Conservatives pick Susan Hall as 2024 London mayoral candidate

The 68 year old defeated opponent Mozammel Hossain with 57% of the vote from London Tory members.

Susan Hall (l) beat opponent Moz Hossain (r) during a vote of London Tory members
Author: Jamel Smith, PAPublished 19th Jul 2023
Last updated 19th Jul 2023

Susan Hall has been selected as the Conservative Party's 2024 London mayoral candidate to face Sadiq Khan.

The 68-year old London Assembly member promised to scrap plans to expand the Ulez (ultra-low emission zone) on her first day if elected.

She defeated opponent Mozammel Hossain with 57% of the vote from London Tory members.

Ms Hall said Mr Khan, whom she will face in the election on May 4 next year, has made no significant achievements during his time as mayor and has no "interest in loving others".

"He (Sadiq Khan) goes on trips while young people get stabbed on our streets," she said.

"He's more interested in selling his book than he is helping Londoners with the cost of living.

"When things go wrong, he hires an army of spin doctors to convince you it's actually not his fault.

"I'll do whatever it takes to win."

London Labour called Ms Hall a "hard-right politician" who does not "stand up for women".

"The Conservative candidate for mayor is a hard-right politician who couldn't be more out of touch with our city and its values," a spokesman said.

"She's an outspoken supporter of (Donald) Trump, Boris Johnson and a hard Brexit; she cheered Liz Truss's mini-budget, which sent mortgages and rents soaring.

"She doesn't stand up for women and she hates London's diversity.

"Londoners deserve better than a candidate who represents the worst of the Tory failure and incompetence over the last 13 years.

"The London election next year will be a two-horse race and the choice is clear - a Labour mayor with a positive vision, who will continue to build a fairer, greener and safer London for everyone, or the extreme Tory candidate, who stands for cuts to London's public services, inequality and division."

Ms Hall told the PA news agency that she does not apologise for supporting former prime minister Ms Truss's mini-budget.

"I'm a low-tax Tory, which is why I supported her. Things did not go as they should have done, and I accept that unreservedly.

"I don't apologise because I wasn't a part of it, and I will never apologise for being a low-tax Tory because that's what I am. The implementation of what (Liz Truss) said she was going to do was not right, and I fully accept that."

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