The West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) has confirmed Ed Cox
as its Chief Executive.
Ed has led the organisation since June 2025 in an interim
capacity, driving delivery of the Mayor's priorities on jobs,
homes, growth and transport.
Following a meeting of the Employment Committee, his appointment
was confirmed today (Friday 13 February) by the Mayor and the
leaders of the seven local authorities that make up the WMCA
Board.
During his time as Interim Chief Executive, he has:
• Delivered the first Regional Investment Summit,
launching the West Midlands Investment Prospectus and securing £1
billion in private investment.
• Launched the West Midlands Growth Plan, setting out
how the regional economy will grow by £17 billion and put an
extra £8,600 into residents' pockets by 2035.
• Overseen a fourfold increase in housing delivery,
keeping the WMCA on track to meet its 7,000-home target for
2025/26 and launching a Social Housing Accelerator to convert
1,000 homes to social rent.
• Commissioned the Rosewell Review to strengthen
delivery of major infrastructure projects and maximise value from
the £2.4 billion City Region Sustainable Transport Settlement.
• Implemented a £75 million construction skills
package and expanded programmes such as West Midlands Works,
which will support 93,000 people into good-quality jobs over the
next decade.
Mayor welcomed the Board's
decision: “Ed has provided strong leadership at an important
moment for our region. He has driven delivery, strengthened our
partnerships and brought clarity and focus to the organisation.
“We are moving at pace to create jobs, build homes and improve
transport. Ed's appointment gives us stability and momentum as we
deliver the Growth Plan and secure more investment for the West
Midlands.”
Birmingham-born, Ed joined the WMCA in May 2020 as Director of
Public Service Reform. He later became Deputy Chief Executive,
leading strategy, economy and net zero, before being appointed
Interim Chief Executive in June 2025.
Since stepping into the role, he has strengthened collaboration
with local authorities and partners, helped secure a £2 billion
multi-year Integrated Settlement with government and led reforms
to stabilise finances, modernise governance and refresh
leadership across the organisation.
These changes include a new people and culture strategy and an
internal transformation programme aligned to the Mayor's
priorities and recommendations from a recent Local Government
Association peer review.
Speaking after his appointment, Ed Cox said: “It has been a
privilege to serve the West Midlands over the past five years,
and I'm incredibly excited to continue this by leading the WMCA
at such a critical moment for the region.
“I look forward to continuing to work with the Mayor, our
councils and partners to deliver real improvements for our people
and businesses with the most ambitious development opportunities
we've seen in decades and a growing range of devolved
responsibilities that will build a stronger, more inclusive
regional economy.”