Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
Thursday 10 July 2025 5:45 am  |  Updated:  Wednesday 09 July 2025 10:52 am

Here’s how failing TfL can restore confidence in our graffiti-riddled Tube

By: James Ford

Add as a preferred source on Google

Sky-high pay and bonuses, PR gaffes, and a failure to tackle graffiti and fare dodging suggest that TfL is losing touch with its customers, writes James Ford

Last week was bad news week for Transport for London (TfL). Poor old Andy Lord, the beleaguered transport commissioner, started the week by explicitly denying that a lengthy delay in introducing the Piccadilly line’s long awaited £3bn fleet of new trains was because the trains were too big for the tunnels. This was followed by the publication of TfL’s annual accounts revealing a dramatic increase in top salaries at TfL, with Mr Lord’s own salary rising £115,000 (to £639,164) in just a year. Then, later in the week, Mr Lord used an appearance in front of the London Assembly to accuse the ‘graffiti vigilantes’ (as the small band of volunteers that have taken to cleaning trains on the Bakerloo line have been labelled) of spraying the graffiti themselves, just so they could clean it off. Whilst we might expect an ill-tempered, personal response from our notoriously thin-skinned Mayor, this was an unexpectedly testy statement from a senior public official.

It might be tempting to blame TfL’s communications team for chronic ineptitude in allowing all three of these embarrassing news stories to run in the same week. (Indeed, if any of the TfL press officers are amongst the 2,200 staff that now earn salaries of over £100k a year they are certainly overpaid and should probably consider their position). However, the problem here is not just poor news management. It arguably speaks to a bloated bureaucracy that has become either deaf to – or indifferent about – public opinion.

Falling customer satisfaction

Transport for London has been profoundly embarrassed by have-a-go heroes in recent weeks. First, Robert Jenrick’s efforts to confront flagrant fare dodgers on the tube went viral. Then videos began to surface of the ‘graffiti vigilantes’ revealing the parlous levels of cleanliness on the Bakerloo and Central lines. The ‘graffiti vigilantes’ have clearly connected with the public and media alike. The Daily Express went so far as to declare that “enterprising tube cleaning vigilantes symbolise why we must not give up on Britain” whilst The Telegraph, writing in hyperbolic terms, concluded that “London’s graffiti-riddled corpse is a warning of our apocalyptic future.”

The response from TfL to public concern about fare-dodging and the graffiti epidemic, however, has failed to either provide a practical solution or assuage public concern. Initially, TfL’s communications machine reached for the go-to tool in their PR playbook: they released an avalanche of statistics, trying to bamboozle Londoners into believing that TfL was actually delivering Stakhanovite-like levels of industry and success in fighting fare dodgers and vandals alike. 

If, as reported, Londoners are set to see above-inflation fare raises every year until the end of the decade, then they will demand that their money is going to be used to address the issues that matter to them, not to pay bloated salaries. The steady erosion of customer satisfaction that has taken place since Sadiq Khan took office – from 86 per cent in 2016/17 to 78 per cent in 2022/23 – will have to be reversed. 

Every one of the 78 TfL staff earning more than the Prime Minister should don overalls and spend a day cleaning graffiti off trains

The policy solution to tackle the apparent culture of failure at TfL seems obvious: a stronger link between pay and performance across TfL but particularly amongst the top ranks. (If TfL bosses think they will be more generously rewarded for their poor performance in the private sector, good luck to them). However, a technocratic solution such as this alone will not fix flagging public confidence in TfL. A more public act of contrition is required. And I have a modest proposal: every one of the 78 TfL staff earning more than the Prime Minister should don overalls and spend a day cleaning graffiti off trains. The rest of the 2,200 TfL staff on six-figure salaries should probably don stab vests and put in a shift as revenue protection officers tackling fare evasion. Unless TfL is able to demonstrate that it is on the side of put-upon Londoners, it will find it increasingly hard to retain public confidence or get a hearing when it has genuinely good news to share.  

James Ford is a public affairs consultant and former advisor on transport policy to then mayor of London Boris Johnson

Read more

TfL dispel concerns over Queen’s tennis final tube havoc

Without specific context from the article, Im unable to generate an accurate alt text. Could you provide more details from...

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Opinion

Categories

  • Opinion

People & Organisations

  • grafitti
  • London Mayor Sadiq Khan
  • Looking for growth
  • Sadiq Khan
  • TFL
  • Transport for London
  • Tube

Trending Articles

  • Burnham tax plans spark investor rush to bank capital gains

  • Brewdog chief executive quits after only one year

  • Nothing fails to file accounts months after dissolution threat

  • UK ‘no longer a serious place’ says Hedge fund boss after losing £200m tax battle

  • Cruyff turn: Starmer allows pubs to stay open for England World Cup game

More from City PM

  • TfL dispel concerns over Queen’s tennis final tube havoc

    Sport Business
    Without specific context from the article, Im unable to generate an accurate alt text. Could you provide more details from...
  • Fideres Study Finds TfL Fare Zones Disproportionately Burden Ethnic Minority Commuters

    Business Wire
  • London’s heatwave is a boon for Lime bikes

    Transport & Infrastructure
    Lime faces growing scrutiny over its safety record.
  • Uber slams £340m London cabbie case as ‘completely unfounded’

    Tech
    Shares in Uber tumbled more than five per cent in pre-market trading as earnings missed analyst expectations.
  • Why are so many people abandoning sex toys on the Tube?

    Opinion
    Abandoned doll on London Tube seat holding City PM newspaper, capturing urban life and public transport atmosphere
  • KPMG report on AI found riddled with AI hallucinations

    Big Four
    KPMG hit with a new financial sanction
  • Give me home Euros over World Cup, but is it really worth £557m of taxpayers’ money?

    Sport Business
    Business professionals discussing strategy in a modern office, highlighting teamwork and collaboration in a corporate setting
  • For all their charm, digital banks still leave me tearing my hair out

    Opinion
    Digital bank interface showing user-friendly dashboard with financial analytics and transaction history on a modern screen

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy