Market2024 London mayoral election
Company Profile

2024 London mayoral election

The 2024 London mayoral election was held on 2 May 2024 to elect the next mayor of London. It took place simultaneously with elections to the London Assembly, some local council by-elections in London and regular local elections elsewhere in England and Wales. Following the Elections Act 2022, voting in this election took place under the first-past-the-post system for the first time, replacing the supplementary vote system. The result of the election was announced on 4 May 2024.

Background
The mayor of London has responsibilities covering policing, transport, housing, planning, economic development, arts, culture and the environment. They control a budget of around £18 billion per year. Mayors are typically elected for a period of four years, with no limit to the number of terms served. Under the Greater London Authority Act 1999, mayoral elections are held on the first Thursday in May in the fourth calendar year following the previous election, unless varied by an order by the Secretary of State. On 13 March 2020, the government announced the election would be postponed until 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The change in election date has been ignored when setting the date of the following election. Consequently, this election was held only three years after the 2021 London mayoral election that saw the Labour mayor Sadiq Khan re-elected. In the 2022 London local elections, Labour gained control of Barnet, Wandsworth and Westminster councils from the Conservatives, but lost Croydon to no overall control, Harrow to the Conservatives and Tower Hamlets to Aspire, a local political party. Labour saw a small net gain in seats of 28 to 1,156 while the Conservatives lost 104 seats, winning 404 across Greater London. The Liberal Democrats and Greens both made gains, winning 180 and 18 seats respectively. Khan froze London Underground fares from 2016 to 2020 and introduced a violence reduction unit into the Metropolitan Police. In August 2023, he announced a £135m programme to provide free school meals for all primary school children in London not covered by the UK government. Ultra Low Emission Zone Khan introduced an Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) in April 2019. The scheme had been initially planned by Boris Johnson when he was mayor. The scheme means that vehicles that fail to meet emissions standards need to pay a £12.50 charge each day they drive within the zone, with money raised from charges invested to improve transport and air quality. The zone was expanded in October 2021 to cover the area between the North Circular Road and the South Circular Road. Khan announced plans to further expand the ULEZ to cover the whole of Greater London in August 2023. The proposal was voted through by the London Assembly with support from Labour, Liberal Democrat and Green members and opposition from the Conservatives. The expansion was unsuccessfully legally challenged by four London borough councils and Surrey County Council. Khan had expressed a desire to replace the ULEZ in the future with a more comprehensive road pricing scheme. He later said that no such scheme would be introduced during his mayoralty. In July 2023, Labour failed to win the Uxbridge and South Ruislip by-election by a narrow margin, which was credited to local opposition to expansion of the ULEZ. Khan later extended financial support available to scrap non-compliant vehicles to all London residents, rather than the previous plan to apply a means test, funded from reserves. == Electoral system ==
Electoral system
Nominations closed on 27 March. Following the Elections Act 2022, the 2024 election used the first-past-the-post voting system. Prior elections had employed the supplementary vote system. The Greater London Authority considered changing to counting votes by hand instead of electronically to save money. being used as a polling station on 2nd May 2024. All registered electors (including British, Commonwealth, Irish, and certain European Union citizens) living in London aged 18 or over were entitled to vote in the mayoral election. == Campaign ==
Campaign
The incumbent mayor Sadiq Khan announced in January 2022 that he would seek election to a third term as mayor of London. There had been speculation as to whether he would instead seek election to the House of Commons in hope of becoming leader of the Labour Party. The Labour Party officially reselected Khan as its candidate in December 2022 following a vote of party members and affiliated trade unions. Khan pledged to maintain the 2030 target for Greater London Authority operations to reach net zero emissions, including decarbonising all buses and establishing a fund to put solar panels on school roofs as part of a wider climate plan. He said he would establish a new publicly owned company to take over London buses with support from a potential future Labour government. He matched Hall's promise to extend Night Tube services to four more lines. Khan promised to increase police budgets by £88 million raised "mainly from council tax" and sought more central government funding for policing. He said he would hire 1,300 more police officers and establish a free legal advice service for victims of sexual offences. He promised to have built 40,000 new council houses between 2018 and 2030. Khan pledged to end rough sleeping in London by 2030 by investing £10 million to extend a network of hubs "designed to help an extra 1,700 rough sleepers every year with rapid reassessment and rehousing". He said he would not increase the minimum standards for the ULEZ, or seek further expansion. He promised not to introduce road pricing, which a Conservative election leaflet, designed to look like a penalty notice, accused him of doing. Labour reported the leaflets to the Crown Prosecution Service to assess their legality. Khan asked supporters of the Green Party and the Liberal Democrats to vote for him to avoid the Conservatives winning after making changes to voting ID laws and the electoral system. Khan was endorsed by Siobhan Benita, who was temporarily the Liberal Democrat mayoral candidate in 2020 before withdrawing. He was also endorsed by the actor Mark Hamill. In July 2023, the Conservatives selected Susan Hall, a member of the London Assembly who led the Conservative group there from 2019 to 2023, as their candidate. Hall is considered to be on the right wing of the Conservative Party and had enthusiastically supported Liz Truss as prime minister and Donald Trump as president of the United States. In September 2023, Hall was reported to have liked a tweet that praised Enoch Powell (who gained fame for his Rivers of Blood speech) and liked tweets that described London's mayor Sadiq Khan as "our nipple height mayor of Londonistan" and a "traitor rat". When asked about the tweets, a spokesman for Hall's campaign said "Susan engages with many people on Twitter without endorsing their views". Several people in the Conservative Party said they should make the election a "referendum" on expansion of the ULEZ. Hall said she would reverse expansion of the ULEZ immediately if elected. She said she would remove 20 mph speed limits on main roads. Hall listed policing and housing as her other priorities. She said she would hire 1,500 more police officers and establish two new police bases in every borough. Hall promised to introduce a women's commissioner, increase British Transport Police presence and make it easier to report harassment to Transport for London staff. She said she would invest in knife detection equipment for police officers and schools. Hall was endorsed by an editorial in The Sunday Telegraph. In February 2023 the Green Party selected Zoë Garbett, a councillor on Hackney London Borough Council who works on health inequalities for the NHS, to be their mayoral candidate. Garbett also ran in the 2023 Hackney mayoral by-election, where she came second with 24.5% of the vote. She said that if elected mayor of London, she would introduce free bus transport for people under the age of 22 and "free morning travel for older people", de-prioritise policing of cannabis and improve protection for renters. She proposed a strategy for London to reach zero murders by 2034, in part by hiring youth workers. She advocated a "London living wage" of £15 an hour. She said she would buy more homes from the general market to be let out as council housing. The Liberal Democrats selected Rob Blackie in August 2023. Blackie said he would provide legal support to undocumented immigrants who had lived in London for several years to seek citizenship and maintain Khan's policy of free school meals for at least one more year. He promised to seek devolution of work permits in the form of a "London passport" to attract foreign workers. He said that reducing crime and prosecuting more sexual offenders were priorities for him, and that he would deprioritise the policing of drug possession and significantly reduce the use of stop and search powers. Blackie promised to introduce grants to pay for the installation of solar panels and trialling both allowing all buses to be hailed from any location after 10pm and free cycle hire on Sundays. Reform said that Cox would abolish the ULEZ entirely, end low traffic neighbourhood schemes and reduce the use of 20 mph speed limits. He said he recognised climate change, but did not believe it was caused by human activity and asserted that it is not a crisis. Cox said he had previously always voted Conservative. The party leader, Richard Tice, said the Conservatives should stand down and endorse Reform UK. During the campaign, two televised debates were held: ITV held the first in mid-April, and the BBC held the second in late April. Both debates were attended by Khan, Hall, Garbett and Blackie. The Evening Standard newspaper endorsed Khan, but noted that he "must rectify the failings of the first and second [terms] ... delivering on his promises on crime, housing and the cost of living" == Candidates ==
Candidates
Labour Party The incumbent mayor Sadiq Khan announced in January 2022 that he would run for re-election. He became Labour's candidate after party members and affiliates voted to automatically reselect him in December 2022. 96% of local parties and party affilitates voted to re-select him without a contest, with some constituency Labour Parties, including Leyton and Wanstead and Tottenham, voting to open selection to more candidates. Khan had worked as a solicitor before being elected the Labour MP for Tooting in the 2005 general election. He held junior ministerial positions in Gordon Brown's government including spending a year as transport minister. From 2010 to 2015 he served as shadow justice secretary in Ed Miliband's shadow cabinet. He was first elected mayor of London in 2016, defeating the Conservative candidate Zac Goldsmith. He was re-elected in the delayed 2021 London mayoral election, that time beating the Conservative candidate Shaun Bailey. The shadow foreign secretary David Lammy and the former speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow had been suggested as possible alternative candidates for the party. Conservative Party In May 2023, the Conservatives set a timetable to announce a mayoral candidate on 18 July. Applications opened on 9 May and closed on 24 May, after which a longlist was produced. A committee was due to produce a shortlist of up to three candidates on 4 June, with local members voting to select a candidate from 4 July to 18 July. It was reported that the Conservatives were seeking to find a celebrity or high-profile businessperson to run as their candidate, such as Karren Brady or Robert Rinder, but the party's former mayoral nominee Steven Norris said it was difficult to convince people to "potentially ruin their reputation, for half the city to hate them". Several Conservative members declared their candidacies, including members of the London Assembly Andrew Boff, Susan Hall and Nick Rogers; the Minister for London Paul Scully MP; the Member of the Senedd Natasha Asghar; the former councillor Duwayne Brooks; the former special advisers Samuel Kasumu and Daniel Korski; and the businesspeople Natalie Campbell and Alex Challoner. Boff had sought the Conservative nomination in five previous mayoral elections, while Brooks sought the Liberal Democrat nomination in 2012 and 2016 and the Conservative nomination in 2021. Kasumu had worked as an adviser to Boris Johnson, but resigned in 2021, saying he thought that the Conservative Party were trying to "pick a fight on the culture war and to exploit division". On the question of expansion of the Ultra Low Emission Zone to cover all of Greater London, Boff, Campbell, Rogers and Scully all said they would unilaterally reverse it if elected while Kasumu said he would grant referendums to affected boroughs to decide whether to be part of it. Scully said he would find new sites for housing, concentrating height in central London. On policing and crime, Brooks said he would abolish the Directorate of Professional Standards of the Metropolitan Police, with investigations of police to be instead conducted by a new body of former police officers and lawyers. Kasumu was endorsed by Steve Baker, Grant Shapps, Priti Patel and Nadine Dorries. Scully was endorsed by Rogers, who withdrew from the election on 19 May. On 11 June, it was announced that Hall, Korski and the lawyer Mozammel Hossain had been chosen as the party's shortlist. Scully had been expected to be included, and Hossain's candidacy had not previously been public. Hall was the only candidate to have held elected office, as a former council leader and member of the London Assembly. She said she would "get the basics right" by focusing on "policing, transport and housing" instead of "fancy ideas". On transport, she opposed expansion of the Ultra Low Emission Zone and said she would remove Low Traffic Neighbourhoods wherever she had the authority to. She opposes road pricing. She expressed concern that some striking London Underground staff "are earning far more than average" and pledged to review their pay and benefits. On housing, she advocated high-density "green, community-oriented places" but opposed any construction on the green belt. She voted for the UK to leave the European Union in the 2016 referendum and supported the leadership campaign of Liz Truss. He said he would lobby the government for deregulation to "attract big business". He supported more use of stop and search said he would "crack down" on drill music. He voted for the UK to remain in the European Union in the 2016 referendum. The clip shows people ignoring social distancing, including Bogue dancing with someone. The invitation for the event, sent out on behalf of Mallet, described it with the words "Jingle and Mingle". Hossain was also supported by Iain Duncan Smith. He said he would build more housing over train stations and railway tracks. He also said he wanted to create a tourist tax to fund a new "minor crimes constabulary" among other police projects. Korski was endorsed by George Freeman and Michael Gove and claimed endorsements from Alicia Kearns, Andrew Mitchell, Joanna Shields and Tugendhat. Korski denied the allegation. On 28 June, he withdrew his candidacy. Some argued that the contest should be re-started after Korski pulled out. Broadcaster and former Conservative Party Parliamentary candidate Iain Dale, who said he himself was approached on three separate occasions to seek the Conservative mayoral nomination, was critical of the decision not to do so. Susan Hall was announced as the candidate on 19 July 2023, winning 57% of the vote against Hossain. • Daniel Korski, businessman and former special adviser to then-prime minister David Cameron (withdrew due to groping allegations) Applied but not shortlisted Natasha Asghar, member of the Senedd (Welsh Parliament) • Andrew Boff, chair of the London Assembly and candidate for mayor in 2000, 2004, 2008, 2016 and 2021Duwayne Brooks, former Lewisham borough councillor • Natalie Campbell, businessperson • Paul Scully, minister for London and MP for Sutton and Cheam Green Party The Green Party nominated Zoë Garbett as its candidate. Garbett was elected as councillor for Dalston ward on Hackney London Borough Council in 2022, simultaneously coming second in the election for mayor of Hackney with 17.0% of the vote. At the time of her selection she worked for the NHS on health inequalities. She had been endorsed by the party's only MP Caroline Lucas and two members of the London Assembly, Siân Berry and Caroline Russell; Berry had served as the party's mayoral candidate on three former occasions. Two other candidates, the councillor and former MEP Scott Ainslie and the councillor Benali Hamdache, contested the nomination. Ainslie had campaigned on "retrofitting London's homes, delivering free school meals for all primary school children, and ensuring London's pension funds are divested from fossil fuels" while Hamdache had advocated "a tourist tax and a workplace parking levy in London" and replacing the London Assembly with a new London Parliament. Nominated • Zoë Garbett, Hackney borough councillor and nominee for mayor of Hackney in 2022 and 2023 Applied for nomination Scott Ainslie, Lambeth borough councillor and former MEP for London • Benali Hamdache, Islington borough councillor Declined Siân Berry, member of the London Assembly since 2016, former leader of the Green Party, and nominee for mayor in 2008, 2016, and 2021 (endorsed Garbett) Blackie works in digital marketing and worked on the Best for Britain anti-Brexit campaign. He said he would re-prioritise the Met Police towards sexual offences and away from "low-level drug offences". He also promised cleaner rivers, more solar panels and better transport links for outer London. French, who works as a community advocate and previously served as a special constable, had said he would reform policing and reduce health inequalities. Blackie was being treated for cancer in 2023–4. He had his left kidney removed in February 2023 and announced the successful completion of his cancer treatment in March 2024. Reform UK Reform UK selected Howard Cox, a campaigner against hydrocarbon oil duty increases, as its candidate. LBC reported that he was prohibited from being a company director and believed aliens were "blending into our communities". • Piers Corbyn, a conspiracy theorist who stood for the Let London Live party in 2021, said he would run in the 2024 election. • Laurence Fox of the Reclaim Party sought to stand, but failed to complete his nomination papers correctly in time. • George Galloway, recently the MP for Rochdale and current leader of the Workers Party of Britain, announced his candidacy in December 2023. Galloway subsequently was elected to Parliament in the 2024 Rochdale by-election. The Workers Party of Britain did not nominate a candidate for the election. • Niko Omilana, a YouTuber who stood as an independent candidate in 2021, was unable to stand as his nomination papers were found to be invalid. Withdrew • Serge Crowbolder, a deliveryman, intended to run as an independent. He said he would lobby the government to facilitate a system to reduce rents, establish an e-democracy platform, look to provide solar panels and heat pumps to every home, and commission a feasibility study into the building of a dam between Essex and Kent. He withdrew his candidacy having been unable to raise funds for a deposit. • Rayhan Haque, a campaigner, said he would increase support for cyclists, explore car-free days like those used in Paris, and create an academy to teach London residents about artificial intelligence to "surpass what San Francisco is doing". Haque left the Labour Party in 2019. Potential The former leader of the Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn said he would think about standing for mayor as an independent when asked at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in August 2023. Corbyn is the MP for Islington North and was a Labour member at the time, but was expelled from the Party after successfully running as an independent in the 2024 United Kingdom general election. Corbyn had been included as a named candidate on some polls; polling in September 2023 by Redfield & Wilson found that Khan led without Corbyn listed, but that Corbyn's inclusion resulted in a Hall lead. It had been speculated that the former prime minister Boris Johnson might stand as an independent candidate. Johnson previously served as mayor of London from 2008 to 2016. In August 2023, the former Conservative cabinet minister and 2019 leadership election candidate, Rory Stewart, declined to rule out contesting the mayoralty in 2024 upon relocating to Britain, having withdrawn his initial candidacy ahead of the previous election in 2021. == Opinion polls ==
Opinion polls
Declared candidates Including candidates who did not stand These polls included former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn as an independent candidate. ==Results==
Results
The election was won by Sadiq Khan of the Labour Party, becoming the first Mayor of London to win a third term of office. Khan increased his share of the vote by 3.8% compared to 2021. Susan Hall of the Conservative Party came second; however, the Conservative share of the vote fell by 2.6% compared to 2021. Rob Blackie of the Liberal Democrats took third place by 70 votes, with the Greens falling to fourth place for the first time since the 2008 election. on X (then Twitter) that "rumours emerging that Susan Hall has won London Mayoral on low turnout," although he cautioned that his was not yet confirmed. A Conservative Party source told the Independent that the result was "extremely close" and that Hall "may have won", adding there were "some in the team who genuinely believe she has done it." After Khan's victory, which saw an improvement on his 2021 performance, senior figures in the Conservative Party blamed "overexcited" activists for the rumours. Journalist James Ball wrote in the New European that some of the rumours came about because of "sampling" of votes before the counting began, as votes were counted on Friday evening after being cast on Thursday. The turnout of 40.5% was the lowest since the 2012 London mayoral election. The number of rejected ballots (11,127) was substantially lower than the 2021 London mayoral election, in which over 114,000 first preference ballots were rejected. By constituencies Source: == Notes ==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com