All posts tagged: Susan Hall

Well done Sadiq Khan, but Susan Hall shows the Conservative party has given up on London

Well done Sadiq Khan, but Susan Hall shows the Conservative party has given up on London

But in the end it wasn’t Hall who was the problem (and some ill-advised tweets early in her campaign had cast her in a poor light for many), it was her policies: she didn’t really have any. I sat down with her for a 90-minute talk at last year’s Conservative conference in Manchester and she said she was going to campaign on crime and Ulez. Oh, and not being Khan. And er, that was it. Myself and the parliamentary team chatted to her for an hour and a half without managing to glean anything personal or additionally relevant at all. Small-talk enquiries about which football team she supports, favourite restaurants and cultural netherworlds were met with shrugs or, oddly, “Why do you want to know that?” Like I say, we all quite liked her as a person, but worried about her ability to convincingly connect with people. And so it has proved. She is living proof that the Conservatives have given up on London. Source link

Sadiq Khan in major trouble as ‘Susan Hall could really win’ | Politics | News

Sadiq Khan in major trouble as ‘Susan Hall could really win’ | Politics | News

The latest voter turnout figures suggest Sadiq Khan “could lose the race” to continue as Mayor of London. While some numbers have yet to be released, the picture looks worse for Mr Khan than for his Tory rival Susan Hall – who was a huge outsider. In the Barnet and Camden constituency turnout has fallen by 3.41 percentage points, according to an Express analysis comparing 2024 figures with those of the last London mayoral election in 2021. The City and East constituency, which is made up of the boroughs Barking and Dagenham, City of London, Newham and Tower Hamlets, has seen a -3.83 percentage drop. These are areas which traditionally vote Labour and have helped Sadiq Khan win previous elections. Greenwich and Lewisham is down -1.67 percentage points; Lambeth and Southwark -1.87 percentage points and the North East constituency of Hackney, Islington and Waltham Forest has dropped -2.43 percentage points. All the above-mentioned constituencies voted majority Labour at the last mayoral election. This compares to outer London constituencies, where turnout is up 4.38 percentage points …

Laura Kuenssberg forced to break up furious row between Labour and Tories | Politics | News

Laura Kuenssberg forced to break up furious row between Labour and Tories | Politics | News

The BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg was force to intervene and break up a furious row between the Tory and Labour spokesmen tonight, as the pair refused to pull their punches over Rwanda. The row began when Tory deputy chairman Jonathan Gullis condemned Labour’s London mayoral campaign insults as “disgusting and abhorrent”, referring to Wes Streeting’s tweet comparing the Conservative candidate Susan Hall to white supremacists. Mr Gullis said the slur was “disgusting and abhorrent, especially when the Labour Party were the ones found to have breached the equality act three times under Jeremy Corbyn with the Antisemitism that went rampant in their party”. Labour’s Jonathan Ashworth called the criticism “nonsense”, and mocking Mr Ashworth’s delight this week that Britain had deported its first migrant to Rwanda. Mr Ashworth pointed to over 700 migrants crossing the Channel this Thursday, but Mr Gullis shot back: “Well what’s your deterrent?” “Your idea is ‘we’re going to tell people if they come to this country they can claim asylum’, you’re then going to process them quicker, if you process them …

London mayoral election: 15 memorable moments in the race for City Hall

London mayoral election: 15 memorable moments in the race for City Hall

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire It may not have grabbed the attention of Londoners to the extent sought by the candidates, but the 2024 mayoral race was not without its highlights. Sadiq Khan’s election day doughnut mystery There may be more to this story: could Mr Khan’s day have a sticky end? Taste test: the Sadiq Khan jam doughnuts in Dunn’s bakery Supplied BBC London’s Having a Mayor podcast BBC London’s political team – Tim Donovan, Karl Mercer and Susana Mendonca – broke new ground with a weekly podcast, which made the campaign sound far funnier than it was. It also featured the occasional contribution from the Evening Standard.  Evening Standard endorses Sadiq Khan According to the political journalist (and former Standard deputy political editor) Paul Waugh, this was the first time the Standard had backed a Labour mayoral candidate. Christian Adams  Susan Hall: ‘I was a raver back in the day’ Not much these days, she said – she prefers a quiet restaurant dinner with family – before revealing she was …

Labour’s Wes Streeting sparks furious backlash for ‘shameful’ Susan Hall attack | Politics | News

Labour’s Wes Streeting sparks furious backlash for ‘shameful’ Susan Hall attack | Politics | News

Labour’s Wes Streeting was facing a furious backlash over an attack on Susan Hall on the eve of the London mayoral election. The shadow health secretary took to social media platform X to claim a vote for the Tory candidate would be a “win for racists, white supremacists and Islamophobes the world over”. The Labour frontbencher said: “A win for Susan Hall and the Conservatives is a win for racists, white supremacists and Islamophobes the world over. “Susan Hall’s campaign has been fought from the gutter with dangerous and divisive politics. London, we cannot let her win. Vote Sadiq.” But Mr Streeting’s post prompted a fierce backlash from Conservative MPs. Former home secretary Suella Braverman said: “London deserves better than this sort of casual hate. “And no one believes that he’s telling the truth now about women and single-sex spaces anyway.” Tory deputy chairman Jonathan Gullis added: “Labour was served with an unlawful act notice by the EHRC after it found Labour responsible for unlawful acts of harassment & discrimination (antisemitism). “Labour, which you served …