Londoners and the rest of Britain voted in
local and regional elections yesterday, as the capital appeared set to elect
its first Muslim mayor.
Voters elected
councils across England, mayors and police commissioners in several cities, a
Scottish Parliament and lawmakers in Wales and Northern Ireland in what local
media dubbed “Super Thursday.”
The countrywide
elections were considered a test for the Labour Party in the first nationwide
polls since Jeremy Corbyn became the party’s new leader last year. The
elections were expected to deal a blow to the party, which has been engulfed
in a row over anti-Semitism.
In London, Labour
Party’s Sadiq Khan, a Muslim and son of a bus driver from
Pakistan, is the favourite to succeed Conservative Party’s Boris Johnson as
mayor. Khan has held a consistent lead over his closest rival, c Zac Goldsmith
of the Conservative Party in a number of opinion polls.
A survey by market
research firm, YouGov for the London Evening Standard published yesterday, put
Khan ahead of Goldsmith by 43 per cent to 32 per cent as a first preference for
voters.
Not all went
smoothly, however. A number of Londoners, including Britain’s Chief Rabbi
Ephraim Mirvis, were turned away from polling stations in the Barnet
neighborhood of north London after officials apparently sent out the wrong
voter lists, the Standard reported. Barnet’s council later said the
problem had been resolved.
Prime Minister David
Cameron tweeted a picture of himself and wife, Samantha after they voted
yesterday, urging Londoners to back Goldsmith, son of the late billionaire
financier James Goldsmith. Corbyn meanwhile, tweeted pictures of
himself with various Labour voters. The result of the mayoral contest will
be announced today.
Meanwhile, Japan’s
Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, who is on a visit to London, told
reporters at a news conference with Cameron later yesterday that Britain
would be less attractive to Japanese investors if it leaves
the European Union. A referendum will be held on June 23 on whether the
United Kingdom should leave the 28-member bloc.
Source: TheGuardian
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