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Why is the City of London parting company with Smithfield and Billingsgate?

In the beginning, it felt so right. True, historic London food markets, fixtures of the capital’s identity for centuries, would be moving from its heart to its outskirts. But relocations had happened before. And if there was to be a great migration of the scores of traders selling fish, meat, fruit and vegetables to shops, restaurants and others across the city, what better destination than an old Thames dock site south of Dagenham, a town hungry for economic renewal?

When the plan was made public, in April 2019, excitement was expressed about the City of London Corporation, owner of the Smithfield meat market in Farringdon, Billingsgate fish market in Poplar and the New Spitalfields horticultural produce hub in Leyton, consolidating all three in one place.

Catherine McGuinness, who at that time chaired the City’s policy and resources committee and, as such, was its political leader, said the selection of the Dagenham site showed the corporation to be committed to the markets’ future, with a “number one priority” of maintaining “a top-quality market environment serving London”.

James Tumbridge, chairman of the corporation’s markets committee, hailed “another positive step forward” towards “a vision for a food centre suitable for London’s future”.

None of this meant a deal was done. The City’s announcement stressed that a public consultation was yet to come and that the 42 acres at Dagenham Dock, now officially the City’s “preferred site”, were at that point no more than “broadly acceptable” to the markets’ traders.

Even so, key ingredients were in place, not least the City owning the land in question. Previously the setting for a coal-fired power station, it had been purchased in December 2018 with the declared view of moving the three markets there – a large step forward in project that had long been in gestation.

There was anticipation in and around Dagenham, too. In November 2019, I visited the then local MP Jon Cruddas as he campaigned in his marginal seat for the following month’s general election. We talked about how the area in some ways resembled parts of Britain that had come to be called “left behind” due largely to de-industrialisation.

In Dagenham, the closure of the Ford Motors production plant, very close to the potential markets site, had had a big, long-term impact. For years, there had been talk of revitalising the Thames Gateway, a long stretch of riverbank reaching from Lewisham and Tower Hamlets into Essex and Kent. Maybe talk would soon be turned into action. “It’s more concrete, it has more potency than before,” Cruddas said.

Barking & Dagenham Council was enthusiastic, too. And in March 2021, its planning committee approved the City’s outline application. Darren Rodwell, the council’s charismatic leader, hailed “great news for the borough” with the prospect of new jobs and training opportunities. The founding of a food school on the site was proposed, where future generations of butchers and fishmongers would be taught.

The pandemic had been going for a year, wreaking havoc with the construction sector. But that did not appear to be derailing what the City termed its market co-location programme (MCP). And 18 months later, on 17 November 2022, it announced that it had “approved plans for a major regeneration programme” which would see it “invest nearly one billion pounds directly into Barking and Dagenham to regenerate 42 acres of industrial land into a modern, sustainable wholesale food market, stimulating the local economy and ensuring resilience in the food supply of London and the southeast”. The new market was expected to open before the end of 2028 at the latest.

By then, and since May 2022, McGuinness had been succeeded as the City’s leader by Chris Hayward, a former deputy leader of Dorset and Hertfordshire county councils with a background in property businesses. He greeted what he called “a major milestone in an ambitious programme with economic growth at its heart, something our country so clearly needs”.

But things began to change. And in November 2024, exactly two years after the Dagenham Dock plan had been glowingly approved, the City said it had been abandoned. What was more, it would be closing both Smithfield and Billingsgate, ending its centuries-long association with them. It pledged to help them find new bases for the meat and fish businesses, but their futures remain uncertain.

What changed? Could the outcome have been different? And what does it all mean for London?

 

WHAT HAPPENED? THE CHAIRMAN’S VIEW

For Chris Hayward, the reason for the collapse of the Dagenham Dock plan is, in the end, straightforward – the City could not afford it.

On the same day in 2022 as the City announced its approval of the move, 17 November, a special meeting of the Court of Common Council – the City’s equivalent of a full borough council meeting – was held, starting early in the afternoon.

The court considered the “markets co-location programme”, as it was termed, but did so in private – away from the public and the press, as is often the case with local government matters when sensitive financial matters are involved. But confidential minutes of the discussion, which later came into my hands, describe it as having been approved “as a major project with a budget envelope of £577 million”.

This figure, the minutes state, excluded “sunk costs” – meaning expenditure already made that cannot be recovered – of £164 million, bringing the total expected to be spent on the programme overall up to £741 million. And the relevant section referred only to Smithfield and Billingsgate. New Spitalfields was not built in to the Dagenham Dock project at that stage. Quoted by the Barking & Dagenham Post, a spokesperson said that although the City still intended this to happen at a later date, it was “not able to give a timeline”.

The minutes also refer to an additional, unspecified, sum in compensation relating to the Poultry Market section of the Smithfield building, saying this had already been approved. They further note that corporation officers would be looking into acquiring another, much smaller piece of land, around 4.78 acres of it, to the south of the Dagenham Dock site. These items, added to the £741 million, perhaps explain the mention in the press release sent out on the same day of “nearly one billion pounds” of City money going into Barking & Dagenham.

Interviewed by me at the Guildhall near the end of May this year, Hayward put the original estimate for the project at “around £600 million” – very adjacent to the £577 million “budget envelope” of November 2022 – and said this had, of itself, “ended up at about a billion pounds”.

He explained that by the time he decided to pull the plug, the City had already “set about spending a few million” on remediating the Dagenham Dock site – cleaning it up before construction work could start. And then came the costs explosion that has helped debilitate the construction sector across the capital. “Inflation took off, construction inflation became huge,” Hayward said. Result? “The bottom line is that I arrived at the view, as the leader of the corporation, with the support of my policy committee, that the Dagenham Dock site had become unaffordable.”

He went to set out why he wouldn’t countenance one possible option for continuing to finance the project. “To have been able to afford it, I was told by officers at the time, would have meant selling a substantial chunk of our investment properties,” he said. This was not an acceptable to him: “We are not a private company. We are not about profit and loss here. We are stewards of all sorts of amenities, not just across the Square Mile but right across London, and many of those, particularly the cultural ones, we subsidise as well, as you always have to do with culture, etcetera.”

Hayward described the investment properties, many of them located on some of the most valuable and sought after real estate on Earth, as having been “bought over a thousand years” and “used to fund everything we do”. They were not to be disturbed. “My view was, frankly, not on my watch. You can only sell the family silver once.”

The wider context was that all of the City’s other capital projects were becoming more expensive too. Some major ones were already underway, notably an ambitious “justice quarter” off Fleet Street on Salisbury Square, comprising new law courts, a new headquarters for the City of London Police and a commercial building to help the numbers stack up.

Then there was the forthcoming new London Museum. Formed by the City as the Museum of London in 1976, it had, ever since, occupied a purpose-built site on bomb-damaged land on London Wall, forming part of the Barbican complex. In 2015, the museum’s director, Sharon Ament, made known a wish to move into a part of Smithfield – the General Market building, that had fallen vacant. Since then, though co-funded with the Greater London Authority, the £250 million price tag for its ambitious renovation had grown as well.

“If we had proceeded on the basis of the increased costs of the Dagenham development, we would have been, in my judgement, overstretched on our ultimate capital programme,” Hayward said. His judgement, in other words, was that had the City gone ahead with the markets scheme, those others that were already in progress might have been in danger of running out of cash.

But Hayward stressed that the decision wasn’t based only on his assessment of financial prudence, because the views of the market traders were important to him too. His starting point was that, from the beginning, those of Billingsgate and Smithfield were eager for change and open to suggestions.

Billingsgate’s current premises are not particularly old. The market takes its name from the wharf on Lower Thames Street where a rudimentary fish market began in the 16th Century. Established in law in 1698, it went through various enlargements and improvements before moving, in 1982, to its present, purpose-built complex right next to the A1261 and close to the twin mouths of the Blackwall Tunnel – good road transport links for the lorries and vans that still daily converge on the market from as far afield as Scotland and Cornwall, with others bringing overseas imports from Heathrow. The site was yet to be overshadowed by the signature glass towers of Canary Wharf on the other side of the old North Dock. But that would soon come.

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Smithfield’s origins are even more ancient than Billingsgate’s. Livestock has been bought and sold at the location since the 10th Century, on what was known as the “smooth field” at the edge of today’s Square Mile. It survived the Great Fire of 1666 and in Charles Dickens’s time was a huge, noisome arena for the slaughter and exchange of beasts delivered to it, often from far outside the capital. Bill Sikes frogmarched Oliver Twist across grounds described by Charles Dickens in his novel as “nearly ankle-deep with filth and mire”.

The market in that form was closed soon after Oliver’s fictional ordeal, and a bespoke, Italianate Central Market building, designed by City architect Horace Jones – whose later achievements would include a Thames-side Billingsgate HQ that also still stands, and Tower Bridge – was completed in 1868, with East and West sides, to contain the new, wholesaling version. The adjoining Poultry Market and General Market buildings were added to it in the ensuing decades, the former rebuilt in the 1960s after a fire. Together, they have grandly occupied a long, rectangular space between, on one side, Charterhouse Street and, on the other, West Smithfield and Long Lane ever since, augmented, also in the late 19th Century, by an adjacent fish market and cold store (image below from Wikipedia by DarTan).

Smithfield market map

The meat trade contracted after World War II, and by the 1990s the General Market building, which the London Museum is currently settling into, had fallen into disuse. Even so, the Smithfield traders wanted a future that was secure and bright.

Hayward said the City could have decided to leave things as they were with both Smithfield and Billingsgate, bar spending what was necessary to meet health and safety requirements. However, he went on, the traders “didn’t want that. They said to us, ‘we want modern buildings. We can’t go on where we are. We can’t expand our businesses where we are’.”

Eventually, Hayward said, the traders themselves concluded that it was time to end the markets’ ancient link with the City: “They said to us, very politely but very firmly, the time has come when we no longer really want you as our landlord, we want to do our own thing. The end of the era, if you want to call it that, was right for them as well as right for us. This was not us bullying them or pushing them, or saying we don’t want you anymore. It was them saying to us, ‘we want to be set free’.”

WHAT HAPPENED? OTHER VIEWS

Not everyone is happy about Chris Hayward’s decision or satisfied with his reasoning. Some in Guildhall circles either don’t accept the matter was handled well in the City’s corridors of power, don’t find Hayward’s financial argument compelling, or both. Others, more distant from the negotiations and ruminations, were upset by the very idea of the historic City of London markets coming to an end.

Peter Acton, who launched a petition to stop the markets’ closures, described himself as, “Just a citizen of the UK who cares about protecting our heritage and the livelihoods of the great workers at Smithfield and Billingsgate markets”. A former Londoner, now resident in Cardiff, he also expressed concern about “food security, including those of lower incomes who rely on these wholesale markets”. As I write, over 40,000 people have signed.

For some of its critics, the City’s about turn exposed ingrained attitudes about what constitutes sound financial investment and, on Hayward’s part, a shortage of commitment when push came to shove. One view is that the Guildhall’s financial officer class was simply not persuaded that putting a large sum into quite a complex development project well beyond the Square Mile’s boundary – one that would yield significant returns in the form of rents only over the long term – represented good value for money. Potential benefits in terms of safeguarding important food businesses and creating new jobs in a part of the capital greatly in need of them are seen as having been not rated very highly.

Another complaint is that the City’s decision-making processes were – and are – both glacial and opaque. From that perspective, the general proposition of the markets move had been considered and backed many times over the years, but institutional inertia had prevented speedy action which, had it been taken, would have seen the project get well underway before development sector costs went through the roof. And part of the reason for that slowness, the argument goes, was that, backstage, small “p” but large “I”, political influence of a largely unaccountable group within the City’s corridors of power was never sold on the idea, resulting in unduly tight financial constraints on those seeking to sort out the details and practicalities of the Dagenham move.

Shifts in the Guildhall’s institutional architecture are seen as having been problematic, too. Renamed the markets board, the markets committee was reduced in size and had its terms of reference re-written, giving it less power. This was resisted on the grounds that the markets’ relocation should not be seen as just another commercial property investment – after all, like those of local authorities all over the country, the City’s markets are run for public benefit and subject to national government regulations, meaning they need to be treated differently at local government level. But the effect of the change from committee to board was, it is said, to marginalise the body and exclude it and its expertise from key decisions.

The special status of markets in law means that relocating them needs the consent of Parliament. Securing this entails depositing a Private Bill – not to be confused with a Private Members’ Bill – which has to be approved by both the Commons and the Lords. During the legislative passage of such a bill, individuals or organisations deemed “directly and specially” affected by it are allowed to petition against it.

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In February 2023, it emerged that Havering Council, Barking & Dagenham’s neighbour to its east, had done so. It was worried about the implications of the Dagenham Dock plan for Romford Market, four miles away. The council drew on another piece of ancient legislation, a Royal Charter granted by Henry III in 1247, which prevented any other market being set up within a distance that could be covered by a sheep – in reality a herd of them being driven to market, and not in a motor vehicle – in the space of a day. Four miles, apparently, would be comfortably within a driven sheep’s normal range.

A rather niche objection, perhaps. But Havering’s interest was valid. The council’s point was that the Private Bill did not explicitly limit Billingsgate and Smithfield to selling wholesale, meaning that ordinary shoppers would be able to buy fish or meat from them, as indeed they can at present. Seeing this as a potential threat to Romford Market, the council asked for a clause to be added to the Private Bill forbidding retail sales.

Meanwhile, negotiations with organisations representing the traders, the Smithfield Markets Tenants Association and the London Fish Merchants’ Association, continued, the former led, as it had been for several years by Greg Lawrence, who was also a City Common Councillor and a member of the markets committee.

There were discussions about the design of the buildings envisaged for Dagenham Dock. A key thing for the traders was that their core activity could continue to take place within a single open space at ground level – if you’re lugging large animal carcasses or big boxes of fish around, you don’t want to be crowding into lifts or dragging yourself up flights of stairs. There were, in Hayward’s words, “several iterations” of a design labelled “10b”.

By the spring of 2024, it was plain that the tide had turned. In May of that year, announcing Chris Hayward’s re-election as policy and resources chair, the City highlighted the Salisbury Square and London Museum projects, but made no mention of the markets. And in the same month, the corporation took on as a consultant, Theresa Grant, a highly experienced senior local authority officer. Recent jobs Grant had completed included sorting out financial problems at Liverpool City Council and the (now-abolished) Northamptonshire County Council. With such experience to draw on, she was well-equipped for her latest challenge.

Grant made speedy progress. Confidential papers relating to a markets board meeting – by then chaired by Henry Pollard – held on 22 July 2024 include an account of a “markets co-location programme update” by Grant, described as “the MCP Consultant”. This referred to a report “subject to the approval of the Court of Common Council” whose “most notable recommendation” was “to cease all work at the end of July pending a more detailed report in October 2024 with a preferred way forward, given the financial constraints”.

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The account also says Grant expressed the view that “the current 10b plan had an expected longevity of the building of approximately 5-10 years” and that approval by the court was to be sought “to explore more options with the view of identifying a more viable and cost-effective solution to the Markets Co-Location Programme, in consultation with market traders”. Members, the account adds, “asked for further clarification of what was meant by 10b”.

The Common Council held its next court on 25 July 2024. Its agenda lists a non-public section to include a “markets colocation programme delivery review update”. And by the time the markets board met again, on 3 October 2024, the Dagenham plan was as good as officially dead.

In terms of committee members, the meeting was so poorly attended it was inquorate: of its 14 councillors, only Pollard, his then deputy (and now successor) Philip Woodhouse and two others are listed as having been present. Among councillors to send apologies were Greg Lawrence. A co-optee, Tony Lyons, chairman of the London Fish Merchants Association, did the same, as did Michael Cogher, the City’s deputy chief executive (and City comptroller and City solicitor), who sent a representative. However, markets director Ben Milligan is named as having been there, along with Grant and 16 others, including ten of the City’s surveyors and other staff.

A document marked “confidential” and headed Agenda Item 19 says Grant gave a verbal update on the MCP in which she “confirmed that she had held a discussion with both Smithfield and Billingsgate traders since the end of July 2024” as well as considering a number of options for the future of the markets, including a “condensed version” of design 10b on Dagenham Dock. However, the account of the update adds that the traders “were still not in favour of a two-storey building design” – a reference to 10b – and “not satisfied either with a potential move to Dagenham Dock”.

It is recorded that one board member, who isn’t named, regarded the lack of a resolution that suited all parties several years after the project began to have represented “a failure for the City Corporation from a governance perspective”.

The document also states that, in response to a question from Pollard, Grant confirmed that a report was due to be submitted to the policy and resources committee meeting due on 7 November 2024 and to an “informal” Court of Common Council gathering scheduled for the same day. Also among the confidential papers that came my way, headed Agenda Item 20 and “not for publication”, was a copy of what appears to be the report itself.

THE CONSULTANT’S VIEW

It was described as the “report of” Michael Cogher, but authorship was attributed to Theresa Grant, who was described as an “independent advisor”. At the top, it stated that the policy and resources committee would take a decision about the report on 7 November and the formal full court would do so on 25 November. The markets board would see it on 13 November, but only “for information”.

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The report’s opening summary got straight to the point:

“This report sets out a recommendation for City of London Corporation (CoL) to support two collective compensation payments to the traders of both Billingsgate and Smithfield markets, for them to vacate the current market sites and continue to trade in a location of their choice.”

Doing this, the summary continued, “would ensure continued food security for London and the South East” and enable the City to submit a new Private Bill to Parliament in order to “de-marketise” and “achieve vacant possession” of the sites thereafter. These would then be used for “new, mixed-use developments” with the emphasis on housing (in the case of Billingsgate) and culture (in the case of Smithfield, complementing and augmenting the museum).

The calculation set out in Grant’s report was that these projects would deliver close to around two-thirds (“c63%”) of the “gross value added” – a measure of the value of goods and services produced by the two areas – aspired to in the original business case for the relocation, with the Dagenham Dock site still having the potential to provide the rest of it if a “creative solution” for it could be found. Financially, the City would come out even, more or less, and also have “no further liability or responsibility” for running the markets “or the costs and risks” associated with them. Those costs were put at about £1 million “accruing year on year across the two markets”.

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Members were asked to approve the “new strategy” of ending the City’s involvement with the markets, bring the markets co-location programme to an end and ask “an external agency” to develop “a media and stakeholder engagement plan” in order to “manage key messages”. They were also asked to approve securing the traders’ support for the new Private Bill that would be needed, “noting an upfront payment is required” to enable them to find new places to do business and “help protect food security”.

The document sets out the background to Grant’s recommendations, recording that the MCP had originally included New Spitalfields as well as Billingsgate and Smithfield going to Dagenham Dock, but that “due to trader unwillingness to accommodate a stacked solution” New Spitalfields had had to be excluded. It says the business case agreed by the City on that basis included “an original cost of £841 million” and foresaw “cumulative GVA for the UK to 2049” of approximately £14.5 billion.

It goes on to state that what it terms “the Dagenham Docks Option 10B” had already been deemed “unaffordable” back in July 2024 by the policy and resources committee and the Court of Common Council, and that this had been due to “global events” such as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and “abnormally high construction cost inflation”. This had meant the estimated programme cost rising to £947 million in all, with £647 million of that to be spent on 10b, which “did not have long term viability” and was therefore “a very poor investment” – a conclusion which, the document reveals, was reached on the advice of financial services company Deloitte and real estate services firm CBRE.

The background section of the main report continues with Paragraph 3, which says as follows:

“In light of these challenges, CoL [City of London] tasked the Independent Consultant with identifying a solution that delivered the maximum social and economic benefits, satisfied the traders, offered continued food security, delivered the desired jobs in LBBD [London Borough of Barking & Dagenham] and provided a solution that was affordable to CoL. Specifically, this included completion of further work on alternative options, including formal negotiations with market tenants.”

In its next paragraph, the report details a previous compensation package agreed with the Smithfield traders (SMTA) back in 2022. This, the report says, was to recompense the Smithfield traders for moving out of the Poultry Market by August 2023, provide vacant possession when the theoretical 10b Dagenham Dock building was ready for them, and an agreement to “take up leases” there.

Of that previous compensation package, the report says “CoL approved payment of £30m to SMTA on signing the deal” plus “£70m on vacant possession of the Poultry Market, with the remaining £15m to be paid as a relocation package” after the traders had taken up their Dagenham Dock leases. The City had also agreed to pay “reasonable professional fees capped at £850k”.

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The first two elements of the agreement, totalling £100 million to the STMA, had already been paid, the report continued. And the £15 million for taking leases at Dagenham would have to follow, even though the leases were not going to be signed, because, in the words of the report, “none of the conditions not to pay over the funds have been satisfied”. Grant’s report went on to summarise “tenant negotiations” that had begun on 31 July 2024 and continued “in parallel” with consideration of the “various options” for their futures.

Eventually, the “various options” were narrowed down to two: Billingsgate and Smithfield staying where they were, or the traders agreeing a compensation package to “go their own way”. The City, says the document, “made it clear that the option of a light refurbishment, giving the [existing] buildings another 10-15 years was suboptimal”. In plain English, that means doing the old buildings up a bit would, though “deliverable and affordable”, be a poor use of the money needed for the job and would not, of course, release the sites for the housing and cultural uses the City had in mind for them.

The document then provides some candid insights into how discussions about the “demarketisation” compensation option proceeded. “Both sets of traders opened with excessive requests,” it says: “Smithfield at £275m (plus the £15m from the previous SMTA agreement) and Billingsgate at £300m”.

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Several months of “intense negotiations” followed, says the document, resulting in the compensation requests being brought down to “more manageable and affordable levels”. A “best and final offer” from the City is recommended as “the lowest figure that can be achieved”. The size of that “best and final offer” is not revealed.

The report then goes through the “various options”. Dagenham Dock is dispensed with in just three paragraphs, one of them stating that the idea of moving “between 40% and 70% of tenants” there had been explored and dismissed.

Moving just over half of the Billingsgate and Smithfield traders up to Leyton, to share space with New Spitalfields, was looked at and turned down. So was accommodating some of them at New Covent Garden, the “New” of its name bearing witness to a previous relocation of a famous London wholesale market from its original home, in its case south of the Thames to Nine Elms. Many paragraphs, covering four pages, were devoted to why “in-situ” options for Billingsgate and Smithfield, leaving them on their current sites, were not recommended either.

That left the preferred, two-part solution: to “de-marketise” and pay the meat and fish traders compensation. To “de-marketise” would be to enable the Grade II listed Central Market, East and West, to be “sensitively reimagined” as “an international cultural and commercial destination”, remove “continued disruption” to the new London Museum works and “release the site for a considerable capital receipt” (translation: a lot of money). The report also said that the recommended option would – through a complicated formula for assessing profitability – reduce the risk of Parliament imposing “a more punitive compensation package” when it considered the new Private Bill.

In return for the compensation package, the traders would be “legally locked into” writing letters in support of the Private Bill, giving evidence to that effect in Parliament if necessary and supporting a “food study analysis”, which would consider London’s long term food security. They would also be locked in to receiving their compensation in three parts, the first upon signing the legal agreement with the City, the second upon the Private Bill getting Royal Assent and the third upon moving out.

In a table, a projected “overall financial position” should the compensation package be agreed and the Smithfield, Billingsgate and Dagenham Dock sites sold, is set out. It foresees a potential profit for the City of £189 million from a 64 per cent share of the proceeds from Billingsgate minus the fish traders’ compensation.

For Smithfield, it anticipates a loss of £90 million once compensation is subtracted from the sale price. The value of the Dagenham Dock site is put at ultimately £125 million. Overall, with the outstanding £15 million for the Smithfield traders thrown in, the City would be £11 million worse off if the £210 million “sunk costs” were taken into account and £199 million to the good if they weren’t.

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Looked at another way, not refurbishing the markets would mean not spending £609 million, and ending the MCP would mean not spending £637 million on moving the markets to the Dagenham Dock site and instead getting a potential £125 million for selling it.

That “combined position”, the report says, would mean well over £700 million being available that otherwise would not have been. This, it continues, “will negate the need to sell valuable investment assets and help restore the City’s Estate financial sustainability”.

Which brings us back to what Chris Hayward said about selling the family silver. It also brings us back to the question to which different people have different answers. Should things have been done differently?

THE FUTURE AND THE PAST

If you haven’t been to Smithfield or Billingsgate markets in the very early morning, make sure you do before they’ve gone. In each case, you will witness integral, largely nocturnal, parts of London’s workings as a human society – mechanisms of production, distribution, consumption and exchange that convey food from far-off fields and seas to the city’s shops, restaurants and homes. You can set free your historical imagination. You can also see the case for change.

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The Billingsgate building’s exterior has a look that might have turned heads at the time it went up, but hasn’t aged with style. The interior is more engaging: a cavernous cold store with wet floors and individual trader pitches wall-to-wall. It is ethnically various, its fare, multicultural, ranging from eel and haddock to exotic species from overseas.

Famously, East Asian customers are well-represented. A cosy café in the corner offers an array of fish dishes with eggs. The morning I went, customers included a family group, maybe South Korean, devouring a lavish spread, a black couple with a small child and a couple of white traders in their white coats. Outside, gulls perched on portacabins. The HSBC megalith soared. In the Canary Wharf tradition, finding the way in on foot, having travelling by Docklands Light Railway to Poplar, was a complex puzzle to solve.

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Smithfield, which I visited earlier on the same morning, is, in appearance, both grander and more tired. Ancient and modern abut in this ancient space, the Elizabeth line station adjoining, the Charterhouse next door. City bollards vie for your attention with a littering of Lime bikes. On the streets, big white vans and more big white coats. Horace Jones’s gracious arches and ironwork endure, but there’s a weariness about the scene that isn’t only due to the early hour.

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Venturing into one of the “buyer’s walk” retail arcades, I saw the unit of G. Lawrence (Wholesale Meats) Ltd and 20 more. Women seated in little kiosks tapped nimbly at adding machines. A brown man accompanied by a small brown boy conversed at length with a white man behind the counter, wearing a white coat and matching net trilby. I put his age at around 70. Once he’d finished with his other customers, I asked for a lump of shrink-wrapped Scotch beef to be weighed.

“I thought I’d better pay a visit before you all disappear,” I ventured.

“If it ever happens,” he replied, jotting the price of my purchase on a pad. He knocked a couple of quid off. “The City of London, they don’t know what day of the week it is.”

“So, if I come back in five years, you might still be here?”

“That is debatable,” he said.

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Does the City know what day it is? Chris Hayward has made his position clear: the Dagenham Dock plan became too expensive for the City and less and less attractive to the Billingsgate and Smithfield traders; the traders wanted better premises, but a make-do-and-mend approach to their existing ones didn’t enthuse anyone involved and, as Hayward put when we met, “their position matured as time went on”; Theresa Grant had explored all the options and concluded that evicting the traders with their blessing, secured with the help of financial compensation and a promise to help them relocate their businesses under their own steam, was the best path to take.

The decision’s critics, though, remain unimpressed. There is, for example, annoyance over the way the way the enigmatic 10b design was ultimately presented to the traders – that characterisation of it as a “two-storey” or “stacked” proposition, when, in the minds of some of those frustrated by the dropping of the project, floorspace above ground level would, in line with traders’ wishes, only ever have been for administrative functions or the food school, not for trading activity. This framing of the building design choice is seen as an example of, as one person put it, “the case for cancellation” being “clearly designed to lead to a single outcome” based on an over-simplified depiction of the project’s possibilities and finances.

I put that point to Hayward, who responded with a different characterisation. “She’s a highly respected chief executive,” he said of Grant. “She was hired by us to negotiate, right? In the sense that she was working for the corporation, how could she be entirely impartial? Her job was to negotiate an agreement that was acceptable to the two parties.” He went on: “I didn’t want a scenario where she negotiated a deal that the traders said they’d been pushed into, forced into, not given any options etcetera. That was never the purpose, so I think her role in this has been hugely helpful to both parties. And I think the market traders will tell you the same thing.”

Another complaint, not made by all, is that the past leadership of the City’s capital buildings board (like the markets board, formerly called a committee), had an outsize influence, undermining the Dagenham scheme. Its current membership includes Hayward and James Tumbridge and Philip Woodhouse, a champion of the Dagenham scheme. Its job description says it is “responsible for the management and oversight of major capital building projects” and it was, until two years ago, chaired by businessman Sir Michael Snyder, who served as the City’s policy and resources chair from 2003 until 2008.

The more caustic critics of Hayward’s leadership of the City as a whole like to point out that Snyder and Hayward are both freemasons, though only some of those I’ve spoken to who have regrets about what has happened with the markets have aired suspicions that Snyder had a negative or too-strong influence on Hayward. One has made a point of stating the opposite.

There is greater unanimity, though, about the final balance sheet: a historic connection is to be lost and with it, notwithstanding the promise of the new museum at Smithfield, a part of the City’s historic stewardship of Londoners’ common interests; a large amount of money has ended up being paid to the two groups of market traders, essentially, in the end, just for packing up and going away – this after quite a tight hold had been kept on the City purse strings when the re-location appeared to be going ahead.

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But whatever the rights and wrongs, the causes and effects, the “de-marketisation” of the Billingsgate site in Poplar and the Smithfield Central Market building, and the severing of the ancient links between the City and the markets is going to take place. The new Private Bill, backed by the Smithfield Market Tenants’ Association and London Fish Merchants Association, was submitted to Parliament on 27 November, 2024. It had its first House of Commons reading on 22 January and is now approaching the committee stage.

In December, James Tumbridge appeared on television to say that around £300 million of private investment had been provisionally put forward to rescue the Dagenham Dock plan, perhaps with twice as much to come. The hope was that these investors would lease the Dagenham site from the City, which  would help them to, as Tumbridge put it, “oversee and run it properly”. In theory, this would have secured the traders’ future and enabled the benefits to Dagenham and its environs to be delivered, but in the end it didn’t work out.

Then, in February, the report into the food security implications for London of closing the markets in their present form was published. It found “minimal concern regarding potential disruptions to the food supply chain arising from the relocation of the Traders”. The “media and stakeholder engagement plan” Grant advised was also put into effect.

That explains why I got to interview Chris Hayward. But I never spoke to the leaders of the Smithfield and Billingsgate traders, even though the City provided me with contact details for Greg Lawrence and Tony Lyons in the expectation that both would convey to me their satisfaction with the deal. As none of my emails were answered, we must make do with statements already published elsewhere.

Last November, when the City’s big decision was announced, the BBC reported Lyons expressing distress: “When we heard that Dagenham wasn’t going ahead, it was the worst news we have had for years. We thought we were going to be there for hundreds of years, and it got pulled from under our feet.” The Islington Tribune carried quotes from Lawrence: “There’s no one going to be sadder than me, because I’ve been there all my life, since I was 16 and I’m quite emotional about it.” He was, nonetheless, forward looking: “I think it will be better, really…make no mistake, we’re not silly people, we know this is the best for the tenants and I can understand it’s the best for the City as well.”

And, of course, the market traders are not silly – certainly not when it comes to cutting deals. Those who think the City got itself into a position where the traders could negotiate from a position of some strength make such  observations without rancour. “They are traders,” says one. “They’re good at trading. It’s what they do.”

The closing of Smithfield and Billingsgate as City of London markets and their departures from their current sites has been folded into the city’s wider Destination City strategy, which seeks to attract visitors to the Square Mile. The new London Museum is integral to that, while the Billingsgate site, which is in Tower Hamlets, is expected to eventually accommodate up to 4,000 new homes. The City has been keen to stress that large majorities of the traders of both markets have said they want to find ways to stick together, and that a City team is helping them locate potential sites within the M25.

For Chris Hayward, the disposal of the wholesale markets is a component of “a renaissance period” for the City of London, where job numbers have “increased by 25 per cent” since Covid, businesses are “moving back from Canary Wharf” and “we cannot build and develop tall office buildings quickly enough”. For others, the impending end of an era can only be about part the capital’s, indeed the nation’s, soul being lost. Whichever view you take, the story of markets underlines, once again, that London, even in its most timeless respects, is a city always ready move on.

Follow Dave Hill on Bluesky.

OnLondon.co.uk provides unique coverage of the capital’s politics, development and culture with no paywall and no ads. Nearly all its income comes from individual supporters. For £5 a month or £50 a year they receive in-depth newsletters and London event offers. Pay via any Support link on the website or by becoming a paying subscriber to publisher and editor Dave Hill’s Substack.

Categories: Analysis

My Beautiful Laundrette at the Cinema Museum

Yesterday evening, my urbanist friend Denean Rowe and I finally did something we’d been talking about for ages. We put on a special screening of the classic 1985 London movie My Beautiful Laundrette, preceded by a locations walk around the parts of Nine Elms and Vauxhall where it was filmed and set.

About 35 people took part in the walk, which Denean, who has lived in the area all her life, designed and led. And all seats were taken at the fantastic Cinema Museum in Kennington, where the walkers completed their journey with the help of a short ride on a Number 196 at the end.

The whole event, originally Denean’s idea, was, I think, a great success. Eighteen of those who took part were On London supporters, who took up my offer of free tickets.

I’ve wrote a piece back in August about the film, and how it captured both the darkest sides of London in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when it was nothing to see the initials “NF” – for National Front – scrawled on walls, and also glimpses of new freedoms and possibilities emerging in their midst.

The film’s core relationship, a romantic one between two young Londoners, one of them (Johnny, played by Daniel Day-Lewis) a white former bovver boy trying to change his ways, the other (Omar, played by Gordon Warnecke) brown, of Pakistani descent, looking after his ailing dad, was a bold one to portray at that time.

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Watching it again – and on the original 16 millimetre film, too – underlined how big the often hard-won social attitude changes of that era were – and, as mainstream British politicians foment a new period of ethnic and cultural conflict, how important it is to protect them.

Denean’s walk began at the new Battersea Power Station tube station at the end of the Northern line extension in the regenerated Nine Elms. It quickly took us back in time, past housing of different eras and into the narrow Stewarts Road, which is straddled by a railway bridge beneath which Johnny and Omar, old schoolmates, are reunited in the film.

Other Wandsworth housing on the route told a real life story of post-war rebuilding in the form of the 1950s local authority Patmore “garden estate”. Along Wandsworth Road, we stopped to admire the sparkling pink Dirty Laundry. That premises had the same use 40 years ago, and makes a cameo appearance in My Beautiful Laundrette, as Omar, making a success of running the nearby concern belonging to his businessman uncle, considers expanding.

Finally, we came to the site of the laundrette of the film’s title, now occupied by flats close to Vauxhall in the area known as Little Portugal. My Beautiful Laundrette isn’t memorialised there, as it should be. In 2021, a plaque in its honour was installed in Wilcox Road, but it was later removed, apparently because of a problem with condensation. Then came the redevelopment and a plaque has yet to reappear. Maybe that will change.

Then it was on to the Cinema Museum, which I had never been to before. It is brilliant place, packed with movie artefacts and memorabilia, and with a fabulous bar (photo above) adjoining the screening area. A charity based at the old Master’s House buildings, it is run by volunteers and has no public funding. The museum is trying to raise £1 million to buy its home and secure its future. You can make a donation HERE.

Categories: Culture

Julie Hamill: Return of Arthur the parrot – a story of modern London

Posters of a striking, emerald-green, missing parrot with beautiful round eyes began appearing on my feed. His name was Arthur, and something about him seemed to radiate personality. I am always sad when I see a pet is lost, and immediately felt for Arthur’s owners, who I was sure must have been frantic.

I was transported to the time when our family dog, Sandy, went missing in Bellshill, Scotland, during my early childhood. Sandy had soft white curly fur (probably part poodle), pointy pink ears and a sandy-coloured stripe down his back. Our street neighbours joined in the search, calling his name, checking gardens, knocking on doors. In the end, it was my sister, Louise, who trusted her instinct, knocked on the right door and found our beloved pet (he’d been stolen).

Arthur the parrot’s story unfolded decades later in London. He wasn’t stolen, he was startled. One afternoon, a cat jumped on top of his outdoor cage, bending the netting just enough to open a small gap. Terrified, the four-year-old parrot launched himself skyward over the top of the cat and vanished beyond the rooftops.

Christy Zetta King, his owner, was at home at the time. “I was working on my laptop when Arthur was in his outer cage, getting his vitamin D,” she says, when I visit. “It was all over so fast. Before I could react or yell, it was too late. Arthur flew off. I knew he’d be disoriented. Parrots don’t have a homing instinct, like pigeons. He wouldn’t know how to get back. Immediately we went into rescue mode, calling for him loudly, even with a megaphone, as the first thing we taught him was to come to us when called.”

Christy and her partner, Michael Zmahar, like her a successful author from Slovenia, moved to London only two years ago with Arthur and Lexi, their incredibly elderly and wonderfully sprightly 19-year-old “golden something” rescue dog. What happened next surprised them.

“London is nothing like Slovenia,” Christy explains. “There, if you lose a pet it’s just: good luck! But here, everyone helped. People put out seeds and water, texted us, called his name in the streets. Kids rode off on bikes to look for him. We were shocked, in the best way.”

Michael agrees: “Our neighbours on this street are Ukrainian, French, Lebanese, Chinese, Indian — everyone came out. First, they thought, who’s yelling with a megaphone? But then they joined in.”

While the couple scoured the streets and posted online, neighbours spread the word on WhatsApp and Nextdoor. Christy notified parrot-alert groups, and posted flyers on trees. “We received about 100 calls that day,” says Christy. “Arthur was spotted up a tree in the park, then over on Willesden Lane, a mile away.”

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After nearly 48 hours, salvation came from a young Brazilian couple, Liz and Rafa, who lived in a flat five storeys up beside a towering tree. They heard squawking at their window and saw a vivid green bird with red feathers perched about a foot away. They offered him a banana, which he ate. The ever-sociable Arthur eventually climbed on to an arm and was brought inside.

“Rafa and Liz don’t speak a lot of English, so didn’t even know he was missing,” Christy adds. “Arthur is an Eclectus parrot from the Solomon Islands, a special bird, not something you usually see in Willesden! He’s vulnerable to cats, foxes and other birds. Liz had done so much research on parrots, what to feed them, how to behave around them. She contacted the parrot society that I had previously notified. They told her to identify the ring around his leg and ask me for the ID number. Once she knew we were the owners,  she sent a video of him eating the banana. We were so happy our boy was with good people.”

Arthur was soon returned. “He got lost on Saturday afternoon, he was at their flat by 8pm that night, and we were reunited Monday,” Christy says. Meeting Arthur in person, I understand the attachment. He’s great with me, very playful, just as Christy and Michael trained him to be – familiar and friendly with people.

At one point he tries to nibble my earrings before giving me a kiss and sticking his tongue out. He even poses for photos by bending his head from side to side. As well as an ear-splitting loud squawk, he boasts a wide vocabulary in both Slovenian and English, and happily shouts phrases like “Good bird!”, “What’s up?”, “How are you?” and of course, his own name. “He’s such a goof,” Christy laughs.

Michael points out that although people meet him, love him and then want to own a parrot as a pet, they don’t realise the commitment required. “It’s like caring for a five-year-old who could live for 40 years. They’re super smart, demanding and full of personality. People don’t realise the level of work, expense and responsibility.”

I am touched to hear that the search for Arthur also involved one very special neighbour, who was the first to hear him after his escape. “A woman four doors down, who is blind, spends her days listening to birdsong in her garden,” Michael says. “She heard a strange-voiced bird and contacted us. ‘Does your bird call his own name?’ she asked. ‘Yes,’ we replied, ‘that’s him, that’s King Arthur!’”

The ordeal left Christy and Michael with more than relief. “It was stressful, of course,” says Christy, “but also uplifting. We’ve never felt this kind of support anywhere we’ve lived before. London gave us kindness, good energy, protection, and we got Arthur back.”

After another parrot kiss goodbye, I head home. I think of the day Louise brought Sandy home in her arms. I visualised him jogging up our hallway to greet me, his tail wagging, my fingers in his furry curls.

Foll0w Julie Hamill on Instagram. Enjoy Christy and Michael rejoicing in Arthur’s return here. It’s just as well that Arthur wasn’t stolen: very few pets reported stolen in the capital are recovered.

OnLondon.co.uk provides unique coverage of the capital’s politics, development and culture with no paywall and no ads. Nearly all its income comes from individual supporters. For £5 a month or £50 a year they receive in-depth newsletters and London event offers. Pay via any Donate link on the website or by becoming a paying subscriber to publisher and editor Dave Hill’s Substack.

Categories: Culture

Christabel Cooper: If fewer ‘White British’ means a nation in decline, why is London so successful?

In the last few weeks, several high-profile commentators have expressed apocalyptic concerns about the fall in the percentage of “White British” people in the UK. In the Daily Telegraph, Professor Matt Goodwin claimed “the white British will become a minority group in the UK by the year 2063”. Conservative MP Neil O’Brien wrote (also in the Telegraph) that “Britain is heading for utter oblivion”, in part because of high migration and consequent rapid demographic change.

They are fond of citing startling statistics from London to back up their dystopian claims. O’Brien, for example, notes that in Greater London, only a third of private renters are White British. In the Standard, David Goodhart stated that “just over one in five school children are white British”.

What is curious about this is that if you are going to argue that a lack of “White British” people is destroying Britain, pointing to London, the region of the UK which is both the richest and the most tolerant part of the country, is a pretty odd choice.

Take productivity. London remains the most economically productive region in the UK. In 2023, output per hour in the capital was 28.5 per cent higher than the UK average and significantly above every other part of the country. Were ethnic diversity a drag on economic output, this situation would be difficult to explain.

In fact, many of the city’s key sectors – from finance, to tech, to hospitality – are powered by migrant labour. A 2017 PwC report estimated that each migrant worker contributes an additional £46,000 in Gross Value Added to London’s economy per year. With about 1.8 million non-UK-born workers, this translates into around £83 billion annually – around 22 per cent of the city’s economic output.

Education tells a similar story. Inner London schools, notorious for low achievement and disorder in the 1980s, are now among the best-performing in the country. This turnaround occurred as the city’s schools became increasingly ethnically diverse. Today, school students in London, many of them from low-income or immigrant backgrounds, routinely outperform their peers elsewhere.

Researchers point to targeted investment (such as the London Challenge) and high-quality leadership, but also the ambitions of immigrant families, which place a strong emphasis on education. Rather than pulling down standards, demographic change appears to have helped raise them.

Although the city has large ethnic minority populations that could form concentrated enclaves, London is less racially segregated than any major US city and not especially segregated by UK standards either, according to analysis by John Burn-Murdoch for the Financial Times. Surveys show that Londoners – crucially including white Londoners – are more positive about immigration and multiculturalism than residents of less diverse areas. This aligns with social science research showing that proximity to diversity leads to familiarity and tolerance. A 2014 Demos study found that White British people who live in diverse areas are less opposed to immigration and less supportive of far-right parties.

Of course, none of this is to say that London is without problems. High levels of migration have contributed to London’s rising population and therefore become a factor in its housing supply problems and pressures on public services, with many poorer migrant families having high levels of need. However, perceptions that migrants are routinely prioritised over longer-established residents for social housing are mistaken, with borough allocations based on need within a legal framework that encourages a requirement for recipients having been residents for at least two years.

London has not been immune from racially divisive politics: in 2006, the British National Party won 12 council seats in Barking & Dagenham and although they were ousted four years later, some parts of Outer London could be fertile ground for Reform UK in next year’s borough elections. The politics of Tower Hamlets provide another cautionary tale. Lutfur Rahman was re-elected as the borough’s Mayor in 2022 due largely to the continuing support of fellow local Bangladeshi Londoners, despite having served a five-year ban on seeking office after an election court found him to have previously benefited from “corrupt and illegal practices”.

Still, the idea that the rest of the country is about to follow London’s demographic trajectory – and plunge into dramatic social decline as a result – does not hold up. London is a clear outlier: in 2023 around 41 per cent of its residents were born outside the UK, compared to just 13 per cent across England. Goodwin’s claim that the “White British” are on the verge of becoming a minority relies on a particularly narrow and contentious definition – one that excludes anyone with one foreign-born parent. By that logic, both King Charles and Winston Churchill would not count as “White British.”

The more sober reality is that the UK is a patchwork of cities with large migrant populations and varied ethnic backgrounds, which will continue to exist alongside less diverse areas. Meanwhile, the insistence that London is a kind of multicultural hellscape is becoming increasingly unmoored from reality. In his Standard piece, Goodhart claimed: “I heard nobody saying ‘rapid demographic change is nothing to worry about, just look at London’.” But maybe more people should be looking at London. The capital has shown that diversity and change does not have to mean decline. Instead, it can  mean adaptation, ambition and success.

Christabel Cooper is Director of Research at Labour Together. Follow her on Bluesky.

OnLondon.co.uk provides unique coverage of the capital’s politics, development and culture with no paywall and no ads. The vast majority of its income comes from individual supporters, who pay  £5 a month or £50 a year. They receive in return bespoke newsletters, bargain London event offers and much gratitude. Details HERE. Photo: Londoners enjoying Granary Square, King’s Cross,

Categories: Comment

Dave Hill: Keith Prince has seen the writing on Conservatives’ wall

He was arguably not the most Farageist of the group, but Keith Prince always looked one of the more likely of the London Assembly Conservatives to throw in their lot with Reform UK.

He was clearly on the right wing of the party: early last year, for example, he thought it a good idea to book celebrity lout Lee Anderson as star guest at a “gala dinner” on a date that turned out to be inconveniently adjacent to Anderson’s gutter lie that Islamists had “got control” of Sir Sadiq Khan. Anderson defected to Reform soon after. Now, Prince can again be an Anderson fan without any need to hide it.

His local political landscape will have influenced his calculations. As well as representing Havering & Redbridge on the assembly, Prince is a councillor in Havering, which has a unique electoral microclimate.

In the May 2022 borough elections, the Conservatives finished second best to a large group of Residents’ Association candidates, one of whom has since then been the council’s leader. Some backers these hyperlocal non-politicians, who have long been a part of the Havering scene, might like the look of Reform. Maybe some of their representatives do too.

Faragesim has made more inroads in Havering in the past than in any other London borough: in the 2014 borough contests, the UK Independence Party won seven seats. After Bexley, it is perhaps the borough most likely to be won by Reform next year. And last year, a local Tory MP, Julia Lopez, only just held off a Reform challenge. Another, Romford’s uber-Brexiter Andrew Rosindell, survived a 30 per cent vote share drop, as Reform’s candidate took 22 per cent.

In January, Prince stepped down as Havering Tory group leader, reportedly citing “changes in his personal and professional circumstances” for his decision. It seems he thinks he’s seen the writing on the Tory wall – a siren scrawl that says “the future of the Right is Reform”.

Which London Conservatives might follow Prince? It isn’t hard to imagine fellow Havering – and maybe fellow Redbridge – Tories doing so. As for the London Assembly group, it contains two conspicuous Trump Tories in its leader, the perma-catastrophist Susan Hall, and her ally Alessandro Georgiou, who also leads the Conservatives on Labour-run Enfield Council.

In her social media output, as charmless as it is copious, Hall routinely allies herself with figures even further to the Right than Farage, such as “remigration” advocate Rupert Lowe MP and an ethnonationalist, self-styled “free speech” martyr who lately described the far-Right so-called Tommy Robinson, a man with a considerable criminal record, as a “national treasure”.

Hall is, though, seen as a diehard party loyalist. It would be quite a leap for her, a defeated Tory mayoral candidate, to forsake Tory leader Kemi Badenoch, who she succeeded on the assembly in 2017 after Badenoch became an MP, and has described as a mentor.

As for Georgiou, any urge he might have to follow Prince by jumping on the Reform bandwagon – which he’d fit into just as comfortably as Prince or Hall – might be tempered by his own local ambitions. In 2022, against the London trend, the Tories closed the gap on Labour in Enfield, and in a recent exchange of unpleasantries on X/Twitter with current leader Ergin Erbil, Georgiou underlined his longing to replace him.

Giorgiou, like Prince, seems to have identified a danger to his prospects from Reform: following last month’s Unite The Kingdom march, led by Robinson, he recorded a video address in which he declared himself deeply moved by the sight of so many “Brits” processing through central London and attempted, somewhat ambitiously, to portray an almost wholly white occasion as multicultural; after the government’s New Towns taskforce confirmed that it had recommended Green Belt land in Enfield as a site for 21,000 homes, his indignation went Full Faux Winston.

But such performances seem designed to dissuade Enfield voters who’ve previously backed local Tories from peeling off to Reform – thereby splitting the Right vote and potentially thwarting  Georgiou’s quest – rather than a sign that Georgiou thinks his chances would be improved by changing sides. After all, Enfield doesn’t have the same history of Farage-friendliness as Havering. He’s probably better off clinging to the sinking ship.

All this switching and Rule, Britannia positioning is taking place as the Conservatives gather in Manchester for their annual conference. Few are in an upbeat mood. In a despairing LinkedIn post, Kevin Davies, who led Kingston Council from 2014 to 2018, has likened travelling there to attending a funeral. “This is the first time I have gone to a conference not understanding what the point is,” he writes.

Davies has intimate experienced of the Tory decline in London. At the end of his four years in charge there, during which the EU referendum took place, his party was routed in Kingston by the Liberal Democrats, losing 19 seats and being reduced to an opposition group of just nine. In 2022, it fell further still, winning just three seats.

Do the Tories in London – or anywhere else – have any sort of realistic plan for reversing their decline? Perhaps they will emerge from next May’s highly unpredictable borough contests better off than they are now, given Labour’s national unpopularity.

But their response to Reform so far, even in the cosmopolitan capital, has been to imitate more than challenge it. And all the while, Reform has continued to take their voters and recruit their politicians. Maybe they shouldn’t set their hopes too high.

Follow Dave Hill on Bluesky. Photo from Keith Prince X/Twitter feed.

OnLondon.co.uk provides unique coverage of the capital’s politics, development and culture with no paywall and no ads. Nearly all its income comes from individual supporters. For £5 a month or £50 a year they receive in-depth newsletters and London event offers. Pay via any Support link on the website or by becoming a paying subscriber to publisher and editor Dave Hill’s Substack.

Categories: Comment

Dave Hill: Labour cannot afford to feed anti-London grievance

The Greens have popped by again, dropping another leaflet through my letterbox. It features three young women informing Hackney voters that Labour, whose candidates the borough habitually prefers, does not deserve their support any more. The local Labour council, the trio of Greens stress, is preparing to make big budget cuts, forced on it by a Labour government that is “continuing the Conservative legacy”. There are, they assert, “credible alternatives” to this.

Of course, they don’t go into detail. But the broad message is clear. So is a ward-level activist focus on community safety, litter-picking and “listening”. The Greens have a gap to close if they are to unseat Labour from my Hackney ward next May: in 2022, their best-placed candidate finished fourth with 881 votes, around half the total of the lowest-placed of the three Labour winners. They face comparable challenges in several other wards in Hackney and in other London boroughs. You can tell, though, that they fancy their chances.

Why wouldn’t they? Labour’s national unpopularity, which continues to inspire astonishment and glee, has been reflected in London by-election results. Polls say the party is still the capital’s most popular. Yet, even, so it has been losing votes to an array of challengers, varying from borough to borough, seat to seat. The next local elections are still seven months away, but if Labour retains control of the 21 boroughs out of 32 it won in 2022, it will be a surprise. The party could sustain heavy losses. Have its national leaders spotted that? If so, do they care?

London voters could not be blamed for thinking Camden’s own Sir Keir Starmer has forsaken the capital, or at least concluded that it suits him to look as if he has. His party conference speech, though accomplished and refreshing in several ways, reprised his Chancellor’s spending review endorsement of tendentious complaints that London has long had preferential treatment.

With “one clear voice”, the PM declared in Liverpool, Labour must say “we should invest more outside of London and the South East”. Thanks for nothing, London’s million-and-a-half Labour voters might respond, that 43 per cent who provided Starmer with a third of his general election majority. In an address that upbraided the politics of grievance, Labour’s leader saw fit to indulge one of the most destructive.

Depressingly, this won him a big cheer – depressingly, yet unsurprisingly. The populist myth that Londoners live the high life at (in particular) honest northern folk’s expense is deeply entrenched and fiercely clung to when challenged.

Yet the reality is that of the £218.4 billion raised in tax revenue in London in 2022/23 (the most recent year for which figures are available), £43.6 billion were spent elsewhere. London and Londoners subside almost all the rest of the UK, and have done so for years. It is a bedrock truth of national life – a truth the national government dares not speak.

The electoral calculation appears clear: most of the Labour parliamentary seats under the greatest threat are outside London, and the biggest threat in most of them comes from Reform UK, whose admirers detest everything London stands for and lots of things they (wrongly) think it does. Therefore, pointedly agreeing that London should come bottom of the spending pecking order might seem a bright idea.

There are, though, two big reasons why Starmer needs to realise that it isn’t.

One is about self-preservation. At some point, Labour needs to stop bleeding support at an alarming rate and at least consolidate at a level of local election losses that is normal for a party in national power. If it doesn’t, Starmer’s leadership will be loudly questioned again and a sense of crisis about his administration may become impossible to shift. Imagine the reaction if even London, so often called “a Labour city”, goes off the party in a spectacular way.

The other reason concerns the economy. Do I have to repeat again that London provides almost a quarter of all UK economic output and remains by far the biggest engine of UK economic power? Do I have to point out once more that London is the goose that lays the country’s golden eggs, and that starving the goose means fewer eggs for all? And then we have the local government Fair Funding Review, with its alarming lack of fairness to most boroughs. The perils that poses for Labour are not lost on Hackney’s Greens. They won’t be lost on Londoners, either.

Feeding anti-London feelings might seem like canny politics. But in the end, neither Labour nor the country can afford it.

Follow Dave Hill on Bluesky.

OnLondon.co.uk provides unique coverage of the capital’s politics, development and culture with no paywall and no ads. Nearly all its income comes from individual supporters. For £5 a month or £50 a year they receive in-depth newsletters and London event offers. Pay via any Support link on the website or by becoming a paying subscriber to publisher and editor Dave Hill’s Substack.

Categories: Comment

Rob Blackie: Panorama showed that the Met needs a London re-set

The Metropolitan Police needs to be changed urgently. This week’s Panorama programme, showing officers’ racism and hatred of women at Charing Cross police station, is just the latest exposure of its failings.

Over two years ago, Sir Sadiq Khan said he had “already acted to put the Met on a path of far-reaching systematic and cultural reform”. Yet we keep seeing unacceptable behaviour. And on everything from recruiting more woman officers to screening new recruits better, the Met is failing to improve fast enough.

Baroness Louise Casey suggested in her 2023 report into the Met that it would need to be restructured if it couldn’t make progress within two years. That time is up.

If we’re going to get the Met that London deserves, we need it to focus exclusively on London’s priorities. That means relieving the service of its various national responsibilities, leaving its leaders free to concentrate on bringing about the major reforms of culture and attitudes Casey called for.

At present, senior Met officers have an almost impossible job, juggling different roles. They have high-risk national tasks. They protect the royal family and diplomats. They also work to stop terrorism across the country. At the same time is fulfilling these specialist duties, they are expected to tackle crime of every type in the capital.

No other major country has this structure. The US has the FBI for national crimes. Its secret service protects diplomats and the President. State and local police handle everything else. But in London, our police chiefs are forced to split their attention between terrorists and phone snatchers.

Here’s a simple solution: reset the Met by focusing it entirely on policing London, investigating and solving crime in communities across the city.  As the Met’s national functions are moved to national bodies, greater powers over crime and policing should be devolved to London’s mayoralty.

This could be done quickly, with only simple legislative measures needed to cement the following changes:

  1. Transfer national and international police duties from the Met to the National Crime Agency.
  2. Allow the National Crime Agency to fulfil new duties and give it arresting powers. This could be as simple as a statement saying that the NCA would have the same powers in the areas it was to assume responsibility for as the Met has at present.
  3. Move management responsibility for the Metropolitan Commissioner from the Home Secretary to the Mayor of London, replacing the current system where the Commissioner has two bosses.
  4. Move Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection and Royal and Special Protection out of the Met into independent groups reporting to the Home Secretary.

These types of change already have wide support, including from the Police Foundation, my Liberal Democrat colleague and former police officer, Wendy Chamberlain MP, and serving police officers I talked to while running for Mayor last year.

Inevitably, people would argue against this for the sorts of reasons often given for not implementing change.

We would hear that it would be costly. It won’t be, though, because only existing duties would need to be funded. Instead, there would be more focused management by people who would know what their job was.

We would hear that the Met would lose funding, a claim made by people who either cynically misunderstand the plan or are unable to add up.

We would hear that such changes would be a distraction from reform. But we’ve seen the Mayor’s current reforms of the Met fail.

Finally, we would hear that the proposal were too radical and need more consideration. Yet we already know that our system is failing, and that if we don’t reform it the people of London will continue to suffer.

Another benefit of bringing the Met back to its core London functions might be inspiring the next generation of police officers. The reforms I’m proposing could again make good, old-fashioned community policing a job young people dream of having, and help fix the Met’s recruitment crisis.

We owe it to the people of London to have an effective police service. We owe it to the many hard working police officers who are trying to protect Londoners every day. It’s time to get going and reset the Met.

Rob Blackie was the Liberal Democrat candidate for Mayor of London in 2024. Follow him on Bluesky. Image from the Panorama investigation, which can be watched in full here.

OnLondon.co.uk provides unique coverage of the capital’s politics, development and culture with no paywall and no ads. Nearly all its income comes from individual supporters. For £5 a month or £50 a year they receive in-depth newsletters and London event offers. Pay via any Support link on the website or by becoming a paying subscriber to publisher and editor Dave Hill’s Substack.

Categories: Comment

Richard Derecki: London must act to reduce youth unemployment

The labour market situation for young people in London today is among the toughest since the fallout from the 2008 financial crisis.

There are just over 900,000 16-24 year-olds in London. Many are in education, some on apprenticeships, some working part or full-time. But increasing numbers are struggling to establish themselves in the labour market, piling financial pressure on them and their families and undermining their sense of self-worth.

Long-standing difficulties with the Office for National Statistics (ONS) labour force survey have affected analysts’ attempts to get a clear picture of what is going on in the labour market. However, various data sources make it apparent that conditions for young people trying to find work have worsened.

Nationally, the unemployment rate has risen from 10.7 per cent in 2022 to 14.0 per cent in 2024. There has been a slight easing of this in the past couple of quarters, but the 2024 annual youth unemployment rate was the highest for ten years. And in London it is significantly higher.

Unhelpfully, there is a paucity of granular London data. However, Trust for London quotes a youth unemployment figure of 14.6 per cent at the end of 2023 and the NOMIS dataset from the ONS has a figure from pooled date for April 2024-March 2025 of 17 per cent.

These unemployment figures are worrying, and a further labour market indicator, that of inactivity rates, compounds the concern. ONS data show that, nationally, the economic inactivity rate for young people (that is, those not able to work or not seeking it ) is running at over 30 per cent and has been on a rising trend for many years.

Economic inactivity reflects certain choices – for example, if a young person chooses to stay in education. But since 2023, this measure has been rising for young people out of full-time education. The current number is around the highest level recored since the current series began in 1992.

A recent House of Commons briefing paper on youth unemployment notes how, since the start of the pandemic, there has been an increase in the number of 16-to-24-year-olds who are economically inactive due to long-term illness. This has been driven largely by an increase in the number of young people with a mental health condition.

There is a well-worn narrative that seeks to explain London’s high youth unemployment rate: employers are looking for ever higher skill levels; there’s a misalignment between the school curriculum and labour market needs; there’s insufficient investment in further education and a paucity of apprenticeship schemes.

A post-2022 twist comes from the rapid and speculative adoption of AI tools by many firms. This is cutting entry-level jobs in administration, customer services and even software development, and wiping out swathes of graduate entry jobs.

The recruitment site Adzuna reports that entry-level jobs now only account for 25 per cent of the market in the UK — down from 28.9 per cent three years ago – and that the number of job vacancies has declined by 32 per cent since 2022. It also reported Dario Amodei, chief executive of AI company Anthropic, warning that the technology could wipe out half of entry-level jobs in the next five years.

This is in line with research about the US. A recent paper from Stanford University shows how employment has declined for young workers in AI-exposed occupations (they highlight software engineers and customer service agents). Growth in employment as a whole continues, but for young people it has stagnated.

Those with no toehold in the labour market of any kind are caught in a terrible bind, as entry-level jobs both for those with GCSEs and those with A levels and degrees vanish. These qualification pathways were traditional routes into well-paid and stable careers. But it is not like that anymore.

Chatting to a Sainsbury delivery driver, who is self-funding a coding degree because everyone assured him coding was a gateway skill to a well-paid software developer job, I wondered what he should do. Crack on, double-down and try for a Masters? Take on more debt in the vague hope of landing, eventually, a high paid role or grind out the hours in his current role on a just above minimum wage?

The rapid adoption of AI is changing our labour market in ways we still don’t really understand – and far more quickly than policy can respond. There will be winners as well as losers, but if we do not want to further entrench employment inequalities we need to be braver about finding a way to recycle some of the staggering profits the tech firms are making into specific support for those whose labours they are making redundant.

The recent UK-US tech agreement goes big on new data centres, but these do not, of themselves, generate many jobs beyond the construction phase. They are capital-intensive, not labour-intensive. A temporary one-percent windfall tax on AI-excess profits earned in the UK could provide a ring-fenced fund to support thousands of paid apprenticeships in not just AI and digital sectors, but also those where there are long standing shortages, such as nursing or childcare. In this way, the AI transition can be made more inclusive.

Meanwhile, in the real world, the government’s policy response is to establish a Youth Guarantee so that every young person aged 18 to 21 has access to further learning and help with getting a job or an apprenticeship. Youth guarantee trailblazers have been launched in eight mayoral authorities in England, and London has been awarded £30 million for 2025-26 to invest in locally-led employment support programmes.

London government – the Mayor and London Councils – has long highlighted how youth unemployment disproportionately affects black Londoners, disabled youth, and those with mental health challenges. Its response has tended to focus on tackling the fragmented nature of employment services provision.

As the most recent London Councils report, Breaking Barriers, argued, “there are many bodies operating at the national, London, sub-regional, and borough levels which offer employment and skills services to young Londoners, but the lack of integration and collaboration among them hinders effective support.”

As part of the London response, the Mayor set-up the No Wrong Door programme, which seeks to ensure that whichever route a Londoner chooses, they get directed to the appropriate guidance or training to help them gain employment and boost their skills. This objective is delivered through four sub-regional partnerships, which are the recipients of the trailblazer funding.

One of those partnerships, the Local London integration hub, focuses specifically on adults (19+) with special educational needs or disabilities and on young people with few qualifications, especially those without Level 2 English or maths.

Local London covers nine outer-London boroughs across the eastern side of London. It focuses on support for schools through their career hubs, which provide self-development and career management skills for students and meaningful exchanges with employers.

It also looks to support young people by capturing their voices through youth summits, so that interventions are more closely aligned to young people’s concerns. The team is helping to develop a core offer that all young people in London should be able to access through interactions with their own dedicated youth frontline advisor, though future funding for this resource-heavy initiative is not yet secured.

Through its engagement with local businesses, Local London found that many SMEs can be overwhelmed with applications when they advertise a vacant role. Without the resources to efficiently manage the process, they can come to rely on word of mouth and people they know when choosing who to take on. This compounds the problems of those with low levels of social capital.

Caroline Kandaya, who leads on the integration hub at Local London, would like to see more direct intervention to support firms with taking initial steps to create and recruit young people for new roles.

Kickstart, the Covid-era employment support scheme for young people, was widely criticised for being overly bureaucratic and inflexible, but Caroline argues that the level of financial support – paying 100 per cent of the age-relevant National Minimum Wage, National Insurance and pension contributions for a 25-hour week for six months – was crucial in mitigating the costs of employing someone in a situation where margins are tight across the firm.

The integration hubs have the potential to address long-standing failings in the functioning of London’s labour market. But they need much bolder levels of investment and less prescription. London government has long argued for greater flexibility over the use of the apprenticeship levy and for some control over the underspends, so that resources can be brought together.

Moves to provide London with an integrated funding settlement, which will include adult skills and employment support and be multi-year, should be the catalyst for amplifying the work of the hubs.

There is momentum behind them. But to really push on, they need the finances to develop their tech infrastructure, to employ well-resourced youth advisors and –  wouldn’t this be something? – to have the ability to pilot a Kickstart-like programme of financial support for local small and medium enterprises. to take on a youngster who needs a helping hand into the labour market.

All the ingredients are there to allow the hubs to make decisive interventions. It is time to bring them all together.

Follow Richard Derecki on Bluesky. Photo from Local London.

OnLondon.co.uk provides unique coverage of the capital’s politics, development and culture with no paywall and no ads. Nearly all its income comes from individual supporters. For £5 a month or £50 a year they receive in-depth newsletters and London event offers. Pay via any Support link on the website or by becoming a paying subscriber to publisher and editor Dave Hill’s Substack.

Categories: Comment

Government confirms Crews Hill in Enfield and Thamesmead riverside picked as New Town locations

Two locations in London have been officially recommended for the building of New Towns, with the potential to provide more than 35,000 new homes between them. The newly-released findings of the government’s New Towns Taskforce confirm that the Crews Hill area in Enfield and riverside land at Thamesmead in Greenwich are among 12 sites thought suitable for New Towns across England, as first reported by On London earlier this month.

The taskforce report says the Crews Hill site has the potential to provide around 21,000 new homes, bearing out suggestions in recent days that it was being earmarked for significantly more the the government’s goal of at least 10,000 for each New Town. The Thamesmead site too, has been judged able to substantially exceed the minimum target, with the report saying 15,000 homes could be built there.

The report’s definition of the Crews Hill location also encompasses the adjacent area collectively dubbed Chase Park in what it calls a “green” and “expanded development” with “an ambition for 50% of those homes to be affordable, helping to address London’s acute housing need”. This effectively combines the two Green Belt sites Enfield Council has long had ambitions to build on and has included in its new Local Plan proposals, which have been undergoing their statutory examination in public.

As Enfield Dispatch editor James Cracknell has documented for On London, Enfield envisaged only 5,500 homes for the Crews Hill area itself (top picture) and 3,700 for Chase Park, a total of only 9,200. The taskforce report say it would bring together and expand the two sites and that “without new town designation it is unlikely that development will be brought forward at such a scale” or with the speed the government seeks.

The much smaller, 100 hectare (247 acre) Thamesmead Waterfront location (pictured below) is described in the report as “an opportunity which has gone unrealised for decades” to renew the original promise of the mid-1960s Thamesmead development, which is undergoing a long term regeneration. It notes a “long-standing desire to connect the Waterfront site to the London transport network” and says New Town status “could be an opportunity to finally realise this historic vision”.

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It identifies as a “key challenge” Transport for London securing “confirmed government support” for its proposed extension of the Docklands Light Railway to the south side of the Thames through Beckton to its north. Sir Sadiq Khan made known his disappointment with the exclusion of commitment government funding for the project from Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s spending review in June. However, transport secretary Heidi Alexander later noted that “substantial work” had been done on the plans and would continue to work with TfL and City Hall to finalise a business case by the autumn.

Follow Dave Hill on Bluesky

OnLondon.co.uk provides unique coverage of the capital’s politics, development and culture with no paywall and no ads. Nearly all its income comes from individual supporters. For £5 a month or £50 a year they receive in-depth newsletters and London event offers. Pay via any Support link on the website or by becoming a paying subscriber to publisher and editor Dave Hill’s Substack.

Categories: News

Sadiq Khan deputy hints at major policy shift to increase homebuilding

As London’s housing crisis deepens, pressure is mounting on Sir Sadiq Khan to reduce his 35 per cent affordable housing requirement for new private developments to help revive home building in the capital, now at a record low.

Could a dramatic City Hall announcement be imminent? That was certainly the expectation among development professionals at the Shaping London’s Future conference held by leading planning chambers Landmark last week “Everyone is waiting for the GLA (Greater London Authority) announcement,” said one attendee as the session began.

That made Jules Pipe, Sir Sadiq’s deputy for planning and overseer of the London Plan, the Mayor’s long-term blueprint for development in the capital, something of a star attraction. And while participants may have been disappointed not to hear specific pledges from him, Pipe suggested there isn’t long to wait. There was an “increasing sense of urgency” as development ground to a halt, he said, with City Hall working with government on “immediate measures”.

Speakers set out the now familiar cocktail of challenges which, according to Tom Dobson of planning consultancy Quod, meant that in the coming period “most developers aren’t going to be building very much”. Soaring costs, high inflation and interest rates and falling sales, coupled with the pressures of new building safety rules and the demand to provide high levels of affordable housing, new infrastructure and other public provision, were all making schemes increasingly unviable.

Two recent schemes were highlighted, the 1,000 home Stag Brewery development in Mortlake and the 52-storey, 434 home Cuba Street scheme at Canary Wharf, where developers had successfully argued for large reductions in an initial 30 per cent affordable home provision, to enable works to proceed. Meanwhile, as Pipe himself pointed out, no work has begun on thousands of potential homes in the capital for which there is planning permission because of similar viability concerns.

With homelessness increasing, the situation is all the more acute because affordable housing built by private developers under “Section 106” agreements with boroughs, in return for planning permission, makes up more than half of the total affordable supply in the city.

More homes in London were also critical for UK economic growth, said Landmark KC Rupert Warren, while his colleague Zack Simons KC pointed out that with the capital allocated almost one in four of new homes in government plans, there would be “no hope” of reaching that target “unless London does its bit”. The Mayor’s London Plan, added fellow KC Russell Harris, must “become a delivery machine…because if it doesn’t, no-one else will”.

“I’m very alive to the reality of development in the current climate,” said Pipe. “We recognise the viability challenge, and the Mayor is serious about kick-starting development in London.” Short-term measures that might initially focus on helping unlock stalled sites and “make those permissions a reality” were in train, he said.

Pipe added that viability challenges were not all due to City Hall and borough planning rules and other regulations. Wider economic pressures were in play, and more investment in transport – particularly City Hall’s top three proposals, for the Bakerloo line and Docklands Light Railway extensions and the new West London orbital line – was vital for meeting the city’s 10-year 880,000 home target.

But he also accepted that for potential new development what had been a flagship, and initially successful, Khan policy, offering a “fast track” through the planning process in return for 35 per cent affordable housing, was no longer delivering. And changes brought in by City Hall at the end of last year, designed to speed up delivery by allowing more flexibility on the type of affordable housing provided, had “not been enough”.

The Mayor would now be “increasingly active” in exercising his power to “call in” major planning applications and take over decision-making from the borough in order to push schemes through, Pipe promised. But beyond that, what could the emergency City Hall guidance, which is now clearly expected – perhaps in the next few days, according to some observers – look like?

Pushing that 35 per cent threshold down is the main demand, with viability expert James Brierley, from the Newmark consultancy putting his money on a reduction to 20 per cent. “Developers want to build, and schemes should provide what they can and maximise the amount of affordable housing, recognising that affordable delivery is the government focus,” he said. “But we need a bit of pragmatism and realism.”

Simons highlighted what he said was the “biggest constraint” on housebuilding in London, its extensive Green Belt, covering 22 per cent of the city’s land area. The government’s changes to planning rules allowing some release of Green Belt land, alongside strict affordable quotas, was a “once in a generation” opportunity to get building, he said, and urged developers to “strike while the iron is hot”.

Follow Charles Wright on Bluesky. Photo: New homes at Brent Cross Town.

OnLondon.co.uk provides unique coverage of the capital’s politics, development and culture with no paywall and no ads. Nearly all its income comes from individual supporters. For £5 a month or £50 a year they receive in-depth newsletters and London event offers. Pay via any Support link on the website or by becoming a paying subscriber to publisher and editor Dave Hill’s Substack.

Categories: News