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  • Chairman's Question to Guests (Supplementary) [7]

    • Question by: Tony Arbour
    • Meeting date: 06 February 2015
    Tony Arbour AM: You will have heard already this morning that the principal concern of the Assembly relates to change of use, particularly change of employment use. One of the areas where the Assembly has actually right across the board sought to encourage the Mayor to be more muscular, even than his natural inclinations might have taken him, related to the [Sharon] Bowles [Member of the European Parliament for South East England] reforms, which have already been referred to, on the loss of office space. In your answer, you have talked about that and you have talked about the changes...
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [13]

    • Question by: Tony Arbour
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    I'm trying to find out what powers you actually have when the Mayor is away. Supposing there was a 11 September situation, for example a plane crashed into the House of Commons, the Mayor was in Australia, all flights were postponed, as they were after 11 September, and there's you, in London, in charge. What actions could you take in such a situation?
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [14]

    • Question by: Tony Arbour
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    I was not suggesting anything like that. I was asking you what real decisions you would make. Despite the marvels of modern communication, it seems unlikely that it would be possible to communicate, even with your literary skills, precisely what was happening here in London to the Mayor, and the chances are therefore that you would have to make some decisions on your own. What kind of decisions would they be? Indeed, what decisions have you made on your own?
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [16]

    • Question by: Tony Arbour
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    So you would accept that you could not reassure Londoners, despite the fact that you are the anointed one, that the Mayor has laid his hands upon you and that he has given you full powers?
  • Questions to Simon Fletcher, Chief of Staff to the Mayor (Supplementary) [17]

    • Question by: Tony Arbour
    • Meeting date: 12 June 2002
    Would you write her speeches in those circumstances?