London mayor says Trump's attacks on him are due to his ethnicity and religion


London Mayor Sadiq Khan has accused Donald Trump of repeatedly criticizing him because of his “ethnicity” and Muslim faith, comments likely to renew his long-running feud with the US president-elect.

The pair became embroiled in an extraordinary war of words during Trump’s first presidency, initially sparked by Khan speaking out against a U.S. travel ban on people from certain Muslim countries.

Remembrance Sunday Service in London
London Mayor Sadiq Khan walks through Downing Street to attend the annual National Service of Remembrance at the Cenotaph in London, U.K. on Nov. 10, 2024. 

Wiktor Szymanowicz / Future Publishing via Getty Images


Trump then accused Khan — the first Muslim mayor of a Western capital when he was first elected in 2016 — of doing a “very bad job on terrorism” and called him a “stone cold loser” and “very dumb.”

The mayor in turn allowed an unflattering blimp of Trump dressed as a baby in a diaper to fly above protests in Parliament Square during his 2018 visit to Britain.

Trump Baby Balloon
The inflatable balloon called Baby Trump flies above the statue of wartime British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Westminster Abbey in Parliament Square, Westminster, the seat of the U.K. Parliament, during Trump’s visit to the U.K. on July 13, 2018. Baby Trump is a 20-foot high orange blimp depicting Trump as an enraged, smartphone-clutching infant – and London Mayor Sadiq Khan gave special permission for it to appear above the capital because, he said, of its protest rather than artistic nature. It was the brainchild of Graphic designer Matt Bonner.

Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images


Speaking on a podcast recorded before Trump’s re-election on November 5 and released earlier this week, Khan, a son of Pakistani immigrants to Britain, said he viewed the past targeting of him as “incredibly personal.”

“If I wasn’t this color skin, if I wasn’t a practicing Muslim, he wouldn’t have come for me,” he told the High Performance podcast, which interviews prominent people in different sectors.

“He’s come for me because of, let’s be frank, my ethnicity and my religion.”

Khan added that during this period he was “speaking out against somebody whose policies were sexist, homophobic, Islamophobic, racist” and that he has “a responsibility to speak out.”

His latest comments on Trump are in stark contrast to those of his colleagues in Britain’s Labour party, which swept to power in July.

Several Labour members of Parliament now in senior government posts, including Foreign Secretary David Lammy, were critical of Trump while they were in opposition during his first White House term.

In 2018, Lammy labeled him a “woman-hating, neo-Nazi sympathizing sociopath.” But Britain’s now-top diplomat last week dismissed the remarks as “old news.”

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Keir Starmer has appeared at pains to forge a positive relationship with the president-elect, promptly congratulating him on his “historic election victory.”

Starmer said their phone call was “very positive, very constructive” and the so-called special relationship between the U.K. and U.S. would “prosper” in Trump’s second term. 



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