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Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm (4)

  • Reference: 2020/4070
  • Question by: Peter Whittle
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
Your press release of 28 July 2020, announces the formation of a ‘Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm.’ What do you understand to be the meaning of the term ‘public realm’ - most specifically in the context of private property, non-public spaces and government-owned land?

Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm (3)

  • Reference: 2020/4069
  • Question by: Peter Whittle
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
Given the Government’s plans to give the Secretary of State for Housing the final say on planning applications relating to statues, due to their national significance, does the Mayor recognise that public statues in the capital have a national significance and agree that their future is not entirely a matter for local/devolved government?

Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm (2)

  • Reference: 2020/4068
  • Question by: Peter Whittle
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
Further to that same guidance from Historic England, can the Mayor confirm that he would follow it and not support the removal of the statues of Thomas Guy and Sir Robert Clayton from Guy’s and St Thomas’s Hospitals?

Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm (1)

  • Reference: 2020/4067
  • Question by: Peter Whittle
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
Given that Historic England - the statutory advisor to central and local government on heritage proposals - has clearly stated its position that contested statues should not be removed, can the Mayor provide assurance that the Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm will abide by that guidance and not recommend the removal of any statues?

Environmentally Friendly Technologies

  • Reference: 2020/4066
  • Question by: David Kurten
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
The makers of wind turbines, solar panels, electric vehicles and other supposedly environment-friendly technologies claim that these technologies are ‘green,’ ‘clean’ and ’just.’ Cobalt is an expensive metal used in electric car batteries, costing about $35,000 per ton. Some 59% of all cobalt comes from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Cobalt mining in DRC is often done by children, some as young as seven, with as many as 40,000 working in what are reported to be brutal and unsafe conditions 1. Is it morally right that the GLA should be developing energy policy, without paying heed to the moral...

Bim’s Burgers, Ilford

  • Reference: 2020/4065
  • Question by: Peter Whittle
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
I was disconcerted to learn of the involvement of the Metropolitan Police on 1 October 2020 in fining Bim’s Burgers of Ilford Lane £1,000 for allowing a customer to order a takeaway burger at exactly 10pm, which was served four minutes later. A spokesperson for the restaurant said that, given the customer had started placing the order ahead of the nightly curfew, staff believed serving them fell within the law. In a tweet, since deleted, the Redbridge branch of the Metropolitan Police wrote: ‘Bims Burger (sic), Ilford Lane breached Covid-19 restrictions by having one customer inside the premises waiting for...

Special Demonstration Squad

  • Reference: 2020/4064
  • Question by: Peter Whittle
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
To ask the Mayor whether the Metropolitan Police Special Demonstration Squad (undercover police officers) still exists? 1 1 https://www.telegraph.co.uk/women/life/man-fell-love-lived-five-years-u…

Police Recruitment (2)

  • Reference: 2020/4063
  • Question by: Peter Whittle
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
How much reputational damage do you believe the Metropolitan Police has sustained over the last five years, as a consequence of implementing its fast-track recruitment programmes?

Police Recruitment (1)

  • Reference: 2020/4062
  • Question by: Peter Whittle
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
To ask the Mayor how many individuals have been directly recruited to the Metropolitan Police at the rank of superintendent over the last eight years, without working their way through the ranks, which had hitherto been the long-established custom and practice in the Met?

Freedom of Speech (6)

  • Reference: 2020/4061
  • Question by: Peter Whittle
  • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
The comedian Sophie Duker appeared on Frankie Boyle’s BBC2 panel show New World Order which was broadcast on 10 September 2020. She addressed the issue of systemic racism, stating: ‘White power is Trump Tower but when we say we want to kill whitey, we don't really mean we want to kill whitey.’ The comedian then quipped ‘we do’. Given that equality of treatment is one of the guiding principles which underpins our legal system and Darren Grimes has apparently been singled out for the same issue, when are the Metropolitan Police going to be interviewing Sophie Duker?
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