Will London Say ‘Good Riddance’ to Livingstone?
The notorious Labour Party Mayor of London is up for re-election this year, and trailing in the polls behind his slightly buffoonish Tory challenger. It's not hard to see why.
Support Pajamas Media; Visit Our Advertisers
There are very few political personalities, on either side of the Atlantic, big enough to be instantly recognizable by first name alone. The two frontrunners in the race to be the next Mayor of London are in that select group. Ask any Brit from Bloomsbury to Belfast about “Ken” or “Boris” and you will get an immediate response. Boris Johnson, journalist and Tory MP, is a staple of the chat shows whose Bertie Wooster-ish persona earns him affection and derision in roughly equal quantities from people who couldn’t name a single other politician; Ken Livingstone, socialist firebrand and erstwhile anti-Thatcher campaigner, is a cult figure on the Left who even did guest vocals on Blur’s seminal 1995 album The Great Escape.
The job of Mayor of London was invented at the turn of the century by a Labour government flushed from its successes in setting up devolved administrations in Scotland and Wales (and then handpicking Labour stalwarts to head them). They looked at the success of the powerful chief executives of American cities and rightly wondered if a similar strategy might reap dividends for London. When they attempted to rig the selection process to install their favored candidate and keep Ken out, he ran as an independent and won anyway. That was in the year 2000, and it’s fair to say that the intervening eight years have not been dull. If his remit was to “sell” the city as a destination for the world’s tourists and businesspeople, Livingstone should not be denied his share of the credit. London in 2008 is thriving, and is unarguably the world’s most vibrant and exciting capital city. His flagship congestion charge for city’s notorious traffic, which currently stands at around $15 per day, has rightly not been without its detractors, but is now being adopted by cities around the planet. And - the undoubted jewel in the mayor’s crown - the Olympics will be held in the east end of the city four years from now. Blair, to his credit, knew when he was beaten; by the rematch in 2004, the Mayor had been readmitted to the Labour family, and re-election was a formality.
So why is it that the polls show Ken trailing his supposedly buffoonish Tory rival by up to 12 points? To all but his most loyal partisans, Boris Johnson is certainly not what you might call a heavyweight. (It’s impossible to explain Boris to a foreign audience; perhaps you would be best to watch a typically light-hearted BBC chat show appearance to get the measure of the man.) Ken’s struggles are a combination of widespread ennui with the government nationally and an inability to pin his mercurial opponent down. Is Johnson really a “dangerous right-wing reactionary”, as the more voluble critics claim, or merely an affable clown? No-one can decide, and the tousle-haired challenger has flourished in the gap.
The deeper truth, though, is that Livingstone has demonstrated, time and again, his manifest unfitness to be the major of London. He has frequently treated his critics with contempt, infamously comparing a Jewish reporter from an unsympathetic newspaper to a concentration camp guard, and mocking two Jewish businessmen with whom he had been in dispute by telling them to “go back to Iran and see if they can do better under the ayatollahs” (they were in fact Iraqi Jews). There have also been widespread accusations of cronyism and loose accounting in his wide and eclectic circle of favoured lobby groups and advisers. Nor is he averse to a bit of populist grandstanding when it suits him, making great play of his 2007 deal with Hugo Chavez to provide cheap oil for London’s buses in exchange for the provision to the Venezuelans of unspecified expertise in municipal affairs, the details of which remain opaque at best.
More seriously, Livingstone has long been – to put it diplomatically - a sympathizer with terrorism, from the days of the IRA’s “armed struggle” against British rule right through to the Palestinians’ use of suicide bombings in the present day. Just two weeks after jihadists killed 52 people on the London transport system, Ken was mitigating (though not excusing) Palestinian terrorism by opining that they “don’t have jet planes, don’t have tanks, they only have their bodies to use as weapons” – moving Mark Steyn wryly to note that Livingstone’s opposition to Islamist suicide bombers was strictly conditional on their selection of Israeli rather than British targets.
Most egregiously of all, Livingstone has extended an unapologetic welcome, under the imprimatur of the London Mayoralty, to Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, the Muslim cleric who has ruled inter alia that homosexuals should be stoned to death - and that unborn Israeli children are legitimate targets for ‘martyrdom operations’, as they will one day wear a uniform in defense of the Jewish state. When the press drew attention to these statements, Livingstone publicly apologized to his honored visitor for the British media’s “xenophobia”.
There’s currently a fierce debate going on among the British center-left as to what to do with Ken; whether a vote for any other candidate would let the Conservative in and thus constitute a betrayal of the “progressive” cause. But the truth is that Livingstone belongs to a strain of the totalitarian left that is as far removed from mainstream center-left politics as at any time in its history, and that has in recent times found the strangest and most noxious of bedfellows in the Qaradawis and Ahmadinejads of this world - reactionary bigots whose sole redeeming feature is a willingness to thumb their noses at the Great Satan in the White House, a man Livingstone once described without irony as “the greatest threat to life on this planet”. Livingstone still practices the discredited and divisive identity politics of the fossilised far Left; in the hands of a Mayor of London, these are no mere socialist parlor games but damaging follies that threaten the success of a great city.
The outcome of the May 1st poll is still too close to call; either way, the incumbent faces a real fight to get re-elected, and not before time. A return to the political wilderness would be most welcome for this most repulsive of political operators.
| Comment | Digg This |
del.icio.us |
![]() |
![]() |
PJM Home |


Digg This
del.icio.us

PJM Home











17 Comments
Sheila:I think it is telling that he is generally known as “Red Ken”
Mar 28, 2008 - 7:10 am Michael T:How appropriate that “Red” Ken is overseeing the total collapse of the UK to the islamists. Londinistan is about to become a reality, if it isn’t so already. The islamists could not have picked a better acolyte. Oh well, people get the government they deserve. Rather sad.
Mar 28, 2008 - 8:18 am Nocomme1:Well, if they get rid of the laothesome Mayor and send him back to Tehran, where he would obviously feel more comfortable, the next task would be to get rid of the equally execrable Rowan Williamson, the Archbishop of Canterbury. Mr. Williamson seems far more suited to the position of lapdog to Muslim killers than he does to any Christian position of authority.
Mar 28, 2008 - 10:03 am peezedtee:Actually this is all pretty irrelevant. The only significant policy area over which the Mayor of London has real power is transport. In that area, Ken Livingstone has been hugely successful. He has achieved a modal switch away from car use that is unrivalled anywhere in the world, with traffic down by 21% in central London and by 5% in Greater London. Bus travel is up 45% and cycling up 83%. He is not the hard-left extremist conjured up by the rightwing press. He favours business and capitalist investment. He is not at all anti-Jewish, indeed all his policies have been marked by a firm commitment to anti-racism. (He was rude to a reporter who happened to be Jewish, but the Jewishness of the reporter was incidental.) Some of his foreign entanglements have been eccentric, but the Mayor has no responsibility for foreign policy.
Mar 28, 2008 - 10:07 am John H Miller:peezedtee…
Hmmm - I can’t find any supporting evidence for your transport claims - perhaps you could enlighten us?
And the Jewishness of the reporter was incidental? Ken presumably has a couple of thousand epithets at the ready, but he coincidentally chose just that one?
As we say in london, yer avin a larf aintcha?
Mar 28, 2008 - 10:37 am mishu:The reason why traffic’s down in London is that you have to pay 5 pounds per day just to drive in there. CC cameras scan your license plates and bill you for the privilege of driving in London. Central London is 10 pounds I think.
Mar 28, 2008 - 3:13 pm Michael:Mishu, if you think a traffic tax is bad, just wait till muslims take over the UK, the Dhimmi tax will be very heavy. And if you don’t pay, the Koran says you must be killed. The British should be ashamed to surrender 1500 years of proud and rightous independance to savages. Churchill is rolling over in his grave, and, to quote the rock group The Kinks: There’s no England now.
Mar 29, 2008 - 5:42 am peezedtee:John, the statistics came from the February issue of “Transport Times”, which isn’t on line. But you can find similar figures and much more in the London Travel Report 2007 at
Mar 29, 2008 - 7:48 am Brian H:http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/corporate/London-Travel-Report-2007-final.pdf
So, the Left is finally getting embarrassed by Ken? How about George, next up?
Mar 30, 2008 - 12:51 am Sed Morrison:Ken tells us to get out of our cars and makes us pay £8 a day to drive into our own city, and then has the cheek to make a single one stop journey on the Underground £4…officially the most expensive public transport in Europe. The man is a fraud.
Mar 30, 2008 - 11:58 am Antipholus Papps:Ken supports the liar and murderer Ian Blair and his illegal assumption of the power to execute on suspicion alone. For this, he must be stopped.
Mar 31, 2008 - 6:31 am peezedtee:Sed, don’t be silly. You know perfectly well that the £4 tube fare is only for American tourists who haven’t managed to work out how to get an Oyster card. It’s meant as an incentive to get one. With the card, the fare is only £1.50.
Mar 31, 2008 - 10:37 am Mortimer:The first time I heard about this turkey was when the Muslims in Nigeria went wild over a newspaper columnist’s remark about the Miss World Beauty Pagent and did the usual murder, rape and burn thing to show everyine what pious Muslims they were. Ken, the beacon of morality and law and order, banned the beauty pagent, insinuating those utterly innocent people were the perpetrators of the Muslim jihad violence. I even blasted this one turdmonger who ran the Idleworm website, who was following the party line in blaming the beauty folks for Muslim violence. Natch, being the good leftwinger he was, he held me up as an example of racism cause I had the temerity to blame the black Muslim culprits
Apr 1, 2008 - 7:42 pm asd:Dude, that mistaken nonsense about Ken being anti-jewish is getting to be repeated often: it’s almost as if people are saying “there’s nothing else wrong with Ken so lets make things up”.
There’s enough wrong with his policies without fabricating some hidden/nascent/latent anti-jewish tendency.
He called the man a concentration camp guard because he was probably acting like one: the satirical image of a badgering and annoying nazi guard has long been the subject of jokes via Monty-Python, Harry Enfield and even recently by Amstrong and Miller.
Like I said, there’s enough wrong with his world-view and policies without putting two-and-two together and making six.
Apr 9, 2008 - 9:23 am