelling down" and
conservatism as "levelling up". At the
2003 Labour Party Conference, Labour Party leader and the then Prime Minister
Tony Blair stated: "I don't want to level down, I want to level up", when discussing his preference for low taxes in support of upwardly
social mobility. Former Conservative
MP for
Putney Justine Greening said in 2021 that she invented the term "levelling up" in 2014, while attempting to explain the concept of social mobility to her mother. In her acceptance speech after securing her seat in the
2015 general election, Greening pledged to focus "on making sure we have a levelled up Britain where everyone can achieve their potential wherever they start, wherever they're born". Greening first used the term "levelling up" as a policy in 2015, while delivering a speech as
Secretary of State for International Development at the
2015 Conservative Party Conference in an attempt to "encourage the then party leadership to focus on domestic social mobility".
Launch Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave a speech on the policy on 15 July 2021, where he described the various inequalities currently experienced across the United Kingdom. He contrasted "levelling up" with "levelling down" by saying that levelling up would seek to improve everywhere, rather than the zero sum averaging regional policies of the past, stating "we don't think you can make the poor parts of the country richer by making the rich parts poorer". Johnson also included social and quality of life issues such as fighting gang crime, obesity, mental health, uneven life-expectancy and excessive elective surgery waiting times within the wider levelling up agenda. MP
Neil O'Brien was the Prime Minister's levelling up adviser, The 2020
Treasury spending review announced a £4.8 billion Levelling Up Fund for interim capital investment in local infrastructure. Local authorities were ranked into three tiers by need, and invited to submit project bids by June 2021. The first round focused on transport projects, town centre and
high street regeneration, and cultural investment. Two other funds are considered within the interim levelling up agenda: the Community Renewal Fund, which replaces the
European Structural and Investment Funds for skills, employment, local businesses, and communities, and the £3.6 billion Towns Fund for 101 towns. Neil O'Brien became a
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the department. In his October 2021
Conservative Party Conference speech, Prime Minister
Boris Johnson again emphasised the policy, saying "uniting and levelling up across the UK [is] the greatest project that any government can embark on." Across government, Levelling Up is viewed as a major policy area with funding, and departments framed policies in their remit to the levelling up agenda for the
October 2021 United Kingdom budget which incorporated the 2021
Treasury spending review. but was delayed until January 2022. The successful bids for the first £1.7 billion tranche of the Levelling Up Fund were announced with the budget. The three largest grants were £49.6 million for the south
Derby growth zone and infinity garden village, £48 million to help replace vessels and improve harbours
Isles of Scilly residents rely on, and £38.7 million for the Advanced Manufacturing Innovation District Scotland travel improvement project in
Renfrewshire. On 30 January 2022,
Wolverhampton and
Sheffield were chosen as the first places to receive levelling up funding. In the 2021/2022 financial year only £107 million of levelling up funds were delivered to projects, compared to the original £600 million ambition, later reduced to £200 million in plans. In summer 2022, the parliamentary
Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Committee was asked to comment on the
Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill, on which it held three evidence sessions. Its main comment was that the bill provided no funding toward the levelling-up missions of public transport and local connectivity, digital connectivity, improving education outcomes, adult skills training and increasing healthy life expectancy. It stated there was a lack of detail in the bill. The committee was concerned that the bill potentially added to centralising planning decisions, rather than supporting
localism. It was concerned that affordable housing was not well supported in the 300,000 new homes per year target, and there were no tenure type and location targets. In April 2024,
Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Michael Gove stated that 2030 should be the reference point by which the implementation of the policy should be judged, comparing it to a half-built cathedral by stating "well some of it looks great but the rest of it is just a mess".
Continuation of Levelling Up post-Johnson With the policy of Levelling Up so closely associated with the Johnson Premiership, many were concerned over the policy's future following his departure. Indeed, the
series of mass Ministerial resignations in July 2022 which led to Johnson's resignation, and the subsequent firing of Michael Gove, meant that
Eddie Hughes,
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Rough Sleeping and Housing, was left as the sole serving Minister within the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities. Following the election of
Liz Truss as Prime Minister in September 2022, there was uncertainty around her position on Levelling Up, and the future of the policy under her Premiership. While
Centre for Cities argued that the policy of Levelling Up would prove a useful mechanism for Truss' economic growth agenda,
UK in a Changing Europe noted that this did not align with her commitments to reducing government investment, or proposals around regional pay for public servants. However research by the
Institute for Government found that, while there had been some "promising steps" on the progression of Levelling Up, the policy had generally "lost momentum" under Sunak's leadership. During their
General Election 2024 campaign the Conservative Party pledged to give an addition £20m of Levelling Up funding to 30 towns across the country, with local people in each area deciding how the money would be spent, through new town boards composed of community leaders, businesspeople, local government and the local MP. == White paper==