Los Angeles Times

London mayor decries Trump’s views

Sadiq Khan, saying the tycoon is ignorant about Islam, calls on U.S. to elect Clinton.

- By Christina Boyle Boyle is a special correspond­ent.

LONDON — The new mayor of London isn’t shy about weighing in on U.S. politics. Days into his new job, Sadiq Khan, the first Muslim mayor of a major Western city, called Donald Trump’s view of Islam “ignorant” and threw his weight behind Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign.

Khan said the Republican presidenti­al hopeful was playing into the hands of extremists. “Daesh, ISIS, all those guys, hate the fact that I am mayor of London,” he told the New York Times. “Why? Because it contradict­s what they say, which is that Western liberal values are incompatib­le with Islam.”

In interviews with U.S. media this week, the mayor said he has no doubt whom he would cast his vote for if he were American. Khan urged U.S. voters to take a leaf out of Londoners’ book and choose “hope over fear” by electing the country’s first female president.

The human rights lawyer-turned-politician said that he is a proud feminist and that Clinton would be an incredible role model for women and girls worldwide, including his two daughters.

Khan has been outspoken against Trump’s proposed “total and complete” ban on Muslims entering the United States. Trump’s comments were received so negatively in Britain that lawmakers debated whether to ban him from the country after an online petition to do so amassed more than half a million votes.

On Wednesday, Trump backpedale­d, saying that the ban was “only a suggestion” and that he could make an exception when it came to Khan.

But the mayor, who was born in London to Pakistani parents, dismissed the offer bluntly.

“I’m not exceptiona­l,” he said in an interview with CNN. “So for Donald Trump to say, oh, Mayor Khan can be allowed but not the rest is ridiculous.”

He cited the British businesspe­ople, young people and tourists seeking to work, live in or visit the U.S. who would be negatively affected if Trump’s idea became reality.

Khan also said he had friends and relatives in the U.S. and happy memories of family vacations to Disneyland with his kids.

“It’s not just about me. It’s about the message it sends from the greatest country in the world. And what is the story of America?” Khan said. “I think Donald Trump doesn’t get the history of America.”

Khan was named mayor of London on Friday, winning 57% of the vote compared with 43% for his closest rival, Conservati­ve candidate Zac Goldsmith.

The victory makes him the elected leader of a capital that is home to 8.6 million people, more than 1 million of whom are Muslim.

Khan says he welcomes the chance to meet with some of his counterpar­ts across the pond, such as New York’s Bill de Blasio or Chicago’s Rahm Emanuel, but those meetings might have to take place before January, if Trump wins the nomination and then the election.

“I’m confident that Donald Trump’s approach to politics won’t win in America,” Khan said in an interview with Time magazine published Monday.

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