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  • LDA Agenda (Supplementary) [5]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 17 March 2004
    My question is on joined-up government and all these relationships with the ODPM, the DCMS, the DTI, GOL and all the rest of it. Did anybody inform you of the Government's new scheme to move some 80,000 jobs out of London? In a sense, there is a contradiction between the long-term plan that London is going to increase, and the Government actually trying to cut down the increase by moving jobs out of London. Was there any consultation with the LDA on this?
  • LDA Agenda (Supplementary) [9]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 17 March 2004
    Yes
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [46]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    Is it true to say that Ken Livingstone believes in a democratic, accountable and transparent system of government? Would that be fair enough?
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [47]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    I am interested in when the Mayor is away. According to The Telegraph, Ken Livingstone is quoted as saying, "My delegation to Simon Fletcher is a routine process I"ve used a number of times'. Has this happened on a number of times that he's signed over his powers to you, not just when he went to Australia? And could you tell us how many times he's done that?
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [48]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    Four times you have been in charge in place of the Mayor?
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [49]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    But at those times, if you cannot get hold of the Mayor - let's say there was some crisis - you would have to act, and you would be able to act. Let's put it that way. You would be able to act with the full powers of the Mayor and you've been in that position, four times, in the last two years?
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [50]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    Don't you find that people out there find this a little bit odd, that the Mayor did not delegate his powers as he could do under the Act, and as it indicates under the Act, to the Deputy Mayor?
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [51]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    In the same way as when he is in the swimming pool in Millbank, the Mayor is the Executive Mayor of London. There is no difference. One of the most extraordinary things of this whole argument was when the Mayor was away and John Craig of the BBC was genuinely surprised to see a letter from the Mayor from Australia, as if he'd not known that there was such a thing as email, fax and mobile phone, let alone landline. It's bizarre. I don't know why you think somehow it's not possible to be in touch with somebody.
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [52]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    A democratic line of accountability relies on the Mayor appointing somebody, and nobody else is democratically accountable in this organisation? Curious.
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [65]

    • Question by: Eric Ollerenshaw
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    So when he's swimming off a beach in Australia, then he is still running London from 10,000 miles away, as far as is practically possible?