• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

MayorWatch

London News and Comment

  • NEWS

Cripes! Boris is getting better

September 10, 2008 - Martin Hoscik

The new term at City Hall got underway properly today when the London Assembly subjected Boris Johnson to another bout of Mayor’s Question Time, or as fellow London commentator Dave Hill says: “‘MQT’ to we hipsters”.

Before the summer break Boris seemed a little out of his depth at these events, often poorly briefed and clearly uncomfortable before an audience who often understood the issues better than he. Something’s changed during the holiday, maybe it was the departure of so many advisors and deputy mayors but along with Boris’s apparent realisation that he can’t delegate his entire job has come a newfound sense of direction and purpose.

The not-quite capacity audience were treated to the first public airing of Boris’s new social liberal persona, talking up difficulties faced by lower income families the  and something tells me that not every one who voted for him is going to be happy with the direction New Boris travels in.

Proceedings got underway with an impressive, confidently delivered statement on budget reductions at City Hall, aware of being portrayed as a fully signed-up member of the ‘slash and burn’ brigade, Boris was at pains to talk of redeploying staff, and not diluting service delivery.

When he came under heavy fire from Liberal Democrat Dee Doocey in her attempt to have him review London Development Agency funding for the London Fashion Week over a row over ‘size zero’ models, Johnson was sufficiently briefed to defend his position but promised he was open to being persuaded.

He won a few new supporters in the audience by voicing a heartfelt tribute to the role of London’s street markets which he described as a “wonderful part of London life” but there were glimpses of the old, non-serious Boris when he said protecting the markets was both an “aspiration and a commitment” – before the Summer break the Mayor seemed to make half a dozen uncosted commitments every MQT session.

The already traditional sparring match between Johnson and Labour’s John Biggs, the closest this event gets to Prime Minister’s Questions, was probably a points win for the Mayor – a result which seemed impossible just a few short months ago.

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email

Filed Under: Comment, Martin Hoscik

RECENT UPDATES

Tube and rail users to benefit from Oyster weekly fares cap

Mayor and TfL call on ministers to help plug funding gap

Tube to get full mobile phone coverage from 2024

TfL says Direct Vision Standard is already making HGVs safer for London road users




POPULAR

City Hall to move to Docklands as Mayor seeks to raise £55m for frontline services

‘Concern’ over TfL’s ability to deliver major projects in wake of Crossrail cost overruns

City Hall halts London Overground ticket office closures but many will still see opening hours reduced

Transport for London confirms bus cuts will go ahead despite passenger opposition

Copyright © 2025 · Terms of Use · Privacy Policy