The Financial Times Calls The City Of London Council Undemocratic: This Local Authority Will Remain That Way Until Westminster Passes Legislation To Abolish Its Business Vote

The City operates an idiosyncratic system of “corporate democracy”. At best it is flawed, at worst a recipe for abuse. A connected problem is the scant choice of candidates. For every councillor position, there are just 1.3 candidates on average, radically fewer than in London’s 32 local boroughs. The aldermanic voting system is particularly open to manipulation. An old acquaintance and former Lord Mayor once told me that one explanation for the City’s sometimes reactionary instincts is a “shadow hanging over the whole structure” of the corporation’s supposedly democratic governance, Freemasonry. Close to a third of councillors are declared masons, including the chairs of nearly all the major committees. Three-quarters of Lord Mayors over the past century have been masons.

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City Of London Planning Chair Shravan Joshi’s Register Of Interests & Public Perceptions Of Probity

In February 2023 Shravan Joshi, the chair of the City of London planning committee, supported an application from the Migration Museum for a new development at 65 Crutched Friars. In October 2023, Shravan Joshi’s wife Mira Joshi began working for the Migration Museum. Although Shravan Joshi has updated his register of interests at least twice since his wife took up her new employment – in December 2023 and again in February 2024 – the planning chair has so far failed to include her work at the Migration Museum, whose planning application he supported.

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