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Marvin Rees

Marvin Rees (born April 1972) is a British Labour Party politician who has served as the Mayor of Bristol since 2016.

Marvin Rees
Rees in 2023
2nd Mayor of Bristol
Assumed office
9 May 2016
DeputyCraig Cheney
Asher Craig
Preceded byGeorge Ferguson
Personal details
BornApril 1972 (age 51)
Bristol, United Kingdom [2]
Political partyLabour
SpouseKiersten Rees
Children3
Alma materSwansea University
Eastern University
Websitehttps://thebristolmayor.com/

Early life and education Edit

Marvin Rees was brought up in Bristol, partly in Lawrence Weston and Easton, by his British mother.[3][4] He attended St George comprehensive school in Bristol and later obtained a master's degree in political theory and government at Swansea University, and a master's degree in global economic development at Eastern University in 2000.[3] Later he completed the World Fellows Program at Yale University.[5] During a fellowship he assisted Tony Campolo, an advisor to President Bill Clinton.[3]

Career Edit

Rees has worked in diverse areas throughout his career. He was a freelance journalist and radio presenter at BBC Radio Bristol and Ujima Radio.[6] He was the Communications and Events Manager at Black Development Agency (now Phoenix Social Enterprise), an agency devoted to empowering individuals and communities through opportunities to work abroad.[7]

Rees was employed in the city of Bristol as the programme manager for race equality in mental health issues at Public Health, Bristol.[8] He worked in the United States as an outreach assistant at the Sojourners Community and as a youth coordinator at Tearfund.[9]

Political career Edit

2012 mayoral election Edit

In 2012, selected by an individual ballot of Labour Party members in the city to stand for Mayor of Bristol, Rees defeated four other candidates for the nomination, including the Leader and Deputy Leader of the Bristol City Council Labour group and a former Member of Parliament, Dan Norris, who would later become Mayor of the West of England.[5] At the election, he received 25,906 votes, coming second, after George Ferguson, an independent. Rees found it difficult readjusting to normal life following his election loss.[10]

Community involvement Edit

In 2012, Rees was the founder and programme leader at the Bristol Leadership Programme, a two-week programme helping a dozen people annually from impoverished backgrounds to attain their aspirations.[11][12] He was also a member of the Bristol Legacy Commission which dispersed its funds and ceased operating in April 2012.[13][14] He is a former director of the Bristol Partnership whose goals are to make Bristol's prosperity sustainable, reduce health and wealth inequality, build stronger and safer communities, and raise the aspirations and achievements of young people and families.[15]

Mayor of Bristol Edit

First term Edit

 
Rees speaking at the 2016 Labour Party conference

Rees was again selected to be the Labour candidate for the 2016 mayoral election, easily defeating a sitting Labour councillor in the selection. On 5 May 2016, he was elected Mayor of Bristol. He received 56,729 votes in the first round and 12,021 transfer votes in the second round, giving him 68,750 votes overall.[16][17] He has been referred to as “the first black mayor of African descent” in the UK.[18]

Rees's term of office started with a £30 million budget shortfall inherited from the previous administration and a £60 million budget deficit from government funding reductions to 2020. In August 2016, Rees instigated a voluntary severance programme aimed at reducing the size of the council's workforce from 6,970 by 1,000.[19] Rees commissioned an independent report by former Audit Commission chief executive Steve Bundred, which criticised senior council officers, leading Rees to say a culture of concealment had previously prevailed so councillors were unaware that agreed savings had not been fully delivered.[20][21][22]

Rees had pledged to gradually increase home building in Bristol toward a 2020 target of 2,000 per year, of which 800 would be affordable.[23] Rees oversaw the founding of a city-owned housing company, Goram Homes, created to develop and build homes, re-investing profits to the development of affordable and social housing.[24] From 2016/17 to 2019/20 the outcome was between 1,350 and 1,994 new homes per year, of which between only 188 and 312 per year were affordable. The affordable homes target for 2020/21 was reduced to 500 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Affordable homes had mostly been built on brownfield land.[23][25] The council housing manager stated the missed target was delay rather than failure, with at least 1,028 affordable homes expected from current projects in 2022/23.[26]

In the 2020 and 2021 Powerlists, Rees was listed in the Top 100 of the most influential people in the UK of African/African-Caribbean descent.[27][better source needed]

Bristol Arena Edit

One matter that split public opinion was Rees's decision in September 2018 not to build the long-awaited 10,000 seat Bristol Arena by Temple Meads railway station, in the centre of Bristol.[28][29] The episode brought discussion about the authority of a city mayor to make autonomous decisions in the face of opposition. Concerns were raised at how businesses are able to influence those with decision-making and planning powers in cities.[30]

The main reasons Rees gave for his decision were building cost, financial risk, and job creation. The building cost for the council, which would have had to be borrowed, had increased to £150 million, plus half of any cost overruns. Costs arising should the arena not be successful would fall on the council, and expert advice was that the venue size was too small for major events. Rees also argued that a mixed use development would create more and better-paid jobs.[31] The decision was also heavily influenced by an agreement to secure a 17,000-seat arena in the north of the city, built with private investment at no public cost.

Statue of Edward Colston Edit

 
The empty pedestal of the statue of Edward Colston, showing placards and graffiti left after the statue's removal

In March 2019, Rees vetoed the installation of a second plaque to the statue of the Bristol-born merchant Edward Colston as he rejected the proposed wording as failing to adequately describe Colston's role in the Bristol slave trade.[32]

In the aftermath in 2020 of the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, in police custody, global Black Lives Matter protests were held around the world. In Bristol, protestors forcibly removed the statue of Edward Colston and dropped it into the harbour.[33] The statue was recovered from the harbour by Bristol City Council,[34] and Rees announced it would end up in a Bristol museum, where the full history of the statue could be told.[35] The events placed Bristol in the forefront of global news, including the major news channels in the UK and US. Rees announced a new commission on Bristol's history, so that there could be a wider understanding of the city's history, including struggles on class, race and gender.[36] A fly-on-the-wall BBC documentary, called Statue Wars, was broadcast in June 2021, showing events in the Mayor's office as Rees managed the fall-out around the removal of the Colston statue.[37]

On 9 December 2020, four people — often referred to as the "Colston 4"[38] — were charged with causing criminal damage in relation to the toppling of the statue.[39] In a trial at Bristol Crown Court, the defendants admitted they took part in the removal of the statue, but argued that it was justified. On 5 January 2022, the jury found the defendants not guilty of an offence.[40]

After the trial, Rees received criticism for not acting sooner to remove the statue, thereby preventing the outbreak of anger. Rees argued he had made a choice to expend his political capital on employment, housing, education, and tackling racism rather than a contentious symbolic matter. He noted that action was being taken elsewhere, pointing to the name change of the Colston Hall which had already been committed to before the controversy surrounding Edward Colston gained nation-wide attention, so that the venue would no longer be associated with Colston's values and actions. Rees said he was pleased that the statue of Colston was no longer there.[41]

Second term Edit

 
Rees in 2022

Rees's mayoral term was due to expire in May 2020, but the next election was delayed for 12, months due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The mayoral election took place in May 2021, and Rees was re-elected with 56.5% of the votes in a second round against the Green Party candidate, who won 43.5%. The Green Party made large gains in councillors, so Labour lost overall control of the council, with Labour and Greens both having 24 councillors.[42]

Rees made a key election pledge to increase the new homes target for 2024 to 2,000 new homes per year, 1,000 of them affordable. In November 2021 Rees created the 'Project 1000' board to oversee the development of an affordable homes delivery plan.[43][44]

In October 2020, Rees was awarded an honorary fellowship by the Royal Institute of British Architects for his work as a "city maker".[1]

In May 2022, a referendum took place in Bristol to decide if the city should continue being run by a mayor or a council-led committee system. The city voted 59% in favour of abolishing the post, on a 29% turnout.[45] Rees will continue to serve as mayor until 2024, after which the new committee system will start.

In June 2022 Rees was criticised for taking a 9,200-mile (14,800 km) flight to Vancouver to speak about climate change at a TED event.[46] After Rees was asked about the "irony" of this act, by a Local Democracy Reporting Service reporter, his council's head of external communications, Saskia Konynenburg, challenged the line taken and whether it was appropriate for a LDRS reporter, rather than “a journalist from a newspaper”, to be asking the question. Shortly afterwards it was reported that LDRS staff would not be allowed to attend the mayor's future press conferences, resulting in a boycott of those events by several local news outlets, as well as the BBC and ITV.[47][48][49]

On 6 July 2022, Rees announced that a Clean Air Zone for central Bristol would start on 28 November 2022. It would impose charges on more polluting older petrol and diesel vehicles, currently about a quarter of vehicles using the zone area.[50][51]

In June 2023 he announced he would stand for selection as prospective parliamentary candidate for the new seat of Bristol North East at the next general election.[52] On 30 July, he was defeated by Mayor of Lewisham Damien Egan.[53]

in July 23, he was presented with a Doctor of Letters from Swansea University

Personal life Edit

Marvin Rees describes himself as the mixed-race son of a Jamaican father and white single mother,[54] and was born and grew up in Bristol in financially difficult circumstances.[10][55] According to Rees, his paternal four-times-great-grandfather was executed by the colonial Jamaican government for participating in the 1865 Morant Bay rebellion.[41] He is married with three children and lives in Frenchay, South Gloucestershire.

In 2018 a documentary film was released with a premiere at Watershed, Bristol, about Rees's journey into politics and his two campaigns for the city's top political job. The Mayor's Race was filmed between 2011 and 2017, covering Rees's two mayoral campaigns in 2012 and 2016 as well as Bristol's historical issues of race and racism—including the 1963 bus boycott, the 1980 St Pauls riot, and the Bristol slave trade.[56] In 2020 the BBC a made a documentary around Rees and the events surrounding the felling of the Colston statue entitled “Statue Wars”. The documentary was made by Uplands TV and had full behind the scenes access to Mayor Rees and his senior team

Rees is a Christian.[55][57]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Booth, Martin (30 October 2020). "Rees awarded honorary fellowship to Royal Institute of British Architects". Bristol24-7. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  2. ^ "About Marvin".
  3. ^ a b c "OBV Profile: Marvin Rees". Operation Black Vote. 2007. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  4. ^ Morris, Steven (12 February 2016). "Marvin Rees: the Bristolian bearing the weight of Labour hopes". The Guardian.
  5. ^ a b "Profiles of Labour’s candidates for the Bristol mayoralty: Marvin Rees", Labour Uncut, 18 May 2012.
  6. ^ "Bristol Mayor News. Marvin Rees". 29 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Phoenix Social Enterprise . Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved 30 August 2012.
  8. ^ NHS Bristol[permanent dead link] - Mental Health and Wellbeing.
  9. ^ "Marvin Rees: Biography". BBC News. 2 March 2005. Retrieved 6 June 2023.
  10. ^ a b Ashcroft, Esme (12 February 2018). "The details of Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees' private life we found out from his new biopic". Bristol Post. Retrieved 13 July 2018.
  11. ^ "Who is Marvin Rees", Bristol Culture, 19 June 2012.
  12. ^ "Youth mayor could engage young people" 31 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Bristol Post, 29 May 2012.
  13. ^ "Mayoral Commissions result in joint action to improve lives in Bristol". Bristol City Council. 4 January 2016. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  14. ^ Bristol Legacy Commission.
  15. ^ "About us" 6 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Bristol Partnership.
  16. ^ Emanuel, Louis (7 May 2016). "Marvin Rees elected as new mayor of Bristol". Bristol 24/7. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  17. ^ "Labour's Marvin Rees has been elected as Bristol city's mayor", BBC News, Bristol, 7 May 2016.
  18. ^ Harris, John (23 May 2016). "Bristol mayor Marvin Rees: 'My dad arrived to signs saying: No Irish, no blacks, no dogs'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  19. ^ "Bristol mayor Marvin Rees to cut 1,000 council jobs". BBC News. 22 August 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  20. ^ "Mayor orders probe into Bristol City Council's finances". BBC News. 22 February 2017. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  21. ^ "Council bosses slammed for concealing budget deficit". B24/7. Bristol24/7. 9 February 2017. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  22. ^ Marrs, Colin (1 March 2017). "Bristol City Council budget 'illegal', according to mayor". Room151. Longview Productions. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  23. ^ a b Cameron, Amanda (17 February 2021). "New figures reveal the total number of new houses built in Bristol". B24/7. Bristol24/7. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  24. ^ "Council officially launches Goram Homes", Bristol City Council, 29 October 2018.
  25. ^ Peacock, Stephen (14 September 2020). Housing Delivery Update (PDF). Growth and Regeneration Scrutiny Commission (Report). Bristol City Council. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  26. ^ Turner, Alex (22 February 2021). "Housing in Bristol under Marvin Rees". The Bristol Cable. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  27. ^ Mills, Kelly-Ann (25 October 2019). "Raheem Sterling joins Meghan and Stormzy in top 100 most influential black Brits". Mirror. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
  28. ^ "City's 10,000-seater stadium plan". BBC News. 12 March 2003. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  29. ^ Wilson, Kate (23 June 2018). "Bristol councillors overwhelmingly in support of city centre arena". B24/7.
  30. ^ Aviram, Alon (5 September 2018). "This is the company set to profit from an arena in Filton". The Bristol Cable.
  31. ^ Ashcroft, Esme (4 September 2018). "In full: Marvin Rees' vote to keep arena in city centre speech". Bristol Post. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  32. ^ Cork, Tristan (25 March 2019). "Second Colston statue plaque not axed but mayor orders re-write". bristolpost. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  33. ^ Cork, Tristan (9 June 2020). "Colston statue - the 83 minutes from plinth to harbour". Bristol Post.
  34. ^ King, Jasper (11 June 2020). "BREAKING: Edward Colston statue retrieved from Bristol Harbour". Bristol Post.
  35. ^ . BBC News. 8 June 2020. Archived from the original on 9 June 2020. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  36. ^ Pipe, Ellie (10 June 2020). "Mayor to launch commission to research Bristol's 'true history'". bristol247.com.
  37. ^ Cruse, Beth (10 June 2021). "Statue Wars: BBC viewers 'admire' mayor for his handling of Bristol's 'deep levels of inequality'". Bristol Post. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  38. ^ Bennett, Geoffrey; Cork, Tristan (December 2021). "Colston 4 trial updates - Bristol Crown Court". BristolLive. Updated several times a day during the trial.
  39. ^ Jessica Murray (9 December 2020). "Four charged over damage to Colston statue in Bristol". The Guardian. from the original on 9 December 2020.
  40. ^ Gayle, Damien (5 January 2022). "BLM protesters cleared over toppling of Edward Colston statue". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  41. ^ a b Gayle, Damien (6 January 2022). "Bristol mayor: Colston Four verdict has little to do with drive to tackle racism". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  42. ^ "Bristol City Council: Labour control dissolved by Green surge". BBC News. 9 May 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  43. ^ Cameron, Amanda (19 April 2021). "Bristol City Council elections 2021: Over 2,000 new homes a year promised by Labour". Bristol Post. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  44. ^ Cameron, Amanda (20 November 2021). "New affordable homes plan raises questions about green spaces and tower blocks". Bristol Post. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  45. ^ "Bristol mayor vote: City decides to abolish mayor post". BBC News. 6 May 2022.
  46. ^ "Bristol mayor flies nine hours for TED climate conference". BBC News. 28 May 2022. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  47. ^ Sharman, David. "Bristol titles boycott Marvin Rees over council's BBC LDR ban - Journalism News from HoldtheFrontPage". HoldtheFrontPage. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  48. ^ "Local Democracy Reporters excluded from Bristol mayor's briefings". BBC News. 23 June 2022. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  49. ^ "Bristol mayor Marvin Rees faces boycott by BBC, ITV and Bristol Live". Press Gazette. 23 June 2022. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  50. ^ Cork, Tristan (6 July 2022). "Clean Air Zone start date finally announced". Bristol Post. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  51. ^ Estel Farell Roig (10 July 2022). "Bristol Clean Air Zone: The story so far as start date finally announced". Bristol Post. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  52. ^ "Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees launches bid to become MP for new seat". BBC News. 16 June 2023. Retrieved 17 June 2023.
  53. ^ "London candidate beats Bristol mayor for MP seat". BBC News. 30 July 2023. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
  54. ^ Morris, Steven (7 May 2016). "Bristol chooses Labour's Marvin Rees as new mayor over George Ferguson". The Guardian.
  55. ^ a b Booth, Martin (9 August 2021). "Rees: 'My faith has given me resilience and a sense of purpose'". B24/7. Bristol24/7. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  56. ^ "The Mayor's Race documentary film". The Mayor's Race film. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
  57. ^ VIDEO: Bristol mayor on Black Lives Matter and being a Christian. Premier Christian Radio. Interviewed by Bentley, Cara. 9 June 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2022.

marvin, rees, born, april, 1972, british, labour, party, politician, served, mayor, bristol, since, 2016, friba, rees, 20232nd, mayor, bristolincumbentassumed, office, 2016deputycraig, cheney, asher, craigpreceded, bygeorge, fergusonpersonal, detailsbornapril,. Marvin Rees born April 1972 is a British Labour Party politician who has served as the Mayor of Bristol since 2016 Marvin ReesHon FRIBA 1 Rees in 20232nd Mayor of BristolIncumbentAssumed office 9 May 2016DeputyCraig Cheney Asher CraigPreceded byGeorge FergusonPersonal detailsBornApril 1972 age 51 Bristol United Kingdom 2 Political partyLabourSpouseKiersten ReesChildren3Alma materSwansea UniversityEastern UniversityWebsitehttps thebristolmayor com Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Political career 3 1 2012 mayoral election 3 2 Community involvement 3 3 Mayor of Bristol 3 3 1 First term 3 3 2 Bristol Arena 3 3 3 Statue of Edward Colston 3 3 4 Second term 4 Personal life 5 ReferencesEarly life and education EditMarvin Rees was brought up in Bristol partly in Lawrence Weston and Easton by his British mother 3 4 He attended St George comprehensive school in Bristol and later obtained a master s degree in political theory and government at Swansea University and a master s degree in global economic development at Eastern University in 2000 3 Later he completed the World Fellows Program at Yale University 5 During a fellowship he assisted Tony Campolo an advisor to President Bill Clinton 3 Career EditRees has worked in diverse areas throughout his career He was a freelance journalist and radio presenter at BBC Radio Bristol and Ujima Radio 6 He was the Communications and Events Manager at Black Development Agency now Phoenix Social Enterprise an agency devoted to empowering individuals and communities through opportunities to work abroad 7 Rees was employed in the city of Bristol as the programme manager for race equality in mental health issues at Public Health Bristol 8 He worked in the United States as an outreach assistant at the Sojourners Community and as a youth coordinator at Tearfund 9 Political career Edit2012 mayoral election Edit In 2012 selected by an individual ballot of Labour Party members in the city to stand for Mayor of Bristol Rees defeated four other candidates for the nomination including the Leader and Deputy Leader of the Bristol City Council Labour group and a former Member of Parliament Dan Norris who would later become Mayor of the West of England 5 At the election he received 25 906 votes coming second after George Ferguson an independent Rees found it difficult readjusting to normal life following his election loss 10 Community involvement Edit In 2012 Rees was the founder and programme leader at the Bristol Leadership Programme a two week programme helping a dozen people annually from impoverished backgrounds to attain their aspirations 11 12 He was also a member of the Bristol Legacy Commission which dispersed its funds and ceased operating in April 2012 13 14 He is a former director of the Bristol Partnership whose goals are to make Bristol s prosperity sustainable reduce health and wealth inequality build stronger and safer communities and raise the aspirations and achievements of young people and families 15 Mayor of Bristol Edit First term Edit nbsp Rees speaking at the 2016 Labour Party conferenceRees was again selected to be the Labour candidate for the 2016 mayoral election easily defeating a sitting Labour councillor in the selection On 5 May 2016 he was elected Mayor of Bristol He received 56 729 votes in the first round and 12 021 transfer votes in the second round giving him 68 750 votes overall 16 17 He has been referred to as the first black mayor of African descent in the UK 18 Rees s term of office started with a 30 million budget shortfall inherited from the previous administration and a 60 million budget deficit from government funding reductions to 2020 In August 2016 Rees instigated a voluntary severance programme aimed at reducing the size of the council s workforce from 6 970 by 1 000 19 Rees commissioned an independent report by former Audit Commission chief executive Steve Bundred which criticised senior council officers leading Rees to say a culture of concealment had previously prevailed so councillors were unaware that agreed savings had not been fully delivered 20 21 22 Rees had pledged to gradually increase home building in Bristol toward a 2020 target of 2 000 per year of which 800 would be affordable 23 Rees oversaw the founding of a city owned housing company Goram Homes created to develop and build homes re investing profits to the development of affordable and social housing 24 From 2016 17 to 2019 20 the outcome was between 1 350 and 1 994 new homes per year of which between only 188 and 312 per year were affordable The affordable homes target for 2020 21 was reduced to 500 due to the COVID 19 pandemic Affordable homes had mostly been built on brownfield land 23 25 The council housing manager stated the missed target was delay rather than failure with at least 1 028 affordable homes expected from current projects in 2022 23 26 In the 2020 and 2021 Powerlists Rees was listed in the Top 100 of the most influential people in the UK of African African Caribbean descent 27 better source needed Bristol Arena Edit One matter that split public opinion was Rees s decision in September 2018 not to build the long awaited 10 000 seat Bristol Arena by Temple Meads railway station in the centre of Bristol 28 29 The episode brought discussion about the authority of a city mayor to make autonomous decisions in the face of opposition Concerns were raised at how businesses are able to influence those with decision making and planning powers in cities 30 The main reasons Rees gave for his decision were building cost financial risk and job creation The building cost for the council which would have had to be borrowed had increased to 150 million plus half of any cost overruns Costs arising should the arena not be successful would fall on the council and expert advice was that the venue size was too small for major events Rees also argued that a mixed use development would create more and better paid jobs 31 The decision was also heavily influenced by an agreement to secure a 17 000 seat arena in the north of the city built with private investment at no public cost Statue of Edward Colston Edit nbsp The empty pedestal of the statue of Edward Colston showing placards and graffiti left after the statue s removalIn March 2019 Rees vetoed the installation of a second plaque to the statue of the Bristol born merchant Edward Colston as he rejected the proposed wording as failing to adequately describe Colston s role in the Bristol slave trade 32 In the aftermath in 2020 of the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis in police custody global Black Lives Matter protests were held around the world In Bristol protestors forcibly removed the statue of Edward Colston and dropped it into the harbour 33 The statue was recovered from the harbour by Bristol City Council 34 and Rees announced it would end up in a Bristol museum where the full history of the statue could be told 35 The events placed Bristol in the forefront of global news including the major news channels in the UK and US Rees announced a new commission on Bristol s history so that there could be a wider understanding of the city s history including struggles on class race and gender 36 A fly on the wall BBC documentary called Statue Wars was broadcast in June 2021 showing events in the Mayor s office as Rees managed the fall out around the removal of the Colston statue 37 On 9 December 2020 four people often referred to as the Colston 4 38 were charged with causing criminal damage in relation to the toppling of the statue 39 In a trial at Bristol Crown Court the defendants admitted they took part in the removal of the statue but argued that it was justified On 5 January 2022 the jury found the defendants not guilty of an offence 40 After the trial Rees received criticism for not acting sooner to remove the statue thereby preventing the outbreak of anger Rees argued he had made a choice to expend his political capital on employment housing education and tackling racism rather than a contentious symbolic matter He noted that action was being taken elsewhere pointing to the name change of the Colston Hall which had already been committed to before the controversy surrounding Edward Colston gained nation wide attention so that the venue would no longer be associated with Colston s values and actions Rees said he was pleased that the statue of Colston was no longer there 41 Second term Edit nbsp Rees in 2022Rees s mayoral term was due to expire in May 2020 but the next election was delayed for 12 months due to the COVID 19 pandemic The mayoral election took place in May 2021 and Rees was re elected with 56 5 of the votes in a second round against the Green Party candidate who won 43 5 The Green Party made large gains in councillors so Labour lost overall control of the council with Labour and Greens both having 24 councillors 42 Rees made a key election pledge to increase the new homes target for 2024 to 2 000 new homes per year 1 000 of them affordable In November 2021 Rees created the Project 1000 board to oversee the development of an affordable homes delivery plan 43 44 In October 2020 Rees was awarded an honorary fellowship by the Royal Institute of British Architects for his work as a city maker 1 In May 2022 a referendum took place in Bristol to decide if the city should continue being run by a mayor or a council led committee system The city voted 59 in favour of abolishing the post on a 29 turnout 45 Rees will continue to serve as mayor until 2024 after which the new committee system will start In June 2022 Rees was criticised for taking a 9 200 mile 14 800 km flight to Vancouver to speak about climate change at a TED event 46 After Rees was asked about the irony of this act by a Local Democracy Reporting Service reporter his council s head of external communications Saskia Konynenburg challenged the line taken and whether it was appropriate for a LDRS reporter rather than a journalist from a newspaper to be asking the question Shortly afterwards it was reported that LDRS staff would not be allowed to attend the mayor s future press conferences resulting in a boycott of those events by several local news outlets as well as the BBC and ITV 47 48 49 On 6 July 2022 Rees announced that a Clean Air Zone for central Bristol would start on 28 November 2022 It would impose charges on more polluting older petrol and diesel vehicles currently about a quarter of vehicles using the zone area 50 51 In June 2023 he announced he would stand for selection as prospective parliamentary candidate for the new seat of Bristol North East at the next general election 52 On 30 July he was defeated by Mayor of Lewisham Damien Egan 53 in July 23 he was presented with a Doctor of Letters from Swansea UniversityPersonal life EditMarvin Rees describes himself as the mixed race son of a Jamaican father and white single mother 54 and was born and grew up in Bristol in financially difficult circumstances 10 55 According to Rees his paternal four times great grandfather was executed by the colonial Jamaican government for participating in the 1865 Morant Bay rebellion 41 He is married with three children and lives in Frenchay South Gloucestershire In 2018 a documentary film was released with a premiere at Watershed Bristol about Rees s journey into politics and his two campaigns for the city s top political job The Mayor s Race was filmed between 2011 and 2017 covering Rees s two mayoral campaigns in 2012 and 2016 as well as Bristol s historical issues of race and racism including the 1963 bus boycott the 1980 St Pauls riot and the Bristol slave trade 56 In 2020 the BBC a made a documentary around Rees and the events surrounding the felling of the Colston statue entitled Statue Wars The documentary was made by Uplands TV and had full behind the scenes access to Mayor Rees and his senior teamRees is a Christian 55 57 References Edit a b Booth Martin 30 October 2020 Rees awarded honorary fellowship to Royal Institute of British Architects Bristol24 7 Retrieved 3 November 2020 About Marvin a b c OBV Profile Marvin Rees Operation Black Vote 2007 Retrieved 23 October 2016 Morris Steven 12 February 2016 Marvin Rees the Bristolian bearing the weight of Labour hopes The Guardian a b Profiles of Labour s candidates for the Bristol mayoralty Marvin Rees Labour Uncut 18 May 2012 Bristol Mayor News Marvin Rees Archived 29 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine Phoenix Social Enterprise Paid Teaching Jobs Abroad Phoenix Social Enterprise Archived from the original on 17 July 2012 Retrieved 30 August 2012 NHS Bristol permanent dead link Mental Health and Wellbeing Marvin Rees Biography BBC News 2 March 2005 Retrieved 6 June 2023 a b Ashcroft Esme 12 February 2018 The details of Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees private life we found out from his new biopic Bristol Post Retrieved 13 July 2018 Who is Marvin Rees Bristol Culture 19 June 2012 Youth mayor could engage young people Archived 31 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bristol Post 29 May 2012 Mayoral Commissions result in joint action to improve lives in Bristol Bristol City Council 4 January 2016 Retrieved 14 September 2017 Bristol Legacy Commission About us Archived 6 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bristol Partnership Emanuel Louis 7 May 2016 Marvin Rees elected as new mayor of Bristol Bristol 24 7 Retrieved 7 May 2016 Labour s Marvin Rees has been elected as Bristol city s mayor BBC News Bristol 7 May 2016 Harris John 23 May 2016 Bristol mayor Marvin Rees My dad arrived to signs saying No Irish no blacks no dogs The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 11 January 2020 Bristol mayor Marvin Rees to cut 1 000 council jobs BBC News 22 August 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2016 Mayor orders probe into Bristol City Council s finances BBC News 22 February 2017 Retrieved 21 December 2022 Council bosses slammed for concealing budget deficit B24 7 Bristol24 7 9 February 2017 Retrieved 21 December 2022 Marrs Colin 1 March 2017 Bristol City Council budget illegal according to mayor Room151 Longview Productions Retrieved 21 December 2022 a b Cameron Amanda 17 February 2021 New figures reveal the total number of new houses built in Bristol B24 7 Bristol24 7 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Council officially launches Goram Homes Bristol City Council 29 October 2018 Peacock Stephen 14 September 2020 Housing Delivery Update PDF Growth and Regeneration Scrutiny Commission Report Bristol City Council Retrieved 7 January 2022 Turner Alex 22 February 2021 Housing in Bristol under Marvin Rees The Bristol Cable Retrieved 7 January 2022 Mills Kelly Ann 25 October 2019 Raheem Sterling joins Meghan and Stormzy in top 100 most influential black Brits Mirror Retrieved 20 April 2020 City s 10 000 seater stadium plan BBC News 12 March 2003 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Wilson Kate 23 June 2018 Bristol councillors overwhelmingly in support of city centre arena B24 7 Aviram Alon 5 September 2018 This is the company set to profit from an arena in Filton The Bristol Cable Ashcroft Esme 4 September 2018 In full Marvin Rees vote to keep arena in city centre speech Bristol Post Retrieved 26 June 2019 Cork Tristan 25 March 2019 Second Colston statue plaque not axed but mayor orders re write bristolpost Retrieved 30 March 2019 Cork Tristan 9 June 2020 Colston statue the 83 minutes from plinth to harbour Bristol Post King Jasper 11 June 2020 BREAKING Edward Colston statue retrieved from Bristol Harbour Bristol Post Edward Colston Bristol slave trader statue was an affront BBC News 8 June 2020 Archived from the original on 9 June 2020 Retrieved 9 June 2020 Pipe Ellie 10 June 2020 Mayor to launch commission to research Bristol s true history bristol247 com Cruse Beth 10 June 2021 Statue Wars BBC viewers admire mayor for his handling of Bristol s deep levels of inequality Bristol Post Retrieved 7 January 2022 Bennett Geoffrey Cork Tristan December 2021 Colston 4 trial updates Bristol Crown Court BristolLive Updated several times a day during the trial Jessica Murray 9 December 2020 Four charged over damage to Colston statue in Bristol The Guardian Archived from the original on 9 December 2020 Gayle Damien 5 January 2022 BLM protesters cleared over toppling of Edward Colston statue The Guardian Retrieved 7 January 2022 a b Gayle Damien 6 January 2022 Bristol mayor Colston Four verdict has little to do with drive to tackle racism The Guardian Retrieved 7 January 2022 Bristol City Council Labour control dissolved by Green surge BBC News 9 May 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Cameron Amanda 19 April 2021 Bristol City Council elections 2021 Over 2 000 new homes a year promised by Labour Bristol Post Retrieved 7 January 2022 Cameron Amanda 20 November 2021 New affordable homes plan raises questions about green spaces and tower blocks Bristol Post Retrieved 7 January 2022 Bristol mayor vote City decides to abolish mayor post BBC News 6 May 2022 Bristol mayor flies nine hours for TED climate conference BBC News 28 May 2022 Retrieved 25 June 2022 Sharman David Bristol titles boycott Marvin Rees over council s BBC LDR ban Journalism News from HoldtheFrontPage HoldtheFrontPage Retrieved 25 June 2022 Local Democracy Reporters excluded from Bristol mayor s briefings BBC News 23 June 2022 Retrieved 25 June 2022 Bristol mayor Marvin Rees faces boycott by BBC ITV and Bristol Live Press Gazette 23 June 2022 Retrieved 25 June 2022 Cork Tristan 6 July 2022 Clean Air Zone start date finally announced Bristol Post Retrieved 22 August 2022 Estel Farell Roig 10 July 2022 Bristol Clean Air Zone The story so far as start date finally announced Bristol Post Retrieved 22 August 2022 Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees launches bid to become MP for new seat BBC News 16 June 2023 Retrieved 17 June 2023 London candidate beats Bristol mayor for MP seat BBC News 30 July 2023 Retrieved 31 July 2023 Morris Steven 7 May 2016 Bristol chooses Labour s Marvin Rees as new mayor over George Ferguson The Guardian a b Booth Martin 9 August 2021 Rees My faith has given me resilience and a sense of purpose B24 7 Bristol24 7 Retrieved 11 January 2022 The Mayor s Race documentary film The Mayor s Race film Retrieved 26 August 2019 VIDEO Bristol mayor on Black Lives Matter and being a Christian Premier Christian Radio Interviewed by Bentley Cara 9 June 2020 Retrieved 11 January 2022 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marvin Rees Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marvin Rees amp oldid 1178423845, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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