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Post-election Secretary of State for Transport (Supplementary) [3]

  • Question by: Richard Tracey
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
Mr Mayor, in this conversation with Philip Hammond [Secretary of State for Transport], when you meet him, can you raise two points that are very relevant to our earlier discussions about the use of Heathrow? One is can you encourage him to go ahead with the high speed rail links which will indeed encourage people to travel by rail, rather than using the internal flights to get to Heathrow. The second one is could you press him to stop the early flights that creep in between 4am and 6am, when 6am is supposed to be the cut off, and wake...

Post-election Secretary of State for Transport (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: Roger Evans
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
Mr Mayor, the previous regime at Whitehall always prevented its ministers giving evidence to this Assembly. They could come along and meet us informally in the basement but they never sat where you are and gave evidence to us.

Post-election Secretary of State for Transport (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Valerie Shawcross
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
As you know, Crossrail is one of those London united issues and I think we are all pleased to hear you have already started lobbying on the issue. One of the anxieties that people are feeling at the moment is that there may possibly be a proposal to chop off one of these important spurs of the Crossrail project, either out at the Maidenhead end or down to Abbey Wood. In your view, would it damage the business case for the whole of Crossrail if any part of the project, as now planned, was to be lost?

Local Elections (Supplementary) [5]

  • Question by: James Cleverly
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
Mr Mayor, do you think that the local election results for the Conservative councils in outer London might have been different if they were in receipt of the kind of grant settlements that Labour controlled inner London boroughs received?

Local Elections (Supplementary) [4]

  • Question by: Richard Barnbrook
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
Laugh it up fuzzballs. I do not think anybody here got anything out of these elections at all. As regards the Conservative/Liberal Democrats, let us give it 6 months or 12 years. Moving to the question, through yourself, Chair, would the Mayor agree that where electoral fraud takes place it should be investigated? I, along with the British National Party in Barking and Dagenham, with 100 cases of direct electoral fraud, are now going through the electoral petition. Regarding my own ward of Goresbrook, a Labour candidate elected was unduly elected because she works for the council. Her excuse is...

Local Elections (Supplementary) [3]

  • Question by: John Biggs
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
Is it not the case that you were tucked away because of the relative incoherence of your administration and its muddledness and that is why the Conservatives won far fewer seats in London than they anticipated? Perhaps answer this question; are you a Liberal Democrat Conservative or just a plain old Conservative? Are you a Liberal Democrat Conservative now?

Local Elections (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: Roger Evans
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
Clearly the Labour Group is scratching around for crumbs of comfort today. Next thing it will be asking us to congratulate the Labour party in Havering for doubling the size of its Group to five in the recent election! To move away from the party points which have been made so far, do you think there are wider lessons to be learned, for your election and ours in two years time, from the way that the London elections were administered and some of the complaints that were made around them?

Local Elections (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Joanne McCartney
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
The reason I asked the question is that we have seen a dramatic change in the municipal make up of London. We now have 17 councils that are Labour controlled, giving Labour the majority of councils in London. Until the election you were the leading Conservative in London. Do you take any responsibility for the fact that voters seem to have rejected Conservative administration across huge swathes of London?

Routemaster Bus (Supplementary) [5]

  • Question by: Len Duvall OBE
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
I tell you what is missing from this debate - and you keep hectoring us about it - is value for money; value for money and all those issues. Where is the value for money concept in this proposal, that you keep hectoring us about, that we have to have? Where is that applied, in terms of TfL, on this project?

Routemaster Bus (Supplementary) [4]

  • Question by: Roger Evans
  • Meeting date: 19 May 2010
Mr Mayor, some of us will recall your predecessor sitting where you are now and telling us that he was going to use the police to ensure people queued for the buses in London. An approach which was universally welcomed by the Labour Group at the time so, possibly, it has changed its tune since then. Meanwhile, in Redbridge, we are very keen to see the number 25, a bendy bus route which is plagued by high levels of crime and fare evasion --
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