We need a Mayor who will be upfront with people, not someone who brushes things under the carpet.
If Sadiq Khan gets another term, the ULEZ expansion will devastate families and small businesses, crime will continue to soar, and the housing crisis will push talented young people out of the city.
I will amend the London Plan to promote an increase in affordable family homes, instead of tower blocks and one bedroom flats.
New high rises have wrecked the look and feel of our borough. People also see their hard-earned money wasted. They understand that things must change.
If you have no choice but to drive to work, like many tradesmen and shift workers in the NHS or emergency services, you’ll be hit.
It’s the most powerful directly-elected position in the country with a £19.4 billion budget. But he squandered his first term.
For five years, he has pleaded poverty, passed blame, and avoided responsibility, instead of delivering for Londoners.
Khan’s latest virtue signalling project is his expensive statue-toppling commission. It’s an outrageous waste of taxpayers’ cash.
The bill for TfL staff working on trade union activities has nearly doubled under him to £8.7 million.
The reduced service Transport for London is providing is just not sufficient for essential workers to travel across the city safely.
I am deeply honoured to have been elected Leader of the Conservative Group, on the London Assembly, at an extraordinarily important juncture.
Thousands of teenagers are exploited through County Lines. The Metropolitan Police force area is the largest exporting hub to the rest of the country.
In February there was an extra £5 million for training new police officers, yet the recruitment drive didn’t start for a whole six months. There is no sense of urgency.
A coordinated “public health” approach can work. But the focus must be at the borough level.
The Mayor of London’s attacks on Uber and the car hire industry show he is positioning himself for a future Labour leadership contest.