Ken: Make Olympic VIPs 'get on the bloody Tube'

By

Olympic officials and corporate executives should be forced to get the Tube to the event like everyone else, Ken Livingstone said today.

Speaking at the press gallery lunch in parliament, the Labour mayoral candidate said the proposed VIP lanes for Olympic officials should be cancelled.

Executives from companies such as Coca Cola should "get on the bloody Tube like everyone else", he said.

"It's all bloody McDonalds and Coca Cola execs in VIP lanes, not the athletes", he added.

In a question and answer session with journalists, the candidate also attacked the Evening Standard for repeatedly mentioning his age in its coverage.

"The bloody Evening Standard never mentions me without '66' in brackets," he said.

"I'm doing what bloody Cameron and Osborne want - working longer."

He then joked that his doctor "almost orgasms" because he is so impressed with his health.

The Labour politician also reminisced about when all politicians were "bloody ugly" and warned that the mayoral system had encouraged the creation of a celebrity political culture where too much executive power was concentrated in one figure.

He admitted that he did enjoy the role, however, because "there is no Sir Humphrey there".

Asked about his tax arrangements, which have seen the candidate suffer weeks of negative headlines, he said: "If I don't win I will make more money than if I was mayor.

"I'm an honest and trustworthy individual."

He then mocked Boris Johnson as a TV celebrity who was not intended for politics.

"'Boris should let me be mayor and I'll support him as the permanent host of Have I Got News For You," he said.

"We can both do what we do best."

Political news to your inbox

Fill in your details to receive Politics.co.uk's brand of informed, in-depth and independent coverage of Westminster to your inbox

Hot topics

The Heathrow third runway debate

The UK falls behind in air capacity... but is the flight race worth the effort?

Is Heathrow's third runway the slowest U-turn of all time? Politics.co.uk looks at the issue no government dares to touch.

Britain's great energy debate

Turning up the temperature: Standard of living and action on  climate change don't make easy bedfellows

Can you tackle climate change without ruining our quality of life? Politics.co.uk takes an in-depth look at an issue with no easy solutions.

Opinion Former Events

Bpas event: Working Together for Women

Join bpas for an informal networking event which will provide an opportunity to talk to others looking to work together to effect policy changes to improve women’s lives and hear from speakers who are doing just that.