Conservative Conference: Boris Johnson’s Speech

Unsurprisingly, Mayor Johnson’s speech at the Conservative Party Conference today focused heavily on London Transport.

The full speech can be found here. Key extracts are repeated below, with edits for political points and non-Transport sections. Perhaps unsurprisingly, whilst he talked extensively about the current Tube Strike extensively, the manifesto promise to conclude a “no-strike deal” fails to get a mention.

I want to speak directly to the three million, people who use the London underground network, every day and the first and most important, thing to say is that I deeply regret, the inconvenience you are suffering as a result, of this strike. I say to the leaders of the unions that, this gesture is nakedly and blatantly political, that it has nothing to do with health and safety, or improving the terms and conditions of work, of their members. And I say to our legislators at Westminster, that it can not be right, that a ballot can lead to strike action when less than half the union members take part.

It can not be right that 3,000 people should be able, to hold the city to ransom, stop people getting to work, and to jeopardise the economic recovery, when the measures we are taking to reform, ticket offices are an inevitable, consequence of the success of the, automatic oystercard system, when some ticket offices are selling, fewer than ten tickets an hour, and when we are able to make these changes, with no compulsory redundancies, with no loss of earnings, and with no station unstaffed at any time.

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We will get London moving because we must get, London moving, because London is the motor of the UK economy, and that is exactly the point, that I make to the Treasury, If you come to City Hall I can show you the physical, evidence of the cuts we have been making over the last, two years, a whole Marie Celeste floor of deserted desks, waiting to be rented out to another agency.

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I can not and will not recommend that this country, should embark on a programme of cuts to, London’s basic transport infrastructure – the buses, the railways, the Tube, that would damage the ability of this country, to compete internationally, and to generate jobs for decades to come,

When you look at a, London bus, you are looking at seat fabric from Huddersfield, and windows from Runcorn, and destination blinds from Manchester, with bodywork and chassis assembled all over, the country, from Falkirk to Guilford to Scarborough, to Leeds to Rotherham to Blackburn, to Ballymena, and when you look at the tube railway, you see rails that are made in Scunthorpe, where there are 350 jobs, and conductor rail from Chard in Somerset where there, are 180 jobs, concrete sleepers from Sandiacre in Derbyshire, and 800 people working on signalling at, Chippenham in Wiltshire, and ballast for railtrack quarried in Yorkshire, and stockpiled in Wellingborough.

There are 60 jobs making timber sleepers at Boston in Lincolnshire, the constituency of my old friend and colleague, John Hayes, and I hope that my old chum will join me, with all his redoubtable campaigning fire, and fight for London transport, and I hope we will be joined by the people of Derby, where we are making our new air conditioned trains, and by the people of Crewe where rail parts are, manufactured, and by the people of Coventry and Portsmouth and, Worthing.

What do we have in Worthing? We have the congestion charge correspondence unit, and if that body is not popular anywhere else, it is popular in Worthing, and I hope that every MP and citizen of these, towns and cities around Britain will join me, in supporting London’s transport budgets, not just because they produce
jobs across the UK, but because a London where people can move, cheaply and easily across the biggest and greatest city, in Europe is indispensable, for the success of the whole UK economy,

It is not just that London exports £20 billion in tax, to the rest of the UK, London is responsible for a third of the UK exports of services, There would be no insurance industry in Norwich, if it was not for London. There would be no financial services industry in, Edinburgh, and great international law and accountancy firms, would have no offices in Birmingham, if they did not have offices in London, and that is why I will stick up for the city of which I am, mayor[.]

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We are pioneering clean, green technology, with more electric cars already than any, other city in Europe, electric or zero-carbon taxis now promised by both, leading manufacturers, and we have an incredible vision for a post-Olympic, London in which we harness the Olympic investments, to drive improvements across East London, starting with green investment zone at the Royal Docks, assisted with new river crossings, perhaps even including a cable car, which we have decided to name in honour of the sage, of Twickenham, Vince Cable, and in which, I hope he will come with me one day, so that we can look out at the City and Canary wharf, and brood on their importance to the UK economy.

I will defend the importance of financial services to, London and the UK, even when I am the last politician in the UK willing to do so, but that defence would be easier, if they lent more to struggling businesses, if they showed some restraint in their pay, and if they made some greater collective sign, of their commitment to wider society, because in tough times, when budgets are being cut, it is absolutely vital that these people show, greater awareness of the difficulties of those who, are less well off.

That is why we are proud of the 24 hour freedom pass, that we introduced and that helps so many people on low incomes, and concessions for war veterans and young people, and that is why we are so proud of the things we are doing to improve the quality of life, for everyone, planting trees, improving urban realm, putting in bicycles[.]

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So I say to my friends in government, I am proud to be standing here speaking for the first time, to a Conservative party conference in power, and I say to my friends in Birmingham and Manchester and Leeds, and all the other compartments of the train or the skilift, you pick your metaphor, that are powered by the London economy, let’s defeat the union militants, let’s confound the doomsayers and the gloomadon poppers, let’s continue our work of creating the best big city on earth to live in, and let’s keep London moving and let’s keep the, great London economy motoring for the good of the whole UK.

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