Honorific-Prefix: | Councillor |
Andrew Boff | |
Honorific-Suffix: | AM |
Office: | Chair of the London Assembly |
Deputy: | Onkar Sahota Len Duvall |
Term Start: | 4 May 2023 |
Predecessor: | Onkar Sahota |
Term Start1: | May 2021 |
Term End1: | May 2022 |
Deputy1: | Keith Prince |
Predecessor1: | Navin Shah |
Successor1: | Onkar Sahota |
Office2: | Deputy Chair of the London Assembly |
Term Start2: | May 2022 |
Term End2: | 4 May 2023 |
Predecessor2: | Keith Prince |
Successor2: | Onkar Sahota |
Office3: | Leader of the Conservative Party in the London Assembly |
Term Start3: | June 2012 |
Term End3: | October 2015 |
Predecessor3: | James Cleverly |
Successor3: | Gareth Bacon |
Office4: | Member of the London Assembly for Londonwide |
Assembly4: | London |
Term Start4: | 1 May 2008 |
Birth Date: | 14 April 1958 |
Birth Place: | Uxbridge, Middlesex, England |
Nationality: | British |
Party: | Conservative |
Residence: | Barking Riverside |
Partner: | Gareth Carey |
Occupation: | Politician |
Profession: | IT consultant |
Andrew Boff (born 14 April 1958) is a British politician who has been Chair of the London Assembly since 2023, and previously from 2021 to 2022. A member of the Conservative Party, he has served as a London-wide Assembly Member (AM) since the 2008 election. Boff served as Leader of the Conservatives in the London Assembly from June 2012 to October 2015.
Andrew Boff was a supporter of the "Yes! To fairer votes" campaign in the 2011 UK Alternative Vote referendum. He was the Conservative representative at a "Yes!" event in London on 3 May 2011. Boff has unsuccessfully sought to become the Conservative candidate for Mayor of London on six occasions, most recently failing to gain the nomination for the 2024 election.
Born in Uxbridge[1] in 1958 and active in politics since the 1970s, Boff was a Young Conservative branch founder whilst still at school; in 1976 he proposed the legalisation of cannabis at a Young Conservative national conference. His mother Elsie was already a councillor when he was elected a councillor in Hillingdon in 1982. He later served as Leader of the Council between 1990 and 1992.[2] In 1992, he stepped down to stand for Parliament, defending the marginal Hornsey and Wood Green constituency. He lost the seat to Labour's Barbara Roche with 39.2% of the vote.
Boff stood in the safe Labour seat of London South Inner in the 1994 election to the European Parliament. He was placed seventh on the Conservative list in London in the 1999 European Parliament election. He failed to be elected both times.[3]
Boff became known in London politics after he contested the Conservative nomination for the London mayoral elections in 2000, 2004 and 2008. He came second in 2000 behind Steven Norris. He came second again in 2008. In summer 2018, Boff launched another campaign to be the Conservative candidate for Mayor of London in 2021. He was shortlisted along with Joy Morrissey and fellow London Assembly Member Shaun Bailey. Boff finished once again in second place with 35% of first round votes, an increase of 31 percentage points on his run for the nomination in 2015 for the 2016 election.
Boff was placed first on the Conservative top-up list for the London Assembly in 2008, comfortably winning a seat. He was re-elected in 2012, 2016 and 2021. He ran for the chairmanship of the assembly in 2010, with the backing of the eleven Conservative members, but lost to Liberal Democrat Dee Doocey, who received the backing of the fourteen other members, including Richard Barnbrook.[4] After his first re-election to the London Assembly, Boff was elected as the GLA Conservative Group Leader. He was succeeded by Gareth Bacon in October 2015.
In September 2015, Boff called for a managed street prostitution zone to be set up in East London in order to protect sex workers from harm.[5]
In 2019, Boff became Chairman of the Confirmation Hearings Committee and the Planning Committee.[6] In May 2021, he was elected Chairman of the London Assembly. In May 2022, he became Deputy Chairman of the London Assembly.
He has stood for office numerous times in Hackney, where he lived. He received the Conservative nomination for the elections in 2002 and 2006 to elect the Mayor of Hackney, but came second both times. He was the Conservatives' London Assembly candidate for the North East constituency in 2004, but came third, behind the candidates from both Labour and the Liberal Democrats.[7]
He achieved success in Hackney in 2005, when he won the supposedly safe Labour seat of Queensbridge in a council by-election, before losing it at the 2006 Hackney Council election, albeit with a vote tripled from the previous borough election.
Boff stood for Mayor of Hackney for a third time in 2010. A booklet containing election statements from every candidate except him was distributed to every voter in the borough. It excluded Boff owing to the council's confusion over whether the statements he made about the cost of the mayoralty were legally admissible.[8] By the time they decided that they were, it was too late to print, and the council compounded the problem by telling voters who enquired that Boff was not running.[9] In the contest, Boff fell to third place, behind the Labour incumbent and the Liberal Democrats.
Boff unsuccessfully stood for the ward of Thames at the 2014 Barking and Dagenham elections[10] and for the ward of Longbridge at the 2018 elections.[11] He unsuccessfully stood again for the Thames ward at a by-election in May 2021. He stood unsuccessfully for the ward of Thames View at the 2022 elections.[12]
On 3 October 2023, Boff was swiftly marched out of the Conservative Party Conference by police after vocally expressing his disapproval of a speech by Home Secretary Suella Braverman, which he reportedly referred to as a "homophobic rant" and "tripe".[13] [14]
He is an information technology consultant.[15]
Boff is openly gay. He has stated that his 2005 same-sex civil partnership was "register number 000001",[16] although it was not the first finalised because the 15-day waiting period was waived for a terminally ill man in Worthing.[17]
Boff is a libertarian,[18] and an outspoken proponent of direct democracy, having prominently publicised the issue at London mayoral hustings and on ConservativeHome.[19]
An atheist and a humanist, Boff is a member of Humanists UK.[20] He helped to launch the Conservative Humanist Association, a Conservative Party ginger group, at an event in London in 2008.[21] [22]
He was involved with the successful reinvigoration of Hackney's Broadway Market in the early 2000s. He also produced a free monthly local magazine for the E8 postcode area.
On 10 June 2019, Boff ran into a burning tower block in Barking Riverside to help people escape a fire that had broken out.[23]