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Developing the Oyster Card and the Barclays Cycle Hire scheme for London
Kulveer Singh Ranger, Baron Ranger of Northwood (born 21 February 1975)[1] is an English strategy and communications executive. A board member of the trade association techUK,[2] he has been a member of the House of Lords since 2023.
After Boris Johnson's victory in the 2008 London mayoral election, Johnson selected Ranger to be his director for transport policy. Ranger had previously managed the implementation of the Oyster card with Transport for London in 2003.[5] In 2011, he became Director for Environment and Digital London, with his work resulting in a record fall in bike thefts,[6] in addition to a number of new electric car charging points in London to encourage a higher take up of electric vehicles.[7]
In May 2024, the House of Lords Conduct Committee found that Ranger had drunkenly bullied and harassed two members of parliamentary staff in the House of Commons Strangers' Bar in January 2024. The committee recommended that Ranger be suspended for three weeks and denied access to the bars of the House of Lords for twelve months.[15] Ranger resigned the Conservative whip in the Lords and sat as a non-affiliated peer.[16][17] The committee's recommendations were approved by the House of Lords on 18 July.[18] Following his suspension, the Conservative whip was restored to Ranger on 9 August.[17]
Family and early life
Ranger is a Sikh, born in Hammersmith in West London, the son of Indian parents. His grandfather Gurnam Singh Sahni set up the first British-Asian newspaper, The Punjab Times, in the mid-1960s.[19]