The role of the London Assembly

Swans on the Thames

 

The London Assembly is a watchdog for London and can directly question the Mayor at Assembly meetings. It also carries out its own investigations.

 

The London Assembly considers the Mayor’s strategies and policies, government consultations and investigates topical issues relevant to London and Londoners. People with a serious London-related concern can contact an Assembly Member and ask them to take up and investigate the matter.

 

The London Assembly is made up of 25 Members who are elected by Londoners at the same time as the Mayor. 11 represent the whole of the capital and 14 are elected to represent constituencies – which are made up of two to four London boroughs.


The London Assembly has legal power to hold the Mayor to account. During Mayor's Question Time and full meetings of the London Assembly, it can quiz the Mayor and officials about their wide-ranging responsibilities for services in the capital, including transport, policing, health, housing and emergency planning. It can conduct detailed investigations through committees and investigate issues that matter to Londoners. It can also amend the Mayor’s budget, around £9 billion a year, when two-thirds of them agree to do so. The London Assembly appoints staff of the Greater London Authority (GLA), which carries out the Mayor’s policies.

 

The Assembly represents Londoners on three key organisations: the Metropolitan Police Authority, the London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority and the London Development Agency.

 

In their investigations, the Assembly gathers information on the issue, asks Londoners for their views and calls experts to give their opinions on the topic in question. After investigating, the Assembly publishes a final report and makes recommendations aimed at improving life in London. These recommendations are made to the Mayor, London boroughs, government departments and private-sector companies.

 

For example, the London Assembly carried out the only public inquiry into the response to the London bombings on 7 July 2005, in particular communications on the day, producing a list of 54 recommendations.

 

Committees also often do follow-up work after the publication of a report to monitor progress against the Assembly’s recommendations. The London Assembly and its committees meet in public at City Hall.

London Election on 1 May 2008