The mayor said in May that action was needed to combat "the threat posed by the massive increase we are seeing in the number of private-hire vehicles," adding that while London had 25,000 black cabs and 8,000 buses, there were "already over 75,000 minicabs and rising." Uber said at the time that it had 15,000 cars in the British capital.
Black-taxi drivers, who have to pass a grueling test to get a license, have complained that Uber threatens their livelihoods and is lowering service quality. Uber's drivers counter that they provide a cheaper service, and that all cars accept credit- card payment and can be ordered to people's homes.
Sadiq Khan, the Labour party candidate to succeed Johnson as mayor, welcomed the TfL recommendations, saying in a statement that some car firms "don't have the level of checks needed to ensure Londoners' safety." The changes should also create a level playing field between cab operators and help protect the city's "historic taxi trade," he said.
The plans for tougher regulation of minicabs are based on an initial public consultation that ended in June and attracted almost 4,000 responses, TfL said.
A trial involving the head of Uber's French operations and its general manager for Western Europe separately began in Paris today. The men face charges of fraudulent commercial practices, encouraging illegal activity and improper use of personal data. The hearing was postponed to allow analysis and sharing of computer records seized by police.
That's after Uber's offices in Amsterdam were raided for the third time this year Tuesday as part of a criminal probe. Dutch authorities say the company's UberPop service, which is meant to allow a driver and non-driver headed in the same direction to share a car and hence costs without anyone making a profit, amounts to a front for illegal taxi operations. UberPop has already been banned in France, Germany and Belgium.
UberPool uses the standard paid-for Uber service but with two strangers picked up independently sharing the ride.