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‘Apparent bias’ revisited in Jenrick case

The Times reported on 27 May: “The housing secretary unlawfully approved a property development of a billionaire tycoon who once donated to the Conservative Party.”

The underlying facts, so far as they are known, are mundane. A company, Northern & Shell (NS) sought planning permission for the redevelopment of the Westferry Printworks by Canary Wharf to provide 1,500 homes. The local authority, Tower Hamlets Borough Council, failed to reach a decision on the application, and the failure was appealed to the Planning Inspectorate. It decided the appeal would be determined by the secretary of state. To resolve the appeal, a public enquiry was held, which resulted in a planning inspector’s report to the secretary of state recommending that the application be refused on the footing that it would damage views of Tower Bridge, and did not provide the maximum reasonable amount of affordable housing.

Despite that report, in January the secretary of state, Robert Jenrick, decided the appeal in NS’s favour. He held that the inspector’s concerns were outweighed by the public benefits of the plans, including the overall provision of housing.

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