Malta Independent

Sadiq Khan scraps London ‘Boris buses’ in latest blow to Boris Johnson’s Mayoral legacy

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London mayor Sadiq Khan has dumped the so called “Boris bus” which was one of the key policies of his predecesso­r’s time as Mayor of London, it has been reported.

The controvers­ial vehicles were a new generation of doubledeck­er Routemaste­rs which Boris Johnson introduced in 2012, shortly after assuming office. The buses were touted as being revolution­ary in decision and cutting emissions.

Mr Johnson spoke of his desire to see 2,000 on London streets by 2020.

However, they cost £350,000 each, compared to a standard £300,000 bus, resulting in criticism that such expense was indefensib­le at a time of severe budget limitation­s. In July of last year, 300 London bus conductors were made redundant as part of plans to save £10m per year from the transport budget.

Transport for London’s business plan reveals the “Boris buses” have now been dropped under new Mayor of London Sadiq Khan. The plan states: “New capital investment will be reduced significan­tly as we discontinu­e purchases of new Routemaste­r buses”, The Guardian reports.

It is understood Mr Khan plans to focus on transport technology which will improve air quality, amid growing concerns over pollution in the capital city.

The news will come as a blow to Mr Johnson amid growing criticism that he failed to leave a significan­t legacy from his tenure as Mayor.

David Cameron’s former director of strategy Steve Hilton has been deeply critical of whether the current foreign secretary managed to leave his mark as Mayor, saying last year: “I honestly struggle to think of what his legacy is...The Mayor of London is basically the person who runs the transport system, and that’s obviously vital, and is there to promote London in a marketing officer sense, and I think Boris has done a great job on both of those.

“But the real legacy of moving London’s transport system forward I think happened with the previous mayor, Ken Livingston­e, with the big moves – the introducti­on of the congestion charge and the Oyster card, and in those two areas of transport and promoting London, it’s really difficult to think of something specific that you could [point] at as being Boris Johnson’s legacy.”

Mr Johnson was elected Mayor of London in May 2008, beating Labour incumbent Ken Livingston­e by 1,168,738 first preference votes to his 1,028,966. He served in the role until May 2016 when he was replaced by Mr Khan in 2016 after deciding not to stand for reelection and to return to Westminste­r politics.

When he introduced his “Boris buses”, Boris Johnson had boasted he had sold all London’s bendy buses to Malta, but these were scrapped as soon as the new Labour government took office and well before Arriva was ousted from Malta’s public transport.

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