We know that trust in politics is low.
People are tired of hearing promises that are never kept.
That is why we are setting out specific commitments for our first 100 days in office, so everyone knows exactly what to expect and can hold us to it.
A council has limited powers, but it can still deliver real change locally. These actions focus on what the Council can actually do, using the levers it controls. They are practical, achievable and designed to show visible change from day one:
- Appoint a dedicated Cabinet Member for Enforcement to restore grip and safety across every enforcement function the Council controls.
- Launch targeted enforcement action in hotspots across the city, focusing on the areas where crime, antisocial behaviour and street disorder are worst.
- Begin issuing dockless bike fines, removing bikes, and convene a summit with operators to agree binding parking standards and geofenced no-go zones.
- Commission an immediate review of all major contracts, starting with those inherited from Labour’s £27 million Geoffrey Osborne failure, to stop waste and restore value for money.
- Write to the Mayor demanding the release of postcode-level Oxford Street consultation data. Around 2,700 people responded from across London, yet the Mayor refuses to release the postcode breakdown. Over 1,700 local people have told us they oppose these plans. We will formally oppose any changes that remove accessible bus routes and set aside a dedicated fighting fund in the Council’s budget to mount a legal and public challenge to any scheme imposed without genuine local consent.
- Launch a rapid graffiti removal programme, especially targeting estates, main roads, railway lines and canal towpaths, listed buildings, bridges and heritage areas.
- Begin a comprehensive review of every major street scheme to assess practicality, affordability and impact on residents.
- Be open about performance from the start, so residents can see whether things are improving.
- Review the intermediate and key worker housing offers for teachers, health professionals and police officers who are being priced out of the neighbourhoods they serve.
This is what Real Action looks like.
Not slogans.
Visible change you can see and hold us to.
