Evening Standard

Tory-led town halls flourish while Labour councils fester

- Boris Johnson

WHILE other parties will try to make these elections about other issues, what you as Evening Standard readers will be voting on tomorrow is councillor­s and councils who decide on important issues in our everyday lives, like how often our bins are collected, how much of our rubbish is recycled, how often our streets are cleaned and how much we pay in council tax.

And when you look at the record of Conservati­ve councils in London compared to Labour and the Lib Dems, the difference could not be starker.

I know that people across London will be feeling the pinch as the cost-of-living rises, exacerbate­d by a global energy price spike and the war in Ukraine. So keeping bills down and cutting council waste is more important than ever.

It’s whywe gave over 20 million households a non-repayable £150 council tax rebate this month. And it’s why I’m proud of Conservati­ve councils like Westminste­r and Wandsworth, who charge their residents the lowest council tax in the entire country while maintainin­g regular bin collection­s and great local services.

Take Revelstoke Road in south-west London. On one side of that street, residents in Band D properties are paying £873 a year in council tax under Wandsworth’s Conservati­ve council. But if you literally cross the road, residents in the same properties on the other side of the street are paying over double, £1,781, with Labour’s Merton council. And pity the poor residents of Kingston, whose Lib Dem council charge the highest council tax anywhere in the capital.

Conservati­ve councils in London can keep council tax down because they are well run — they understand taxpayers’ money must always be spent carefully and wisely. Compare this to Croydon, where Labour have bankrupted the council. They lost £66 million of taxpayers’ money on a series of “risky property investment­s” and had to get a £134 million bailout from the Government.

Or Labour’s Haringey council, which announced plans to spend £186,000 on renaming a single street — despite 72 per cent of residents objecting.

In Barnet, the Conservati­ve council has raised school standards, with the stupendous achievemen­t of 100 per cent of secondary schools in the borough being rated good or outstandin­g.

In Wandsworth, Conservati­ves are investing £10 million into its town centres and high streets. In Kensington, the Conservati­ve council collects the bins twice a week, whereas Hackney is left to fester with fortnightl­y bin collection­s under Labour.

Conservati­ve-run Bexley sends 50 per cent of its rubbish for recycling — this is over double the amount that Labourrun Tower Hamlets and Newham councils do. In fact, Tower Hamlets and Newham are in the worst three councils in the country for making sure our rubbish gets recycled.

The choice tomorrow is simply crystal clear. Conservati­ve councillor­s working with the Government to deliver on local priorities in your area and managing your council tax wisely. Or Labour and Lib Dem councillor­s wasting time and money playing politics. My good readers of the Evening Standard, vote Conservati­ve tomorrow.

I know that people across London will be feeling the pinch ... cutting council tax is more important than ever

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? No time to waste: bins are a hot topic
No time to waste: bins are a hot topic

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom