The Sunday Telegraph

I can still beat Sadiq Khan, says London Tory hopeful

Susan Hall places her commitment to the capital and safety front and centre of her mayoral campaign

- By Will Hazell POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

SUSAN HALL has placed a digital countdown clock by the kettle in her kitchen, showing the days, hours, minutes and seconds to polling day in the London mayoral election.

Rising early each morning, the Conservati­ve candidate for mayor makes herself a cup of tea and contemplat­es the clock. She tells The Telegraph that each time the same thought occurs: “One day less to save London.”

With just a week and a half remaining in the race, Ms Hall knows she has her work cut out to deny Sadiq Khan an unpreceden­ted third mayoral term. A YouGov poll on Friday suggested that she was 19 points behind her Labour opponent, on 27 per cent of the vote to his 46 per cent.

Ms Hall acknowledg­es the scale of the challenge. “Look, I’m the underdog,” she says. “There’s no question, I accept unreserved­ly I’m the underdog.” But she holds out hope that Londoners’ dissatisfa­ction with Mr Khan’s “abysmal” record might just result in the mother of all political upsets. “I’m just hoping that people that want my policies, want a stop on the war on motorists, want actually us to be safer… I’m hoping they think, ‘Yeah, we’re in with a chance of getting Sadiq Khan out.’”

Ms Hall meets The Telegraph for her interview in a Westminste­r pub, but with her eyes on the electoral prize and packed days of campaignin­g ahead, she orders a Diet Coke. She has abstained from alcohol throughout the campaign, but will allow herself a tipple once polls have closed.

Setting out a tour d’horizon of what London will be like in four years’ time if she wins on May 2, it is perhaps no surprise that Ms Hall starts with motorists.

Tory strategist­s have viewed the ultra low emission zone (Ulez) as Mr Khan’s soft underbelly since he controvers­ially expanded the charging zone for high emission vehicles to outer London in August.

Ms Hall says that in four years, Ulez expansion will be a “bad memory” because she will stop it “on day one”. She believes scrapping the expansion will have a revivifyin­g effect. “Small businesses on the outer outskirts of London will start to thrive again... people will start coming back over the border... the war on motorists will be over.” Needless to say, pay-per-mile charging of drivers – something which she has accused Mr Khan of plotting despite emphatic denials – will never see the light of day.

Ms Hall says she has heard “heartbreak­ing” stories about the toll of Ulez. “It’s making poor people really suffer… seriously, if you saw some of the emails I get, you’d literally cry.” On a campaign stop to Romford market that morning, she talked to “three elderly ladies” about the scheme. “They said that it’s dreadful, because their family couldn’t come in and see them anymore.”

The Tory candidate also plans to ring the changes in London’s transport policy by stripping out “floating bus stops”, where pedestrian­s must cross cycle lanes to reach a stop, which she says forces blind and partially sighted people to take “their lives in their hands”. And she wants to clamp down on Low Traffic Neighbourh­oods. “I’ve always said a successful city is a moving city,” she says. “We’ve got to get London moving again.”

Moving on herself, the next stop in her tour of London in 2028 is crime. Ms Hall says while she is frequently pigeon-holed as obsessing about Ulez, her “big passion in life” is policing. She promises a return to borough-based policing with two more bases in each council area, along with 1,500 extra officers on the streets and a £200million cash injection for the Met. A huge focus will be on the experience of women in the capital, who she says “are just not feeling safe”, with the appointmen­t of a women’s commission­er. She says fears about crime have helped crush the capital’s nightlife, which is now “really bad”.

Again, she paints a picture of London springing back to life after the Khan years. “At the end of the four years, I want people to say, ‘Oh my god, yeah, I do feel safer’... If we make our streets safer it has a feelgood factor. It’s like a stone in a pond, isn’t it? It’ll resonate all around.

“At the end of four years, I hope people think things are fairer, because they’re not being taxed to the hilt for driving a car. I hope people won’t feel oppressed, really, as they do now. But most of all, I want mums and dads to be quite happy that their kids are going out at night because they know that they’re safer.”

‘If you look at his policies, where is the change in policing that will make a difference? There isn’t any’

On planning – the third major area within the mayor’s control – Ms Hall has clashed with her Labour rival over house building statistics. In the last quarter of 2023, the number of new house starts in London slumped to a record low. “He’ll say he’s going to build tens of thousands of houses or properties, one and two bedroom flats,” she says. “He won’t. He won’t build family homes.”

Mr Khan’s supporters have accused Ms Hall of talking down London – pointing for example to an attack ad in which the capital was presented as a crime-riddled Gotham-like metropolis. But she insists that people will be “desperate” if he wins a third term.

“If you look at his policies, where is the change in policing that will make a difference? There isn’t any,” she says. The campaign has been acrimoniou­s at times, with Mr Khan accusing her of being “Trumpian”. “He’s thrown around a load of personal insults,” she says. “Carry on if you like, because it makes him look pathetic.”

On the subject of Donald Trump – with whom Mr Khan has feuded on social media – Ms Hall says she would be willing to work with him if he is re-elected. “Whoever the Americans decide is their president, I will work with,” she says. “It is not for the Mayor of London to decide whether they like the leader of the biggest democracy in the world or not.”

Firing some of her own barbs at Mr Khan, she claims he has been using the mayoralty as a “stepping stone into something else. I think he thought he’d be leader of the Labour Party”.

With the days running out, Ms Hall is honest about her own strengths and weaknesses. “I won’t come out with the right words. I may make gaffes. I’m not polished,” she says. “But I care, I genuinely care.”

Above all, she promises a shift in accountabi­lity if she is elected. “If you listen to Khan over the years, his rhetoric is all around, ‘It’s the Government’s fault,’” she says. “If you’re responsibl­e for something, good and bad, when things go wrong, bloody well take it on the chin… you can’t just go through life blaming everybody else for everything.” Whatever the result, it seems unlikely that Ms Hall will shirk responsibi­lity.

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 ?? ?? Susan Hall has promised a shift in accountabi­lity if she is elected as mayor of London
Susan Hall has promised a shift in accountabi­lity if she is elected as mayor of London

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