Boris pretends to oppose Cameron’s cuts
4:05 pm - July 14th 2010
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This is a classic bit of positioning by Boris Johnson – given the likely political fallout from Cameron’s cuts:
The mayor, who has made tackling crime and improving London transport two of his key objectives for the mayoralty, told members: “It would be a great mistake to cut frontline policing in this city and it would be a disastrous mistake to cut investment in transport infrastructure.”
The mayor is particularly concerned that vital tube upgrades and the £16bn Crossrail project – an east-to-west rail link across the capital which will increase London’s rail capacity by 10%, remain unscathed.
…
But John Biggs, deputy leader of the Labour group, pointed out that the mayor has at the same time increased the number of his senior team on top salaries of more than £100,000 to 18.
It’s obvious what Boris is doing – positioning himself so when London suffers from Tory cuts, he can claim that he opposed them all along.
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Sunny Hundal is editor of LC. Also: on Twitter, at Pickled Politics and Guardian CIF.
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Reader comments
Clever politics. Lib Dem MPs who aren’t ministers should do the same.
Particularly Charles Kennedy, who might well be able to claim a second bite at the leadership cherry before too much longer (although I’m sure Simon Hughes is also paying close attention, as he does to anything which looks likely to be of benefit to Simon Hughes).
On the other hand, I’m watching Lynne Featherstone; I think she’s probably the most likely of the cabinet Lib Dems to quit on a point of principle, and at that point she becomes a very strong candidate for the social wing to rally around.
This is just being a “good constituency MP,” my local Tory MP has been winning applause for opposing any cuts in his back yard, while supporting cuts everywhere else for years.
I expect local government Tories will do the same. Not just for tactical reasons, but also because councillors tend to see the good that local government does directly, which tends to make them more supportive of local government funding. My experience of Local Government Conservatives has often indicated that they are socially, rather than economically right-of-centre. Boris is essentially just the most powerful local government politician in all the land.
Your headline – indeed the whole story really – assumes that Cameron is intending to cut front line policing and Crossrail.
But he isn’t.
As long ago as June 16th Phillip Hammond confirmed that the government is committed to the full £16 bn for Crossrail.
On policing, Cameron has said that he cannot guarantee there will be no cuts to the front line, but the intention is to make the necessary savings elsewhere if at all possible. Boris & co will be setting the budget for the Met, and having cannily frozen the precept for 2010/11, should have some headroom later.
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