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The London & Partners affair

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Publication type: General

Publication date:

In September 2019, The Sunday Times published an article referring to an investigation it had undertaken, which it said revealed that The Rt Hon Boris Johnson MP failed to declare a series of potential conflicts of interest over a friendship with Jennifer Arcuri during the time he held the office of Mayor of London.

As a result, the GLA Oversight Committee decided there was due cause to investigate the suitability of the GLA's Code of Conduct and the governance processes of L&P. 

Today the Committee has published a report which assesses the evidence the Committee received across sessions with experts on local authority codes of conduct; representatives from L&P; and beneficiaries of L&P's sponsorship and trade missions.  

Whilst the Committee was not legally permitted to investigate whether the Code of Conduct was broken, it did feel that the GLA Code needed strengthening to ensure that any Mayor or Assembly Member should be in no doubt that they should declare non-pecuniary interests such as personal relationships with individuals.

The recommendations include:

  • L&P should address the risk that undue pressure from senior GLA officials, and the Mayor undermines its processes and controls.
  • L&P should promote its services more widely to ensure potential beneficiaries have equal access and that participation is not limited to those with connections to L&P. As part of this L&P should look to expand into other industry sectors.
  • More should be done by L&P to publicise the opportunities for sponsorship monies, including to those involved in trade missions.
  • The review of the Code of Conduct must address non-pecuniary interests as part of the rules and guidance, with a particular focus on ensuring the guidance reduces the risk of misinterpretation of the rules.
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