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Ex-Mayor Livingstone Policing

Livingstone defends the indefensible

Today some of the papers are gunning for the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir Ian Blair, following yesterday’s publication of the IPCC Stockwell One report. The London Mayor has tried to defend Blair by saying that he was only in post for five months at the time of the shooting.

Blair should be hung out to dry but not for the shooting. He needs to go because he specifically ordered the Met to keep the IPCC away from the case.

The IPCC Chairman, Nick Hardwick said yesterday:

The Commissioner attempted to prevent us carrying out an investigation. In my view, much of the avoidable difficulty the Stockwell incident has caused the Metropolitan Police arose from the delay in referral.

Blair showed precisely the wrong instinct. At a time when Londoners needed clarity all we got were mixed messages that gave the impression that the victim was somehow to blame for his own fate. Instead of the Commissioner loudly saying up front that a terrible mistake had happened and that he had called in the IPCC we instead had him writing to the Home Office to get the IPCC off his back.

The Mayor’s press machine went into a frenzy of activity yesterday coming up with three releases on this subject. Compare and contrast what the Mayor says with Hardwick’s statement above:

There is nothing in the IPCC report today that justifies the political witch hunt of David Davis against the police and the Commissioner – a witch hunt which has been condemned in strong terms by the Association of Chief Police Officers, The Metropolitan Police Federation and the national Police Federation.

There is something Mr Mayor. The smoking gun is the IPCC saying that Blair’s getting in their way made for “much avoidable difficulty”.

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Ex-Mayor Livingstone Policing

Papers calling for Blair to go

Telegraph

The Commissioner is a guileful political operator with powerful friends. But in clinging to office he displays neither a sense of honour nor any real concern for policing in the capital, which, under his discredited leadership, will be ill-prepared for the challenges ahead.

Guardian

Almost his first act on the day of the shooting was to write to the home office and explain that he had “decided” that the IPCC would not be allowed to investigate. It emerged that he had no power to decide this and the IPCC work was soon underway. But its chairman, Nick Hardwick, stated yesterday that “much of the avoidable difficulty the Stockwell incident has caused the Metropolitan police arose from the delay in referral”, and he put the blame for this delay squarely on the shoulders of Sir Ian.

Daily Mail

Last week on our front page we called Sir Ian “a man without honour”. Yesterday, he proved it again.

If the Commissioner hasn’t the decency to resign by the time the Metropolitan Police Authority meets next Thursday, they must sack him.

Andrew Gilligan in the Evening Standard last night said:

If the Met had shown itself more willing to admit criticism over Stockwell, it might have found more Londoners willing to give it the benefit of the doubt.

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Ex-Mayor Livingstone Policing

Assembly asks Blair to go

The London Assembly made the headline story on the PM programme tonight by voting 15 to 8 on a motion which expressed “lack of confidence in the Commissioner’s stewardship” and urged him to resign.

The Mayor in his campaign to shore up Blair was typically dismissive of the assembly calling them “impotent”, calling the vote “pure posturing” and suggesting that the only people who would applaud the assembly was Al-Qaeda. See BBC coverage here.

In a pugnacious performance this morning the embattled Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir Ian Blair, confirmed to the London Assembly that he would not be resigning and that the MPS would not be appealing the guilty verdict in the health and safety trial relating to the Stockwell shooting. He spent an hour and a half batting away questions from assembly members before the vote of no confidence, which is non-binding as it is the Metropolitan Police Authority not the assembly that is ultimately responsible for the Met.

You can see the whole four hour session here. The Met bit starts at about 50:00 minutes in. There is a rambling statement from Len Duvall, past Labour AM and current chairman of the MPA at about 52:55 which finally focuses in on the health and safety trial at 59:20. Blair makes a statement at 1:03:27 and answers questions from about 1:14:00 until 2:41:40. The session resumes at 2:52:20 with the political debate and voting.

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Ex-Mayor Livingstone Road pricing

Standard says Rush-hour slower thanks to CC

es-rush-hour-slower.JPG

Tonight the Evening Standard is reporting new results from measurements of London traffic speeds that show that traffic is now slower than it was before the Congestion Charge came into force.

I have tried checking this story but TfL don’t have anything obvious on their website and the Standard don’t condescend to give any links or references.

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Communications disease Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Met publicity spending up 42% last year

mpa-publicity-expenditure.JPGToday most of the papers have caught up with the “Met spends £3.3 million on recruitment ads for PCSOs” story – see BBC for instance. The image right is taken from the MPA report and accounts which include the Metropolitan Police Service. As you can see their publicity spending, which includes recruitment ads, shot up 42% last year to £8.6 million.

SNT 2007 campaignYou might ask how do they manage to spend this kind of cash? The LibDems found out that the current 2007 campaign (left) reminding everyone about the SNTs cost £800K, shared with TfL. Last year they admitted to me that they spent £485K on the original 2006 SNT campaign (below). They run a number of these high profile ad campaigns during the year, see the list here. They also contribute £250K per year towards the Mayor’s propaganda sheet, the Londoner. If you are kind there are 49 press officers working for the MPS or if you want to collar everyone involved the number goes up to 92, see answer to a question from Richard Barnes here. There are two press officers in the MPA.

SNT 2006 campaignYou can understand that the Mayor would only want to spend £485K helping Labour councillors to get elected last year but he reckons that £800K is a more appropriate figure to get himself re-elected – I guess he thinks he is worth it. You wonder how TfL justifies spending out £400K on an ad that is about policing and does not mention transport security.

Last year I did a piece for ConservativeHome and on a back-of-a-fag-packet basis reckoned that the Mayor and his GLA bodies spent something like £100 million on advertising and the black arts of communications. Here we see that the Met, typically one of the slightly more retiring parts of the empire, manages to spend £8.6 million on publicity all on its own.

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Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Why Livingstone is backing Blair

Judging by the headline story on the London Mayor’s website his most pressing concern over the last couple of weeks has been to shore up the beleaguered Metropolitan Police commissioner Sir Ian Blair. The Mayor spent Thursday touring radio newsrooms to make his case. One of his silliest lines was that he:

wouldn’t put the irresponsible politicians attacking the police Commissioner within a million miles of running the kind of anti-terror operations London has had to deal with over the last few years.

And still less would anyone put the Mayor anywhere near them either. Don’t forget this is the man who failed to condemn the IRA at the height of their operations and while slightly less mealy mouthed about Islamic fundamentalist inspired terrorism still manages to run with people like Yusuf al-Qaradawi.

Over the weekend the tide has been running against Blair and the Mayor. You might ask why is Mayor quite so supportive of Blair? The answer is complicated.

Blair/Livingstone’s one bankable achievement in policing London has been the roll out of Safer Neighbourhood Teams. As Brian Coleman pointed out in the Independent on Sunday the highly political Blair did not baulk about rolling these teams out to coincide with the May 2006 local elections and taking part in a totally integrated comms exercise that included press advertising, to the tune of £300K paid for by the Met, but also all Labour council candidates’ election literature. See previous posting.

Whilst we all welcome, certainly here in Northfield, the SNTs the Met had to cut a lot of corners to deliver the teams to a political timetable and beyond this rollout the list of the achievements of Blair/Livingstone are thin indeed. Recently Blair/Livingstone have been trying to talk up falls in crime numbers but have cynically failed to mention increases in in-your-face violent crime – the thing that worries people the most. See previous posting.

Blair is a relative newcomer but Livingstone has had 8 years to reform the Met, confront its Spanish practices and to get our coppers out on the streets on their own rather than going around in pairs (even their ads show policemen going around in pairs). The Mayor knows that appointing a new commissioner over the next six months will throw a spotlight on his lack of achievement in the policing area. The Mayor would rather the Blair/Livingstone media double act continued unmolested as any incoming commissioner is likely to want to distance him or herself from the Mayor and start to set out the considerable room for improvement there is at the Met.

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Ex-Mayor Livingstone

The Met Commissioner in the papers

Brian Coleman, Tory London Assembly Member, says in the Independent on Sunday today:

The Mayor of London’s rush to defend Sir Ian is hard to explain. I do not recall Ken Livingstone defending the SAS when they shot dead three IRA terrorists in Gibraltar in 1988. On the other hand, Livingstone knows that if Sir Ian falls, his London administration’s great achievement of reintroducing neighbourhood policing and presiding over a fall in crime in the capital (though only in certain categories) will be tarnished.

Sir Ian’s tenure has suffered from one “unfortunate” episode after another. Yesterday, contrary to claims that he has “modernised” the Met, came new allegations that the victims of the botched Forest Gate raid in 2006 had been held at gunpoint again and racially abused.

Simon Jenkins in the Sunday Times doesn’t think he should go but hardly endorses him:

Blair has committed plenty of gaffes, but they have largely been a result of his love for publicity and for playing politics. He appears to have reacted to the de Menezes killing in a detached and initially obstructive way. As a result he continues to lack the confidence that his office needs to be effective. But he should not be sacrificed to a squalid health and safety gambit that can only make the job of counter-terrorism harder.

Andrew Rawnsley in the Observer says go:

Sir Ian has always been a politically controversial figure. He has now become a political liability for the government. He is not a figure who can build public confidence in the ability of the authorities to keep them safe. And he will not be a persuasive advocate for new anti-terror legislation. This will be one of the big contentions of the new parliamentary session, which begins this week when Gordon Brown attempts to persuade MPs to lengthen the period that terror suspects can be held without charge. The Prime Minister and his Home Secretary know that they are going to win this battle only with great difficulty. They want to be able to call on arguments from the police that they need these powers to deal with terrorism. To help the government make its case, Number 10 wants a police commissioner who is a compelling witness, not one tainted by anxiety about his competence and conflict about his right to be in office.

Anne McElvoy in the Evening Standard on Friday was clear that he should go too:

A resignation would be a harsh conclusion to a career which has also had its successes – not least in helping change the image of the Met. But an innocent young man was shot dead in a manner which the trial condemned as “catastrophic”.

That was not bad luck, but the result of serious errors of judgment. Sir Ian should do the honourable thing and accept the consequences.

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Ex-Mayor Livingstone

CC’s Achilles’ heel – without fines it would make a loss

Trawling through some answers to questions to the the Mayor this morning I came across a real gem regarding the Congestion Charge. The question from LibDem AM Sally Hamwee is typical of the garbled questions that AMs come up with:

How much gross income was generated in 2006/07 from

a) charging for entry to the congestion charge (broken down by the central and western extension congestion charge zones)

b) fining motorists for not paying to enter the congestion charge zone (broken down by the central and western extension congestion charge zones)

Was the income from each directed to specific projects?

The answer by the Mayor is typically disingenuous but even his slippery briefers can’t avoid letting some useful information slip:

It is not possible to breakdown income by any specific zone. The Congestion Charging Scheme is operated as a single scheme and therefore income is reported for the scheme as a whole. There is no record of whether a journey is to or within a specific charged area.

The gross income breakdown for 2006/07 was as follows:

  • Charge Income £157.4m
  • Enforcement Income £95.0m

This gives a Total Gross Income of £252.4m.

The net income is used on other transport schemes. The provisional proportional allocation of funds was:

  • 82% to bus network operations;
  • 11% on roads and bridges;
  • 4% on road safety; and
  • 3% on walking and cycling.

The talk of spending net income is just a straight lie as I have shown here. The interesting bit is the proportion of income from fines. This is £95.0 million, which is almost 38% of the total income, and exceeds the net income figure of £89.1 million stated in TfL’s annual report and accounts. So, without these fines the thing would make a loss every year. This is a shame because the system cost £265 million to set up and made a £58 million loss in its first part year of operation.

Interestingly the situation seems to have worsened over the last year. In 2005/6 fines were at 30% of a £254.1 million revenue (see answer to question here) whereas in 2006/7 they are 38% of a slightly smaller £252.4 million revenue.

cc-penalty-income.JPG

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Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Gilligan turns his blowtorch on the freeze

The Evening Standard’s Andrew Gilligan today turns his blowtorch onto the Mayor’s so-called fares freeze. See here.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Mayor’s freeze melts

Two fibs here - travel cards not included and RPI not CPIThe Mayor has been in support Ian Blair mode for a week and this graphic only replaced last week’s picture of Sir Ian Blair on the headline spot on the Mayor’s website today.

Today’s press release jumps through all kind of hoops to make out how generous the Mayor is being with our money. He tries to make out that “the freeze” is bigger than it is. Most people use travelcards to get to work so the freeze only applies to a minority in any case.

What is more the index used to uprate travelcards is RPI which is typically much higher than CPI. In September CPI stood at 1.8% whereas RPI was at 3.9% – RPI is increasing more than twice as fast as CPI right now – see National Statistics website.

Back in August I showed how TfL has been runing a structural deficit of £1.6 billion for the last 4 years so there is no way that the Mayor can afford to be generous with fares. All he can do is make out he is being generous with fares.

The Evening Standard reckons that 7 out of 10 Tube passengers will miss out.