Skip to main content
Mayor of London logo London Assembly logo
Home

Search questions

  • 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?
  • 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?
  • 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…
  • 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...
  • 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?
  • 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 (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 (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 (5)

    • Reference: 2020/4071
    • Question by: Peter Whittle
    • Meeting date: 19 November 2020
    In your press release of 28 July 2020 you state: ‘The Mayor is creating the Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm to help ensure London’s achievements and diversity are suitably reflected. Statues, plaques and street names largely reflect Victorian Britain…’ As a statement of fact, it is demonstrably untrue that London’s statues, plaques and street names largely reflect Victorian Britain, a period of only 60 years. London has a well-documented commemorative and location-naming timeline of at least a thousand years, which also stretches long beyond the Victorian era. Why would you suggest otherwise?
  • Coronavirus Fines

    • Reference: 2020/3780
    • Question by: Peter Whittle
    • Meeting date: 15 October 2020
    How much in fines has so far been handed out by the Metropolitan Police to members of the public and businesses for violating the Coronavirus Regulations?