OnLondon

Is Sadiq Khan ‘introducing a £5.50 Outer London Tax’ as Tory candidate Shaun Bailey claims? No, he (still) isn’t

Screenshot 2021 02 09 at 07.06.46

Screenshot 2021 02 09 at 07.06.46

Last month, Shaun Bailey, the Conservative candidate for London Mayor, claimed that Labour incumbent Sadiq Khan is “introducing a £5.50 commuter tax”. It wasn’t true. What Bailey called a “commuter tax” was not and is not about to be brought in by the current Mayor, might very well never be brought in, would not cost most motorists £5.50 if it was and – please take note – would not be paid by Londoners at all.

Bailey was deliberately misrepresenting what is at this stage a purely theoretical Greater London Boundary Charge, which is one idea for raising money – an estimated £500 million a year – put forward to the government by Transport for London as part of the latest negotiations about future funding for the capital’s transport authority.

Now, Bailey has taken to being even more untruthful about the Boundary Charge idea. On Twitter he writes: “Sadiq Khan is raising the cost of living for families, businesses and commuters by introducing a £5.50 Outer London Tax” and “As Mayor, I’ll scrap this tax on day one”.

Bailey’s claim is false from top to bottom.

A Boundary Charge is apparently not even the Mayor’s favoured option for bringing in an annual extra half a billion. As he recently told the London Assembly – in the presence of Bailey, who is an Assembly Member – he would prefer that sum to accrue from the capital being allowed to retain the Vehicle Excise Duty (VED) the government raises from London vehicle-owners each year, rather than it being spent on roads everywhere in the country except London, as is presently the case.

In having that preference, the Mayor enjoys the backing of Bailey’s fellow Tory AM Keith Prince and politicians from other parties, who share the view that VED should be devolved. Prince fears that a Boundary Charge – quite an old idea, previously included in the 2012 manifesto of Liberal Democrat mayoral candidate Brian Paddick – could have a detrimental effect on businesses in towns just inside the boundary, such as Romford in his constituency. Khan has expressed some sympathy.

More recently, even as negotiations between his department and TfL were taking place, transport secretary Grant Shapps publicly turned his nose up at the Boundary Charge idea, saying, “We can’t have a situation where a devolved administration in one place pins the cost on people who live elsewhere,” and characterising this as “taxation without representation”.

It is unclear how that statement can be reconciled with people from anywhere from Penzance to Kilmarnock being required to pay the Congestion Charge if they enter the Central London zone or why Southampton City Council can charge Londoners for using Itchen Bridge. But it is plain enough that Shapps doesn’t care for the Boundary Charge idea (by the way, in a similar spirit of constructive engagement he’s publicly rubbished VED devolution too).

It seems, then, that a Boundary Charge is not the most popular option for helping TfL become more self-sufficient post-Covid with either Shapps or Khan, who are important rival parties to the negotiating of TfL’s next funding settlement. It might be, therefore, that whatever prospects there ever were of a Boundary Charge being introduced have receded.

Meanwhile, candidate Bailey is putting it about that the Boundary Charge is a done deal which will soon come into effect and apply to people who live in Outer London. It isn’t true.

Photograph from GLA.

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