I’ll admit that – occasionally – I write close to deadlines. Never for this column, of course. Well, maybe just sometimes. There’s nothing for productivity like the doing-your-homework-on-a-Sunday-night fear. Perhaps it was this energy that pushed the Hodge review – baroness Margaret Hodge’s independent review of Arts Council England (ACE) – into publication, shortly before the season changed and it missed its autumn deadline.
The report, a year in the making, was damning: the ACE has been unnecessarily bureaucratic with too much emphasis on box ticking. Hodge – a Labour peer and former arts minister – recognised the damaging impact of Let’s Create, a 10-year strategy due to be in place until 2030, and recommended binning it in favour of something more streamlined.
Read more:
- Hints of Scrooge at the Arts Council of England
- English National Opera cuts speak of a deeper problem
- Firebrand cellist Abel Selaocoe: ‘Classical music is about telling a great story’
It was in the name of Let’s Create that many national institutions had their budgets slashed in the 2023-26 allocation, with far-reaching consequences. (In March 2025, in light of the upheaval, ACE agreed to maintain the same cohort to 2027.) ACE’s approach to building a new national portfolio was roundly condemned.
Internationally important bodies like ENO (English National Opera) were being allocated funds with dubious strings attached. In the case of ENO, it was to relocate outside of London within a short time frame, but this was eventually deemed unrealistic. ENO’s Greater Manchester base is to be ready by 2029; the organisation has begun its performances there.
Hodge calls for the return of regional arts boards to strengthen local decision making. This seems sensible. An allegedly misinformed centralised body passing judgement on areas beyond its knowledge base is counterintuitive. There are also suggestions on ways to improve funding, such as extending
existing tax breaks for touring. Overall, despite ACE’s shortcomings, Hodge is still in favour. It lives to fight another grant application.