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Sadiq Khan claims ‘900K Londoners could be silenced” in mayoral election over voter ID

By Noah Vickers, Local Democracy Reporter

Sadiq Khan will set out his stall on this afternoon for next year’s mayoral election, while claiming that “900,000 Londoners could be silenced” due to voter ID requirements.

The Labour mayor will outline his future priorities for the capital in a speech at the Centre for London think tank’s annual conference, as he asks Londoners to entrust him with an historic third term at City Hall.

The requirement for voters to have a photo ID was introduced through the Elections Act 2022, and was used for the first time in the local elections in May this year – which took place outside of London.

Mr Khan is expected to tell conference attendees: “I’m under no doubt, this election will be the toughest yet.

“Not only will it be the first in London using the First Past The Post system, but also every Londoner will be forced to show photo ID to take part.

“Let’s just call this what it is: a cynical attempt to make it harder for people to vote. All told, 900,000 Londoners could be silenced.

“To everyone here, I ask you: use your voice to ensure no one else is denied theirs, because democracy belongs to us all.”

The mayor’s figure is derived from Labour-commissioned Opinium polling which found that 15 per cent of Londoners do not have voter ID. A total of about six million Londoners were on the electoral register as of December last year.

The polling found that among 18 to 34 year-olds, the figure rises to 20 per cent, while reducing to 12 per cent among 35 to 49-year-olds, 13 per cent among 50 to 64-year-olds and 10 per cent among those aged 65 and over.

When Mr Khan voiced concerns about the same poll findings in October, a Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities spokesperson said: “These claims are untrue.

“The vast majority of voters in the polling station – 99.75 per cent – cast their vote successfully at the local elections in England in May.”

The Electoral Commission believes that the 0.25 per cent of voters who were unable to vote due to lack of ID is an underestimate. They said this is partly as a result of data quality issues but also because some people will have been reminded of the ID requirement before they could be recorded in the data.

A poll conducted by Redfield and Wilton Strategies and published in the Times in September showed Mr Khan winning just 33 per cent of the vote, with his Tory rival Ms Hall close behind on 32 per cent.

Pictured top: Mayor of London Sadiq Khan (Picture: PA)


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