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Social media post from Tory London Mayoral candidate attacked as ‘fake news’

By Noah Vickers, Local Democracy Reporter 

A social media post from Tory London Mayoral candidate Susan Hall, claiming that Sadiq Khan will charge motorists for every mile they drive, has been attacked by critics as “fake news”.

On Friday morning Ms Hall posted an image on her social media channels depicting a ULEZ roadside sign alongside an apparently photoshopped sign warning of a supposed ‘Pay-Per-Mile’ zone.

She captioned it: “Don’t want to see this on every street corner? Stop Sadiq Khan’s pay-per-mile plans. Vote for change.”

The post came after the Conservatives claimed in a recent party political broadcast that the Labour Mayor has “secret plans to impose new charges for every single mile you drive – a pay-per-mile London”.

Responding to Ms Hall’s post, London Labour said: “This sign does not and will never exist.

Sadiq has been clear — ruling out pay per mile categorically while he is Mayor. This is a photoshopped image and is a lie.”

Hornsey and Wood Green MP Catherine West said the Tories “need to drop their fake news tactics”.

A source close to Ms Hall said: “Sadiq promised not to bring in the ULEZ expansion, and then he did it anyway.

“Sadiq has spent £150million on the technology for pay per mile, and he expects Londoners to believe he won’t use that technology? Mad.”

The Mayor said in answer to a written question in July 2021 that he had “no plans to extend the ULEZ to outer London”, before announcing such plans eight months later, in March 2022.

The reference to £150million being spent on the “technology for pay per mile” is in relation to a Transport for London (TfL) scheme called Project Detroit.

The project aims to build “a new core technology platform for road user charging” which would “replicate the capability” of existing road charges like the ULEZ congestion charge and tolls at the Blackwall and Silvertown Tunnels.

A Freedom of Information (FoI) response from TfL in December 2022, stated: “The Detroit platform has the capability to be extended and we will be looking to build the system flexibly so that other forms of charging could be catered for if a decision was made in future to do so.”

According to separate FOI requests reported by the Daily Telegraph, £21million has already been spent on the project, which started in 2021.

Mr Khan told the London Assembly in September 2023: “As long as I am Mayor, we’re not going to have a pay-per-mile”.

He insisted that despite having asked TfL to investigate the concept, it was not something he intended to pursue. 

The London Mayoral election will take place on May 2, along with elections to the London Assembly.

Pictured top: The image showing a fake ‘pay-per-mile’ sign, posted by Susan Hall on Friday (Picture: Conservative Campaign Headquarters)


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