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Labour's Sadiq Khan wins a second term as London's mayor, beating Conservative rival Shaun Bailey

KingT

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Sadiq Khan the current mayor of London gets a lot of hate. Some for the right reasons and some because of his ethnicity and religion.

He was elected as the Mayor of London and the Far-Right nearly drowned in their own tears. The same site will be seen next year again imo.
Sadiq Khan WILL be re-elected.

The reason I'm making this thread is to see how well it ages.
 
100% if he wants to, Labour are weak are there is no reason to push him out of office and labour will take London 7 days of the week.

eventually he'll angle to become party leader which may throw a spanner in the works.

from an opp pov, libs are weak, and tories have no big london personality who, if the election was held tomorrow could challenge sadiq khan even in a popularity context type thing.

and final point as far as India goes, a lot of london indians are either non-hindu, or hindu latter generational, i dont think they really give a toss about what the indian media has to say about who should be mayor of London.
 
100% if he wants to, Labour are weak are there is no reason to push him out of office and labour will take London 7 days of the week.

eventually he'll angle to become party leader which may throw a spanner in the works.

from an opp pov, libs are weak, and tories have no big london personality who, if the election was held tomorrow could challenge sadiq khan even in a popularity context type thing.

and final point as far as India goes, a lot of london indians are either non-hindu, or hindu latter generational, i dont think they really give a toss about what the indian media has to say about who should be mayor of London.

He's leading by 20+% in the opinion polls. I doubt that's going to change in 5 months
 
he gets hate for the crime increase not because of ethnicity or religion, however he will get elected unless he vacants and wants to become labours head.
 
he gets hate for the crime increase not because of ethnicity or religion, however he will get elected unless he vacants and wants to become labours head.

I said some for the right reasons and some for the wrong. Knife crime falls in the right reasons but his ethnicity makes people see it as a lot worse than it actually is
 
Personally, i think he is useless, crime and knife crime in particular is out of control and all he does is shruggs his shoulders and blames it on police cuts by the tories.

I am a labour man, but surely we can do better than sadiq khan?
And i am not going to vote for him simply because he is a muslim, he has done a poor job in my opinion.
 
I said some for the right reasons and some for the wrong. Knife crime falls in the right reasons but his ethnicity makes people see it as a lot worse than it actually is

this ethnicity issue is blown out of proportions by the katie hopkins and like sitting on twitter and acting like keyboard warriors
 
Personally, i think he is useless, crime and knife crime in particular is out of control and all he does is shruggs his shoulders and blames it on police cuts by the tories.

I am a labour man, but surely we can do better than sadiq khan?
And i am not going to vote for him simply because he is a muslim, he has done a poor job in my opinion.

i dont think tories can put a strong enough leader against him, maybe he did a poor job but he seems to have an open field in the next election.
 
Almost certainly.

https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/1192383843824799744

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="in" dir="ltr">London mayoral voting intention:<br><br>LAB (Sadiq Khan): 45%<br>CON (Shaun Bailey): 23%<br>IND (Rory Stewart): 13%<br>LDEM (Siobhan Benita): 8%<br>GRN (Sian Berry): 7%<br><br>via <a href="https://twitter.com/YouGov?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Yougov</a><a href="https://t.co/303oFs20AZ">https://t.co/303oFs20AZ</a></p>— Britain Elects (@britainelects) <a href="https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/1192383843824799744?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 7, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
They're getting triggered over this little position.
Imagine if Sajid Javed becomes PM in 2028 or maybe even in 2024 :)))
There's a realistic possibility of this actually happening.
 
They're getting triggered over this little position.
Imagine if Sajid Javed becomes PM in 2028 or maybe even in 2024 :)))
There's a realistic possibility of this actually happening.

boris is not stepping down anytime before his two terms of pm are done and hes pretty much expected to sweep the next election too, so sajid will have no chance in 2024
 
London Mayoral Election Poll
November 2019 | Greater London



220px-YouGov_logo-red_July2019.png




Mayor of London first preference vote:

Sadiq Khan: 45% • Shaun Bailey: 23% • Rory Stewart: 13% • Siobhan Benita: 8%


___________________________________________


Mayor of London second preference vote:

Sadiq Khan: 64% • Shaun Bailey: 36%


___________________________________________


EIyv9xrWsAAHQ7E
 
Sadiq Khan should win fairly comfortably.

Bailey is an idiot and his past comments should mean that he shouldn't get elected (worked in PM Johnson's case, but London is a different kettle of fish), although stranger things have happened. However in such a diverse city as London is, he would lose a lot of support based on comments he has made previously.

The other challengers don't really cut it.
 
i dont think tories can put a strong enough leader against him, maybe he did a poor job but he seems to have an open field in the next election.

Probably true as london.is labour centric, i am also a labour man and dont want a tory as major, but i would prefer a better labour candidate.
 
Almost certainly.

https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/1192383843824799744

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="in" dir="ltr">London mayoral voting intention:<br><br>LAB (Sadiq Khan): 45%<br>CON (Shaun Bailey): 23%<br>IND (Rory Stewart): 13%<br>LDEM (Siobhan Benita): 8%<br>GRN (Sian Berry): 7%<br><br>via <a href="https://twitter.com/YouGov?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Yougov</a><a href="https://t.co/303oFs20AZ">https://t.co/303oFs20AZ</a></p>— Britain Elects (@britainelects) <a href="https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/1192383843824799744?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 7, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

rory stewart is like an alternate history arnie, who decided studying history in england was a better way to rebel than bodybuilding in america
 
I like Sadiq Khan. But if Labour do not replace Corbyn after the general election by someone more centre left, I would like labour to keep getting massacred.
 
https://twitter.com/AdamBienkov/status/1237330274192633857

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">New YouGov/QMUL London Mayor poll puts Sadiq Khan on course for big victory in May, almost winning outright in first round.<br><br>Sadiq Khan (Lab): 49% (+4)<br>Shaun Bailey (Con): 24% (+1)<br>Rory Stewart (Ind): 13% (nc)<br><br>Second round: <br><br>Khan: 67%<br>Bailey: 33%<br><br>Changes with November 2019.</p>— Adam Bienkov (@AdamBienkov) <a href="https://twitter.com/AdamBienkov/status/1237330274192633857?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 10, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
https://twitter.com/AdamBienkov/status/1237330274192633857

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">New YouGov/QMUL London Mayor poll puts Sadiq Khan on course for big victory in May, almost winning outright in first round.<br><br>Sadiq Khan (Lab): 49% (+4)<br>Shaun Bailey (Con): 24% (+1)<br>Rory Stewart (Ind): 13% (nc)<br><br>Second round: <br><br>Khan: 67%<br>Bailey: 33%<br><br>Changes with November 2019.</p>— Adam Bienkov (@AdamBienkov) <a href="https://twitter.com/AdamBienkov/status/1237330274192633857?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 10, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Not surprising really. London is overwhelmingly Labour.
 
Sadiq is the best Mayor. Not a Corbynite raving loony left, but a proper moderate!
 
Sadiq or anyone Labour will win. He has been poor not just on crime, but some of his statements around crime and terror have been insensitive. He also lost support with his handling on Uber. But he will still win :-/
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">&#55357;&#56485; Exclusive: Shaun Bailey, the Tory candidate for London mayor, has lost the support of senior party officials and donors.<br><br>Some are keen to see him replaced by a prominent name - such as former chancellor Sajid Javid.<br><br>Latest with <a href="https://twitter.com/GeorgeWParker?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@GeorgeWParker</a> <a href="https://t.co/kAGkRW4yvg">https://t.co/kAGkRW4yvg</a></p>— Sebastian Payne (@SebastianEPayne) <a href="https://twitter.com/SebastianEPayne/status/1270385715742941189?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 9, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
London mayor labels government 'hapless' as capital faces COVID measures

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has branded the government "hapless" over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

He told Labour's virtual conference: "Unfortunately, and it gives me no pleasure to say this, we've all been catastrophically let down by the government.

"If ministers had risen to this moment, as the British public have, then the loss of many lives and much of the economic hardship could have been avoided.

"These times called for a government that could put ideology, dogma and ego aside, and calmly and competently do whatever it takes to save lives and jobs.

"Unfortunately, we got the exact opposite. Just when we required a steady, capable hand on the tiller, we've had a hapless government that keeps on steering us onto the rocks."

His comments come as he presses ministers to extend local restrictions elsewhere in the country to the capital, which he believes may be just "two or three days" behind the hotspots of the North West and North East of England.
 
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has called for additional measures to prevent the spread of coronavirus in the capital as he said the testing system was a "mess".

He told BBC London: "We want additional measures to pre-empt further hospital admissions and deaths and to prevent a second lockdown."

He pointed to cities in the North East of England and in Birmingham as an example and said some things which had been done there could be done in London, including reducing the time bars, pubs and restaurants are open, and making sure events like weddings do not inadvertently lead to an increase in the spread of the virus.

He said testing in London "had been a mess" with contact tracing "collapsing", adding that it appeared patterns of the virus being transmitted were different in the capital to other parts of the country.

Mr Khan also said he hoped to be part of Tuesday's Cobra meeting but had not spoken to the prime minister since the last one on 10 May.
 
In an interview with the Guardian, London Mayor Sadiq Khan says household visits must soon be banned for the capital's nine million residents.

His remarks come after London councils said that London is now on England's coronavirus watchlist - which is expected to be confirmed by Public Health England later.

Khan tells the the newspaper: "It's obviously bad news that London is an area of concern.

"But the good news is that finally the government will pull their finger out and give us additional support."

He said he had lobbied the prime minister for tougher measures in London, saying: "If you go too late, we will already be in a north-east, north-west, Birmingham-type situation. You've got to go early, particular in the absence of testing.

"One of the things that I said to the prime minister is: I think we should be following what's happening around the country and stopping social mixing of households , and I say that with a heavy heart."
 
Sadiq Khan has accused Boris Johnson of lying to MPs after he claimed the capital's mayor had "effectively bankrupted" Transport for London
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">London Mayoral Election Voting Intention:<br><br>Khan (LAB): 50% (+2)<br>Bailey (CON): 28% (=)<br>Porritt (LDM): 10% (-1)<br>Berry (GRN): 10% (+1)<br><br>Via <a href="https://twitter.com/RedfieldWilton?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@RedfieldWilton</a>, 15-17 Oct.<br>Changes w/ 7-8 Sep.<a href="https://t.co/9y2rQQfzwY">https://t.co/9y2rQQfzwY</a></p>— Election Maps UK (@ElectionMapsUK) <a href="https://twitter.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1318866917940203522?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 21, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
London mayor, Sadiq Khan, said his past year had been filled with “anger, frustration and pride” as he fought to tackle the global pandemic and keep Londoners safe.

He was speaking at an “In Conversation” event organised by the Asian Media Group and Eastern Eye.

Over one hour the Labour candidate for mayor spoke about his vision should he be re-elected, and he also answered questions on the pandemic, recovery plans, congestion charge, crime and racism.

“I genuinely think, on 6 May we face the most important election in London’s history.

“We face challenges because of Brexit and the consequences of this awful pandemic. Over last year, more than 18,000 Londoners have lost their lives across the country, and 30,000 in London alone.

“More than 300,000 Londoners have lost their jobs, and more than a million are currently furloughed.

“The furlough schemes end in September, and there’s a real possibility that those who were furloughed, could be made redundant,” Khan told Barnie Choudhury.

“So, if I re-elected as mayor, my focus will be jobs, and making sure City Hall does what they can to protect those who are currently working to support the creation of new jobs.

“We will also help those who lose their jobs to get back into work as soon as possible.”

Khan pointed out that his administration announced measures worth more than £544 million to set up skill development academies in the green, creative, digital, health and social care sectors supporting Londoners to get the skills they need for future proof jobs.

“We set aside £6m to encourage people from the west and across the country for people to come to London safely throughout the summer.

“I am the son of immigrants, son of a bus driver and became the mayor of the greatest city in the world.

“You’ve seen me celebrate with you, irrespective of religion. I always stood for you and I believe diversity is not a weakness, but it’s a strength.

“I’m asking all of those who live in London, who have progressive, liberal and green values to vote for me and make no mistakes. So, I can build the foundation we’ve laid in the first five years,” Khan said.

“I love this job. I love the city. I’ve got cousins in India and Pakistan, Pakistan, and my cousins are an ethnic majority and religious majority. In India, they are an ethnic majority, religious minority, and they say we could have achieved what you achieved in London.

“Why? Because of the London promise, I call them a promise. You work hard, you got a helping hand, you can achieve anything. That’s the story of my dad, and I want to give something back. I want to be that helping hand. Help Londoners have their potential fulfilled.”

While mentioning the mayor job as a 24-7 job, Khan said that he loved the difference he has been able to make over the first five years, and want to carry on ‘being a mirror’ of the greatest city in the world.

The mayor expressed hope that sporting events such as Euro 2020 and tour of Pakistan and New Zealand cricket teams combined with cultural events will give London rapid recovery this summer.

He reaffirmed his campaign promise to bring the Indian Premier League (IPL) to London during the interview.

While mentioning the Covid situation in India, Khan said that they are lobbying with the UK government to assist India, whichever way possible.

“We know the troubles that the people of India are going through while dealing with this virus. I’m sure all of us are showing solidarity with our brothers and sisters in India.

“And we’ll do what we can to support them during these difficult times the virus spreads incredibly quickly, in a very densely populated country.”



Mayor Sadiq Khan on key issues

Pandemic

“Several emotions over the last 14 months. Anger, frustration, heartbreak, pride all those things. I think one of the lessons of this pandemic is going to be centralised democracies isn’t good for responding to crisis.

“When I speak to mayors across the country from Manchester to Liverpool to Birmingham, we think we could have helped the government more had they asked us and let us help them with the health consequences of the pandemic, but the economic consequences as well. Heartbreaking, because many of these deaths were preventable and indeed could not have happened had the government done the right things around personal protection during Covid, test tracing, making sure they follow the advice of experts, had they locked down earlier, listen to the advice of Sage, not doing so many U-turns.

“Pride because of the response of your fellow Londoners and people across the country. Doctors, nurses, shop workers, drivers, teachers many of them of Asian origin, from our faith, took so much risk to serve our community. So, it’s heartbreaking when you see the lives lost. It’s heartbreaking when you realise how many could have been prevented.”

He said that prime minister Boris Johnson, at the moment, is concerned about his legacy.

“The government was falling asleep. It should have realised that the health of individuals is interlinked with the health of the economy, and the government’s failure to follow the advice of, for example, sage, was quite expensive. So, when there’ll be a public inquiry, I will be more than happy to give evidence to that.”

However, he hoped that there will not be another lockdown as long as we continue to progress with the vaccine roll out, but also test trace and also support for those have to have to isolate.

Congestion charge

Sadiq Khan said that the government has forced him to reintroduce the congestion charge to £15, which was suspended during the early periods of the pandemic, when it pumped money into London’s transport authority, TfL.

“When the pandemic began in March, what I did was I lifted congestion charges. From March till June there was no congestion charge, that was my decision. No passengers were using TfL because of the pandemic London did the right thing and stayed at home. Like every other transport authority in the world, we wanted the government to step in and help. The government in June said we will support it but said there are some conditions. You must reintroduce the congestion charge, widen the scope and increase the level. As there was no option I accepted those.

“If I get re-elected, I will say to the government that you can’t impose conditions on London. We know London best. I know many people who are suffering because of these charges. We need to fix the charge, level and time because we know our communities, our economies. When the government wanted to take away free travel for children and over 60, I said no. If I am elected, I can say to the government that I have the mandate to decide what the charges will be.”

Crime

When asked about the crime rates in London, Kahn said that he had invested in police and recruited 1,000 more people into the force and also on young people. He said that he was the first mayor in London who invested more than a billion pound in police, and because of this crime rates have gone down in the city.

Community pharmacies

The mayor was vocal about the service of community pharmacies and pharmacists during the pandemic and urged the government to support them by truly addressing their requirement.

Racism

When asked about racism, he said that he doesn’t want to elaborate on the abuses he faced during his tenure as it may discourage others to enter politics.

Mental health

He also expressed his concerns about the mental health of children during the pandemic and lockdown

https://www.easterneye.biz/exclusiv...-election-in-londons-history-says-sadiq-khan/
 
Sadiq Khan has been a dissapointment. His job first and foremost is to be neutral, but he ended up playing to the SJW gallery.
 
Sadiq Khan has been a dissapointment. His job first and foremost is to be neutral, but he ended up playing to the SJW gallery.

beyond the politics he has been a disappointment as a mayor. ulez was supposed to be his legacy policy, and with the current trends in demographic moves away from city centres the long term utility of that remains uncertain.

the office is so limited, by its nature it is best suited for politicians like livingstone and johnson who werent afraid to push boundaries and not worry too much about their image, its part administrator, part lawmaker, part ambassador.

if im giving him the benefit of the doubt, perhaps hes saving his legacy policies for the second term im pretty sure he will be guaranteed to serve.
 
beyond the politics he has been a disappointment as a mayor. ulez was supposed to be his legacy policy, and with the current trends in demographic moves away from city centres the long term utility of that remains uncertain.

the office is so limited, by its nature it is best suited for politicians like livingstone and johnson who werent afraid to push boundaries and not worry too much about their image, its part administrator, part lawmaker, part ambassador.

if im giving him the benefit of the doubt, perhaps hes saving his legacy policies for the second term im pretty sure he will be guaranteed to serve.

No

As this article makes it clear, as long as torys are in gov. Sadiq will be ineffective

https://www.gq-magazine.co.uk/politics/article/sadiq-khan-mayor
 
On the bright side, Niko is running for Mayor of London as well.
 
I must commend Sadiq Khan who has constantly fought the racists and white collar bullies. Yes he has disappointed on a few fronts but he cannot solely be blamed. If I was him I would not run for election again, but if he is running then he has to be the best man having the experience of the first term and to have learned from his mistakes.
 
One has family roots in Pakistan, the other in Jamaica: the two leading contenders for mayor of multicultural London stand out amid an anguished debate about post-colonialism and race in Britain.

The office formerly held by Prime Minister Boris Johnson oversees a budget of £17 billion ($24 billion, 20 billion euros) along with one of the world's biggest transport networks and city police forces, guaranteeing the mayor national exposure.

a person wearing a suit and tie: Boris Johnson back in 2015 when he was London mayor© Craig Barritt Boris Johnson back in 2015 when he was London mayor

Opinion polls tip the Labour party's Sadiq Khan for a clear win on Thursday, five years after he took over from the Conservative Johnson, becoming Britain's best-known Muslim politician.

"The city back in 2016 chose me to be their mayor so it shows how progressive we are," Khan, the 50-year-old son of a Pakistani bus driver, told AFP.

"I'm really hopeful about the future, because I get to mentor and help some of those coming through the pipeline," he said.

"And there's a new generation of really talented British politicians coming through from different backgrounds, who I think will accelerate the progress in the future."

Khan's main opponent is the Conservative Shaun Bailey, 49, who like him grew up in social housing. Bailey notes that he would become one of Europe's most prominent black politicians if elected.

His grandfather emigrated from Jamaica in the late 1940s, part of the "Windrush" generation of Caribbean migrants who, along with South Asians, did much to rebuild London after World War II.

- 'Surface' change? -

In 2017, revelations that some in the Windrush generation had been illegally deported after living for years in Britain provoked soul-searching about racism.

The debate intensified last year with the "Black Lives Matter" protests as campaigners pressed for a new examination of the country's colonial past.

Bailey, however, is part of a new generation of minority Conservative politicians including finance minister Rishi Sunak and interior minister Priti Patel who play down race in politics.

"People are much more interested in my experience of London, and I have a unique one because of my background, but it's not the only thing I bring to the table," he told AFP.

Johnson's government has been leading an "anti-woke" agenda that seeks harsh new jail terms for vandalising statues of historical figures, following the toppling of a slaver's edifice in the western city of Bristol last year.

A government-commissioned report sparked outrage last month by saying that structural racism does not exist in Britain, prompting Johnson's most senior black adviser to quit.

The Conservatives stand accused by some critics of promoting a few visible faces in their ranks while doing little to address structural issues holding back minorities in education, housing, health and employment.

"On the surface it will look like it's making progress in terms of diversity," commented Dibyesh Anand, head of social sciences at the University of Westminster, stressing that political discourse is still focussed on the white majority.

- Anti-Muslim, anti-Jewish -

In London at least, white Britons are in the minority, making up 45 percent of the city's population in the 2011 census, the lowest figure for any area in Britain.

The Conservatives' 2016 mayoral candidate Zac Goldsmith was accused of Islamophobia against Khan, who won comfortably.

Steven Fielding, professor of political history at the University of Nottingham, said it was "no surprise" that the Conservatives opted for a minority candidate after the controversies that dogged Goldsmith.

"It helps them maybe re-establish themselves as a more kind of liberal, inclusive party," he said.

"So it is evidence of a change of attitude. But how genuine is it in certain instances?"

Labour has also been shadowed by an anti-Semitism cloud under its former national leadership, which hurt its standing among Jewish voters in London at the last general election in December 2019.

But Bailey has himself been dogged by the emergence of years-old remarks questioning multiculturalism and the role of women.

Like other local elections around Britain, the London race was delayed by a year due to the coronavirus pandemic, and the leading candidates have been warring over jobs, housing and knife crime.

One of the minor candidates is TV actor Laurence Fox, running on an anti-woke and libertarian platform that has drawn accusations of racism, which he denies.

Fox is neck and neck in the polls, on a lowly one percent, with "Count Binface", a self-declared intergalactic space warrior.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...eed-minority-mayor-in-polls/ar-BB1gkSL7?pfr=1
 
Sadiq Khan faces an anxious wait to find out if Londoners have re-elected him after Labour sources reported a lower than expected turnout at polling stations.

Around 1,500 local government workers will oversee the counting process from 9am Friday morning but the final result will not be known until Saturday at the earliest.

London Mayoral Election 2021: What powers does the mayor have?
Opinion polls gave Mr Khan a commanding lead over Conservative rival Shaun Bailey although the gap narrowed in recent weeks.

A combination of Covid fears and a lacklustre campaign are likely to be blamed for a low turnout.

“While we are hopeful Londoners have chosen to re-elect Sadiq as their mayor, we remain concerned that turnout combined with voters believing they can afford to put smaller parties first without consequence, means it is not impossible that the Tories sneak over the line”, said a London Labour source.

Vote counting, using electronic machines is taking place at three election hubs - Alexandra Palace, Excel and Olympia

Ballot papers from half of the 14 London Assembly constituencies will be counted on Friday

Votes from the remaining seven will be left untouched until Saturday

Social distancing and other Covid safety measures mean the counts will be far slower than in previous elections.

The winner will serve a three-year term at City Hall after the election scheduled for May 2020 was postponed by the pandemic.

ITV
 
Labour's Sadiq Khan has won a second term as London's mayor, beating Conservative rival Shaun Bailey.

He won 55.2% of the popular vote, after entering a run-off with Mr Bailey when neither managed to secure a majority in the first round of voting.

The former MP became the first Muslim mayor of an EU capital city when he was first elected to the role in 2016.

The Green Party's Sian Berry came third, while the Liberal Democrats' Luisa Porritt was fourth.

The Lib Dems lost their deposit, as Ms Porritt failed to win more than 5% of the vote.

Mr Khan was seen as the favourite throughout the campaign, with some pollsters predicting he would win more than half of the first-round votes.

BBC
 
Labour's Sadiq Khan has won a second term as London's mayor, beating Conservative rival Shaun Bailey.

He won 55.2% of the popular vote, after entering a run-off with Mr Bailey when neither managed to secure a majority in the first round of voting.

The former MP became the first Muslim mayor of an EU capital city when he was first elected to the role in 2016.

Speaking at City Hall, he promised "to strain every sinew to help build a better, brighter future for London".

The Green Party's Sian Berry came third, while the Liberal Democrats' Luisa Porritt was fourth.

The Lib Dems lost their deposit, as Ms Porritt failed to win more than 5% of the vote.

Elsewhere on Saturday evening, Labour lost overall control of Durham county council while the Tories continued to make inroads in its traditional heartlands.

Sadiq Khan: 'I never wanted to be a culture war poster boy'
Mr Khan was seen as the favourite throughout the campaign, with some pollsters predicting he would win more than half of the first-round votes.

The 51-year-old failed to reach his record-setting vote total of 2016, but won with a 228,000-vote majority.

Mr Khan's closest rival was Mr Bailey, who received 44.8% of the first and second-round votes, and increased the Conservative vote share by 1.6%.

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Speaking after the results were announced, Mr Khan said: "I will always be a mayor for all Londoners, working to improve the lives of every single person in this city.

"The results of the elections around the UK shows our country, and even our city, remains deeply divided.

"The scars of Brexit have yet to heal. A crude culture war is pushing us further apart."

Mr Khan continued: "Economic inequality is getting worse both within London and in different parts of our country.

"As we seek to confront the enormity of the challenge ahead, and as we endeavour to rebuild from this pandemic, we must use this moment of national recovery to heal those damaging divisions."

Mr Bailey said he had been "written off" by pollsters, journalists and other politicians, adding: "But Londoners didn't write me off."

He congratulated Mr Khan but said he hoped the re-elected mayor would not "blame everything on the government".

During his tenure as mayor, Mr Khan has had run-ins with the government over coronavirus restrictions and Transport for London's finances.
 
Sad day for London.

Totally inept mayor; couldn't tackle knife crime but did reduce police funding by £40M. Raised Council tax by double digits. TfL almost went bankrupt (before C19). Raised the congestion charge, only to claim it was temporary rise before the mayoral election in the past few days. Increased cycle lanes in areas which resulted in more traffic jams when all the while claimed he was helping the environment; while reducing speeding limits to 20 on A-roads, resulting in more traffic jams! Above all, complete disregard for his cultural heritage.

The list is endless, but was always there for SJWs, in particular when attacking Trump. His radio interviews are more or less a disaster, but nothing tops the drubbing he recieved on Question Time.

He is worse than Boris when he was mayor.
 
Oh, how could I forget, he was totally against Brexit and was hell bent on trying to overturn the result with his Labour chumps.

Sad sad day.
 
Sad day for London.

Totally inept mayor; couldn't tackle knife crime but did reduce police funding by £40M. Raised Council tax by double digits. TfL almost went bankrupt (before C19). Raised the congestion charge, only to claim it was temporary rise before the mayoral election in the past few days. Increased cycle lanes in areas which resulted in more traffic jams when all the while claimed he was helping the environment; while reducing speeding limits to 20 on A-roads, resulting in more traffic jams! Above all, complete disregard for his cultural heritage.

The list is endless, but was always there for SJWs, in particular when attacking Trump. His radio interviews are more or less a disaster, but nothing tops the drubbing he recieved on Question Time.

He is worse than Boris when he was mayor.

To be fair, Westminster pays for 70% of the Met budget so it is a little unfair to blame the Mayor for years of cuts going back to 2012/3.
 
Posts like these the masks slips a little for trolls like Technics. Him and PakLFC. I'm glad I'm not the only who thinks they're imposters.
 
Sad day for London.

Totally inept mayor; couldn't tackle knife crime but did reduce police funding by £40M. Raised Council tax by double digits. TfL almost went bankrupt (before C19). Raised the congestion charge, only to claim it was temporary rise before the mayoral election in the past few days. Increased cycle lanes in areas which resulted in more traffic jams when all the while claimed he was helping the environment; while reducing speeding limits to 20 on A-roads, resulting in more traffic jams! Above all, complete disregard for his cultural heritage.

The list is endless, but was always there for SJWs, in particular when attacking Trump. His radio interviews are more or less a disaster, but nothing tops the drubbing he recieved on Question Time.

He is worse than Boris when he was mayor.

Might as well get used to the cycle lanes and congestion charges, they are rolling out across the country, it's not something that is unique to London, although being a massive wall of concrete in central areas, London probably needs it more than most. As a driver I also find this extremely frustrating, but I can see that the town centres will be better for pedestrianisation.
 
Might as well get used to the cycle lanes and congestion charges, they are rolling out across the country, it's not something that is unique to London, although being a massive wall of concrete in central areas, London probably needs it more than most. As a driver I also find this extremely frustrating, but I can see that the town centres will be better for pedestrianisation.

There has to be a better solution. Maybe just ban private cars in the centre, except cabs. Small vans can do all the deliveries. You don’t need a car in the middle of the Smoke.
 
Might as well get used to the cycle lanes and congestion charges, they are rolling out across the country, it's not something that is unique to London, although being a massive wall of concrete in central areas, London probably needs it more than most. As a driver I also find this extremely frustrating, but I can see that the town centres will be better for pedestrianisation.

Bus lanes, and even 20 MPH roads are not really the issue for me, in fact I am a full supporter of 20 MPH and public transport - but at least create these lanes/limits in the right place.

As a passenger on a bus sometimes, I enjoy bus lanes during office rush hour, but then when the bus cannot move because of the jams created inadvertently by cycle lanes and bottle-necked cars, then it defeats the purpose. The constant start/stop of cars is detrimental on petrol use too!

20 MPH limit around schools I am fully supportive of but not on A Roads, it is totally nonsensical. Town centres pedestrianised is also great on paper, but logistically a nightmare. SK creates these new lanes, not realising the ramifications. And I'm talking zones 5 and 6!

Congestion charge is getting wider and more expensive. Seems to me SK's strategy is to make travelling by car expensive, but the alternative, TfL is getting worse day by day, and is obscenely expensive - 20 quid for a 1 day 1-6 zone travelcard, and continues to rise above the rate of inflation every year.

Now for the classic, these pesky cyclists, have their own lanes but it doesn't stop them from travelling by overground trains, with their cycles!!! I always find cyclists with their push bikes on trains, from Twickenham to Waterloo route. What a joke! Ban cycles on trains outright!

Then the sheer classic of them all, this is a belter, road works. Why on earth have road works during the day? Switch the work to night time in order to minimise disruption - but no, bang on 8 AM the works start, and these seem never ending.

Local councils absolutley mint it in on Parking fines and traffic violations, but are still bust! Where is this money ending up?

I really do miss Ken Livingston.
 
Lets not forget the ring road - the A406 (North) and the worst route in London the A203 (South) - combined make the London Ring road. I'm just recalling my dreaded experience on the route and there's not enough profanity to describe the experience.
 
I live at the other end of the country, when I do make the odd trip to London, I will usually drive to a smaller town where there is some parking, then get an all day Tube pass to get around the city itself. It actually works really well, you can zip around the city quite nicely without too much fuss. I think I far prefer it to getting stuck in traffic jams which can often take half an hour to get from one end of a road to the other.

Public transport has lots of room for improvement, and I think this is the way to go for inner city travel. Heck I would happily travel to London by train and ditch the car altogether if rail travel wasn't so expensive. Obviously there are occasions when the car is the way to go, especially on longer trips, but the goal should be reducing everyday traffic. I think that is the direction we are headed regardless of whether the Mayor is Sadiq Khan or anyone else.
 
I live at the other end of the country, when I do make the odd trip to London, I will usually drive to a smaller town where there is some parking, then get an all day Tube pass to get around the city itself. It actually works really well, you can zip around the city quite nicely without too much fuss. I think I far prefer it to getting stuck in traffic jams which can often take half an hour to get from one end of a road to the other.

Public transport has lots of room for improvement, and I think this is the way to go for inner city travel. Heck I would happily travel to London by train and ditch the car altogether if rail travel wasn't so expensive. Obviously there are occasions when the car is the way to go, especially on longer trips, but the goal should be reducing everyday traffic. I think that is the direction we are headed regardless of whether the Mayor is Sadiq Khan or anyone else.

I also believe central London by tube/train is the sensible choice since the late 80s, but the lack of investment on public transport, in particular train/tube networks hasn't made the experience touch and go, and frankly a gamble. The Mayor is 100% responsible.

The train tracks need upgrading, replacing old skool wooden track dividers with concrete is a must now.

1. Too much Sun and wires are melting, tracks buckling - delays.

2. Too much rain and short circuits kick in, traffic signals down - delays.

3. Too much wind, leaves fall on tracks, yup, delays.

4. Any Snow - game over.

It takes one signal failure outside of Waterloo or Clapham Junction, and that's a quarter of the train service in London, down.

Too many single points of failure, and little or no investment.

The worst part is when TfL drivers hold Londoners to randsom by holding strikes on key dates.

Sick of it.

No wonder Londoners are moving out to better pastures across the country. Now with working from home becoming the norm, this trend will continue.

London is just not worth it anymore.
 
Lets not forget the ring road - the A406 (North) and the worst route in London the A203 (South) - combined make the London Ring road. I'm just recalling my dreaded experience on the route and there's not enough profanity to describe the experience.

South Circular is hideous. Just pure stress.
 
South Circular is hideous. Just pure stress.

Many times i’ve driven on the South circular past midnight thinking traffic would be minimal, well, if the traffic doesn’t stress you, the road works will. Once it was near clear path, and that was on xmas day!

Also I don’t think the day is far when cyclists will be taxed in London etc. Cars are the golden goose, and no doubt when we turn 100% electric, electric vehicles will be taxed too. Pure utter jokes. I hope the Thames barrier fails.
 
Sad day for London.

Totally inept mayor; couldn't tackle knife crime but did reduce police funding by £40M. Raised Council tax by double digits. TfL almost went bankrupt (before C19). Raised the congestion charge, only to claim it was temporary rise before the mayoral election in the past few days. Increased cycle lanes in areas which resulted in more traffic jams when all the while claimed he was helping the environment; while reducing speeding limits to 20 on A-roads, resulting in more traffic jams! Above all, complete disregard for his cultural heritage.

The list is endless, but was always there for SJWs, in particular when attacking Trump. His radio interviews are more or less a disaster, but nothing tops the drubbing he recieved on Question Time.

He is worse than Boris when he was mayor.

No surprise to read this from a Trump fan.
[MENTION=21699]Pakpak[/MENTION] is the mask coming off again?
 
Many times i’ve driven on the South circular past midnight thinking traffic would be minimal, well, if the traffic doesn’t stress you, the road works will. Once it was near clear path, and that was on xmas day!

Also I don’t think the day is far when cyclists will be taxed in London etc. Cars are the golden goose, and no doubt when we turn 100% electric, electric vehicles will be taxed too. Pure utter jokes. I hope the Thames barrier fails.

I think mandatory cyclist insurance is coming. On the South Circular at Wandsworth I sat in fear as they whizzed past me on both sides, threatening my wing mirrors.

Big trucks thundered past a foot away. Then coming into Putney it suddenly opened out into two and then three lanes and the stress melted off. Still ninety minutes from Oval to M25 though, averaging 10 mph in mid-morning.
 
I think mandatory cyclist insurance is coming. On the South Circular at Wandsworth I sat in fear as they whizzed past me on both sides, threatening my wing mirrors.

Big trucks thundered past a foot away. Then coming into Putney it suddenly opened out into two and then three lanes and the stress melted off. Still ninety minutes from Oval to M25 though, averaging 10 mph in mid-morning.

Yup the 3 to 1 lane conversion is as deadly as it gets.

The North circular has a special mention purely because of the Hanger Lane round-a-bout. Oh my god.
 
Immigrants who illegally snuck into the country via the back channels of Europe will never understand the changes London has undergone over the past 5 decades. They’ll keep cheering for the likes Sadiq Khan as long as they live in grotty houses sharing 3 rooms with 20 people and claiming benefits. To them London is paradise, to others they are parasites, and what has destroyed what was once a great city.
 
Yup the 3 to 1 lane conversion is as deadly as it gets.

The North circular has a special mention purely because of the Hanger Lane round-a-bout. Oh my god.

More of a square than a roundabout..... the only good thing about it is the A40 underpass.
 
as a cyclist who cycles about 5/6 times a year for fun, i can tell you its litterly life or death with a cycle on some roads in London.

cycle lanes are welcomed, and you need to get use to it as its becoming the norm in western countries, especially europe.

congestion charge is another thing you need to get use, unless you prefer to have the polar ice caps melted only because you wanted to use your car.
 
If cyclists actually obeyed traffic laws such as stop at red lights, not cross zebra crossings when pedestrians are crossings, or tailgate on blind spots, then it might be safer for them.

Still, taking a cycle on the train is the mother of all ironies.
 
If cyclists actually obeyed traffic laws such as stop at red lights, not cross zebra crossings when pedestrians are crossings, or tailgate on blind spots, then it might be safer for them.

this.

as a driver its staggering how little care some cyclists have for their own life. some literally dont care abt breaking any traffic rules bcz they know they wont be tracked. and as a driver u know for certain that anything happens to a cyclist, u will hurt them orders of magnitude worse than yourself.

also the greatest irony is how cyclists moan abt how drivers treat them, and screw over pedestrians any chance they get. ive had way more close encounters with cyclists when walking in the city than any drivers, primarily because repeating the initial point, a lot of em dont believe any laws or common standards of courtesy apply to em.
 
as a cyclist who cycles about 5/6 times a year for fun, i can tell you its litterly life or death with a cycle on some roads in London.

cycle lanes are welcomed, and you need to get use to it as its becoming the norm in western countries, especially europe.

I used to ride from close to Heathrow into Brixton on summer mornings. If I left at 6.20 I could make it in and shower in time to sit down at my desk for 8. It was OK - there were hundreds of cyclists on Cheyne Walk and it felt like we were a big pack protecting each other.

Coming back was unpleasant, however. The Vauxhall one way system was a literal killer of cyclists, and Hammersmith terrifying.
 
Shaun Bailey did quite well in the Mayoral contest in the end, got much closer than the polls predicted.
 
I used to ride from close to Heathrow into Brixton on summer mornings. If I left at 6.20 I could make it in and shower in time to sit down at my desk for 8. It was OK - there were hundreds of cyclists on Cheyne Walk and it felt like we were a big pack protecting each other.

Coming back was unpleasant, however. The Vauxhall one way system was a literal killer of cyclists, and Hammersmith terrifying.

the battersea side of vauxhall is a killer, hopefully with the new contructions happening, things will get better, but the other side of vauxhall is alot better with some cycle lanes. I had a pleasant ride there coming from oval and heading towards waterloo along the river.
 
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