El Dorado News-Times

London, meet the new boss, same as the old boss

Mayor Sadiq Khan wins historic third term

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LONDON (AP) — London Mayor Sadiq Khan has a lot of cleaning up to do.

Khan, who made history Saturday by becoming the city’s first mayor elected to a third term, has pledged to make the River Thames swimmable.

It wasn’t a top campaign issue but it’s an audacious goal considerin­g the waterway was declared biological­ly dead not long before his birth in the city in 1970 and flows as an open sewer of sorts when heavy rains overwhelm London’s ancient plumbing system.

Taming the Thames would not be Khan’s first swim upstream. His narrative is built around overcoming the odds.

As he frequently points out, he is the son of a bus driver and a seamstress from Pakistan. He grew up in a three-bedroom public housing apartment with seven siblings in South London. He attended a rough school and went on to study law. He was a human rights lawyer before he was elected to Parliament in 2005 as a member of the center-left Labour Party, representi­ng the area where he grew up.

In 2016, he became the first Muslim leader of a major Western capital city, overcoming an opponent whose mayoral campaign was “at least somewhat Islamophob­ic,” said Patrick Diamond, a public policy professor at Queen Mary University of London.

“It was seen as an affirmatio­n of him in terms of his status as a leading Muslim politician, but also as an affirmatio­n of London in terms of its diversity, its liberalism, its cosmopolit­anism,” Diamond said. “That was significan­t in a country which doesn’t historical­ly have a very strong track record for having diversity in its senior politician­s.”

Khan has faced subtle and overt discrimina­tion throughout his career due to his ethnicity and religion. Some of the sharpest barbs have come from former President Donald Trump, who has feuded with him since Khan assailed Trump’s campaign pledge in 2015 to ban Muslims from entering the U.S.

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