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  • Sporting Legacy (Supplementary) [13]

    • Question by: Angie Bray
    • Meeting date: 15 February 2007
    I was struck by the fact that so much legacy is going to be wrapped around Sport England and the role they are going to play in the sporting legacy. Of course, I suspect there is a problem here, is there not, because of the fact that they are, to a large extent, dependent on Lottery funding. It would seem that Lottery funding is now being very stretched indeed, given that it looks like the Lottery is going to be involved in actually bailing out large overspends should they happen. How concerned are you that Sport England is going to...
  • Sporting Legacy (Supplementary) [17]

    • Question by: Angie Bray
    • Meeting date: 15 February 2007
    I think there are concerns here that everyone talks grandly about legacy, but actually so much of it is dependent on all the ducks being in a row, and I think perhaps that we are concerned that its intentions will not necessarily guarantee delivery. Lord Coe, I know everybody in West London is very excited that you have agreed to come to talk to the West London Alliance in May, about what West Londoners might be able to expect in terms of legacy from the Games, amongst other things. Perhaps I am being a little early in this, but I...
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [43]

    • Question by: Angie Bray
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    You talk about the huge burden that falls on the Mayor's sole shoulders and that you are important to him because you help him to carry that burden. Isn't the real problem that the Mayor has to do with his non-membership of any of the mainstream political parties? He's here as an independent and he cannot actually rely on any of the political groupings to help him shoulder the burden in the usual accountable, transparent way. He has to rely on people like you precisely because he has no relationship with any of the other political parties here.
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [54]

    • Question by: Angie Bray
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    Why is it then that the Mayor does seem to have made it very clear that he'd actually rather like to go back inside the Labour Party? Clearly, he is finding it a strain to carry this entire burden without party machine support of any particular party.
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [55]

    • Question by: Angie Bray
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    Let me put it this way to you. You talked about other mayors elsewhere. Actually, any mayor I can think of - whether they be in Paris where they are drawn from the successful party, or indeed New York where you have either a Republican or a Democrat - they are able to draw on their own party resources and loyalties which are transparent to the people who are then electing the parties. I put it to you that one of the reasons why he couldn't use the services of his Deputy in his absence was precisely because it would...