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Welcome to the 'This Is The North' Podcast, your source of transformative conversations. An intentional challenge to the systems holding back the North of England. Hosted by Alison Dunn, an award-winning charity chief executive and former solicitor. This podcast is supported by the Society Matters Foundation and is dedicated to curating and sharing knowledge, powering the change we need for a more equal and inclusive society.
In this episode, Alison sits down with Sir Andy Street, a Conservative who spent seven years proving something Westminster insists is impossible: that cross-party collaboration actually works. Street never had a Conservative majority on his board. Fourteen Conservative MPs, fourteen Labour MPs, and for seven years every single financial decision was taken cross-party. When his own government tried to cancel HS2, he held a press conference outside then-PM Rishi Sunak's hotel and led the 10 o'clock news. Region first, party second.
From being rejected by Birmingham City Council and Marks & Spencer to spending 30 years rising to CEO of John Lewis, Street's path wasn't conventional. He joined John Lewis because they hired "mavericks." He became mayor because it was "an executive job rooted in a place."
Street speaks candidly about "the Rubicon moment", fiscal devolution, holding taxes locally and what he learnt from those seven years. Now chairing Birmingham Rep, he draws parallels with the North: "Newcastle has its proud tradition. You had shipbuilding, coal mining. We didn't. But the stories are basically the same. You need to understand your past to be able to plan your future."
Timestamps:
00:00 Introduction
01:23 Sir Andy Street's Early Career and Aspirations
02:15 Joining and Growing within John Lewis
02:46 The Mutual Model of John Lewis
03:33 Challenges and Successes in Retail
07:11 Transition from Retail to Politics
09:43 The Role and Impact of a Mayor
11:25 HS2 and Infrastructure Challenges
16:53 Reflections on Mayoral Achievements
18:23 Integrity in Leadership
19:21 Challenges of National Collaboration
20:37 The Evolution of Devolution
21:57 Fiscal Devolution and Political Regrets
23:12 Conservative Party Conference Insights
31:05 The Role of Arts and Culture
35:05 Future Prospects and Personal Reflections
36:40 Advice for the Next Generation
In an era when frustration is rising and voices offering complaints without solutions are gaining ground, Street's story reminds us what leadership should look like. Values-led leaders who put people and place before party, who understand that serious problems require serious answers, and who refuse to compromise their integrity for political convenience. Seven years proved what's possible when leaders refuse to compromise their values. The question now is whether we're ready to demand that kind of leadership everywhere.
Host: Alison Dunn
Guest: Sir Andy Street
This podcast is produced by Purpose Made.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Alison DunnWelcome to the 'This Is The North' Podcast, your source of transformative conversations. An intentional challenge to the systems holding back the North of England. Hosted by Alison Dunn, an award-winning charity chief executive and former solicitor. This podcast is supported by the Society Matters Foundation and is dedicated to curating and sharing knowledge, powering the change we need for a more equal and inclusive society.
In this episode, Alison sits down with Sir Andy Street, a Conservative who spent seven years proving something Westminster insists is impossible: that cross-party collaboration actually works. Street never had a Conservative majority on his board. Fourteen Conservative MPs, fourteen Labour MPs, and for seven years every single financial decision was taken cross-party. When his own government tried to cancel HS2, he held a press conference outside then-PM Rishi Sunak's hotel and led the 10 o'clock news. Region first, party second.
From being rejected by Birmingham City Council and Marks & Spencer to spending 30 years rising to CEO of John Lewis, Street's path wasn't conventional. He joined John Lewis because they hired "mavericks." He became mayor because it was "an executive job rooted in a place."
Street speaks candidly about "the Rubicon moment", fiscal devolution, holding taxes locally and what he learnt from those seven years. Now chairing Birmingham Rep, he draws parallels with the North: "Newcastle has its proud tradition. You had shipbuilding, coal mining. We didn't. But the stories are basically the same. You need to understand your past to be able to plan your future."
Timestamps:
00:00 Introduction
01:23 Sir Andy Street's Early Career and Aspirations
02:15 Joining and Growing within John Lewis
02:46 The Mutual Model of John Lewis
03:33 Challenges and Successes in Retail
07:11 Transition from Retail to Politics
09:43 The Role and Impact of a Mayor
11:25 HS2 and Infrastructure Challenges
16:53 Reflections on Mayoral Achievements
18:23 Integrity in Leadership
19:21 Challenges of National Collaboration
20:37 The Evolution of Devolution
21:57 Fiscal Devolution and Political Regrets
23:12 Conservative Party Conference Insights
31:05 The Role of Arts and Culture
35:05 Future Prospects and Personal Reflections
36:40 Advice for the Next Generation
In an era when frustration is rising and voices offering complaints without solutions are gaining ground, Street's story reminds us what leadership should look like. Values-led leaders who put people and place before party, who understand that serious problems require serious answers, and who refuse to compromise their integrity for political convenience. Seven years proved what's possible when leaders refuse to compromise their values. The question now is whether we're ready to demand that kind of leadership everywhere.
Host: Alison Dunn
Guest: Sir Andy Street
This podcast is produced by Purpose Made.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.