Sadiq Khan wins third term as London mayor as Labour deals blow to Sunak’s unpopular Conservatives
05 May 2024 - 18:23
bySachin Ravikumar
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London — Britain’s Labour Party won mayoral polls in London and central England on Saturday, in crushing defeats for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s unpopular Conservatives ahead of a national election due later this year.
While Labour politician Sadiq Khan’s re-election as London mayor was widely expected, Labour also snatched a surprise, narrow victory in the central West Midlands region that is home to Britain’s second-largest city of Birmingham.
The wins are Labour’s latest in local elections to councils and mayoralties and could fuel fresh calls for Sunak to step down.
Opinion polls predicted that Labour will win the next national election, propelling Keir Starmer to power and ending 14 years of Conservative government in Britain. Sunak has said he intends to call a vote in the second half of the year.
Conservative West Midlands mayor Andy Street lost to his Labour opponent Richard Parker. Street’s 37.5% of the vote was eclipsed by 37.8% for Parker, a razor-thin margin translating to 1,508 votes.
Street, who has served as mayor since 2017, ran a campaign emphasising his personal record on investment while downplaying his Conservative affiliation. He publicly disputed Sunak’s decision to scrap the high-speed HS2 rail link from Birmingham to Manchester last year.
Parker had sought to link him to the unpopular national government. “I believe a Labour mayor working with a Labour government will help get Britain’s future back,” Parker said in a speech after the result.
Starmer said the result was beyond Labour’s expectations. “People across the country have had enough of Conservative chaos and decline and voted for change with Labour,” he said in a statement.
Sunak had been counting on getting an electoral boost from recent announcements on defence spending and the progress of his divisive plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.
Khan’s victory in London, his third in a row, came despite some public anger over knife crime and the Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) that charges drivers of older, more polluting vehicles a daily fee.
“It’s been a difficult few months, we faced a campaign of non-stop negativity,” Khan said in a speech after the results showed he had won 43.8% of the vote against 33% for the Conservatives’ candidate, Susan Hall.
“For the last eight years, London has been swimming against the tide of a Tory (Conservative) government and now with a Labour Party that's ready to govern again under Keir Starmer, it’s time for Rishi Sunak to give the public a choice.”
Khan became the first Muslim mayor of the British capital in 2016.
Hall had made scrapping ULEZ a centrepiece of her campaign but the Donald Trump fan made a series of gaffes and faced accusations of racism after being found to have engaged with far-right content online.
In one bright spot for Conservatives, Ben Houchen won re-election as mayor of Tees Valley in northern England on Friday.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Britain’s Labour Party sweeps key mayoral polls
Sadiq Khan wins third term as London mayor as Labour deals blow to Sunak’s unpopular Conservatives
London — Britain’s Labour Party won mayoral polls in London and central England on Saturday, in crushing defeats for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s unpopular Conservatives ahead of a national election due later this year.
While Labour politician Sadiq Khan’s re-election as London mayor was widely expected, Labour also snatched a surprise, narrow victory in the central West Midlands region that is home to Britain’s second-largest city of Birmingham.
The wins are Labour’s latest in local elections to councils and mayoralties and could fuel fresh calls for Sunak to step down.
Opinion polls predicted that Labour will win the next national election, propelling Keir Starmer to power and ending 14 years of Conservative government in Britain. Sunak has said he intends to call a vote in the second half of the year.
Conservative West Midlands mayor Andy Street lost to his Labour opponent Richard Parker. Street’s 37.5% of the vote was eclipsed by 37.8% for Parker, a razor-thin margin translating to 1,508 votes.
Street, who has served as mayor since 2017, ran a campaign emphasising his personal record on investment while downplaying his Conservative affiliation. He publicly disputed Sunak’s decision to scrap the high-speed HS2 rail link from Birmingham to Manchester last year.
Parker had sought to link him to the unpopular national government. “I believe a Labour mayor working with a Labour government will help get Britain’s future back,” Parker said in a speech after the result.
Starmer said the result was beyond Labour’s expectations. “People across the country have had enough of Conservative chaos and decline and voted for change with Labour,” he said in a statement.
Sunak had been counting on getting an electoral boost from recent announcements on defence spending and the progress of his divisive plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.
Khan’s victory in London, his third in a row, came despite some public anger over knife crime and the Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) that charges drivers of older, more polluting vehicles a daily fee.
“It’s been a difficult few months, we faced a campaign of non-stop negativity,” Khan said in a speech after the results showed he had won 43.8% of the vote against 33% for the Conservatives’ candidate, Susan Hall.
“For the last eight years, London has been swimming against the tide of a Tory (Conservative) government and now with a Labour Party that's ready to govern again under Keir Starmer, it’s time for Rishi Sunak to give the public a choice.”
Khan became the first Muslim mayor of the British capital in 2016.
Hall had made scrapping ULEZ a centrepiece of her campaign but the Donald Trump fan made a series of gaffes and faced accusations of racism after being found to have engaged with far-right content online.
In one bright spot for Conservatives, Ben Houchen won re-election as mayor of Tees Valley in northern England on Friday.
Reuters
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