Who are the top candidates for London mayor, and what are their policies?

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan urged young people to vote on May 2 (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

PA Wire

Mayor since 2016, previously Labour MP for Tooting. Former lawyer, married with two adult daughters. Political pugilist who finds it hard to resist a verbal punch-up with the Tories. Often deflects criticism of his record by blaming the Government. Seeking to be first London mayor to serve three terms.

Policy: Free school meals for primary school children

What’s achievable? Introduced as a one-year “emergency” measure to ease the cost of living crisis, free school meals proved so popular that Mr Khan wants to make them permanent. What’s unspoken is that he would have faced a political backlash had he axed them. But the £140 million annual cost — currently drawn from City Hall reserves and business rates — could push up council tax bills in future.

Policy: Ruling out pay-per-mile road charging

What’s achievable? Normally, candidates are judged on what they plan to do. Such is the row whipped up by the Tories around the Ulez and congestion charge potentially being replaced with a pay-per-mile “smart” system that Mr Khan felt obliged to make clear that it won’t happen on his watch. He claims that the “success” of Ulez means he can hit “net zero” targets by 2030 without pay-per-mile. But the impact of its expansion on air quality is as yet unknown, and ditching pay-per-mile weakens his green credentials.

Policy: Tube and bus fares freeze

What he promises: “Freeze TfL fares until at least 2025 and continue to freeze fares for as long as economic conditions allow”.

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