Sadiq Khan became London’s first Muslim mayor on Saturday, as voters rejected attempts to taint him with links to extremism and handed a decisive victory to the bus driver’s son from south London.
Khan hailed his victory as the triumph of “hope over fear and unity over division”.
His victory was the most dramatic result in local and regional elections that produced few big changes but underscored Britain’s political divisions ahead of a referendum on whether to remain in the European Union, AP reported.
Labor Party candidate Khan received more than 1.3 million votes–57% of the total—to Conservative rival Zac Goldsmith’s 43%, after voters’ first and second preferences were allocated.
Turnout was 45.6%, up from 38% in 2012.
The official announcement came past midnight—more than 24 hours after polls closed—after delays due to what officials called “small discrepancies” in the count.
Khan was elected to replace Conservative Mayor Boris Johnson after a campaign marked—and many said marred—by US-style negative campaigning. Goldsmith, a wealthy environmentalist, called Khan divisive and accused him of sharing platforms with extremists, a charge repeated by Prime Minister David Cameron and other senior Conservatives.
Khan, who calls himself “the British Muslim who will take the fight to the extremists”, accused Goldsmith of trying to scare and divide voters in a proudly multicultural city of 8.6 million people—more than 1 million of them Muslim.
The attacks, criticized by some senior Conservatives, appear not to have deterred voters from backing Khan. London has seen attacks by extremists, including July 2005 suicide bombings that killed 52 bus and subway commuters, but has avoided the level of racial and religious tensions seen in some European cities.
“Fear does not make us safer; it only makes us weaker,” Khan said in his victory speech. “And the politics of fear is simply not welcome in our city.”
Conservative Campaign Fails
Former Conservative strategist Steve Hilton told BBC that Goldsmith’s campaign had brought back “the ‘nasty party’ label to the Conservative party” and said Khan’s victory sent a “positive and powerful message about London”.
Even Goldsmith’s sister criticized his tactics. Journalist and socialite Jemima Goldsmith tweeted: “Sad that Zac’s campaign did not reflect who I know him to be—an eco-friendly, independent-minded politician with integrity.”
Labor, Britain’s main opposition party, performed strongly in the capital, taking more than 40% of Londoners’ votes. That and Khan’s victory were bright spots for Labor, which was pushed into third place in Scotland, where it was once dominant.
The Conservatives under popular Scottish leader Ruth Davidson became the main opposition in Scotland’s Edinburgh-based parliament—an unprecedented situation in a region that shunned the party for decades after the 1980s governments of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, whose policies cost thousands of jobs in mining and heavy industries.
Thursday’s elections for local authorities and regional assemblies demonstrated the complexity of British politics in the final weeks before Britons vote on June 23 on whether the country should leave the European Union.
Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn is under particular scrutiny in this first nationwide poll since he became leader last year.
While Labor’s losses in Scotland were humiliating, the party fared less badly overall than many had predicted. It lost only a handful of council seats and held on to control of major English cities, including Birmingham, Newcastle and Sunderland.
Corbyn said the party had “a lot of building to do” in Scotland, but said he was pleased with results in England.
In Wales, which has traditionally been pro-Europe, the anti-EU UK Independence Party gained seven Welsh Assembly seats and the party also won two London Assembly seats, their first ever.
Votes were also being counted in the contest for Northern Ireland’s Catholic-Protestant power-sharing assembly. Full results there were not expected until later Saturday, but the major British Protestant party, the Democratic Unionists, appeared on course to retain its leading role in power.
Andrew Blick, a constitutional expert at King’s College London, said the results underscore how difficult the referendum campaign will be, as attitudes nationally seem to be so complex.