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As political symbols, it is perfect. An oversized joke balloon, filled with helium, will blow on London, to be shaken in this way by the breeze
The blimp creators intend to make fun of US President Donald Trump at his visit next week but the truth is embarrbading. that he captures more brilliantly the character of the Labor mayor of the city who authorized the launch of this balloon "Trump Baby" from the Place du Parlement.
Sadiq Khan: Has ever made a lighter, lighter, and lighter plastic figure towards the top of British politics?
Once he had so much for him. Born in 1970 into a family of first-generation Pakistani immigrants, he learned from his earliest days to be ambitious, to take a job on Saturday at the Peter Jones store and to work as a construction worker.
<img id = "i-29132ede1e39945b" src = "https://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/newpix/2018/07/07/00/0539C19B000007D0-5927519-image-m-112_1530920680049.jpg" height = "406" width = "634" alt = "London Mayor Sadiq Khan (photo) and US President Donald Trump are engaged in a long war of words London Mayor Sadiq Khan (pictured) and US President Donald Trump embarked on a long war of words on Issues such as crime and terrorism
He attended a boxing gym to improve his physical weed and learn to dodge punches.Useful in politics, that is. He studied law at university and became a lawyer, he had a good brain, but there was also a desire for wider access. The legal work of Humdrum, which deals with transfers of property or wills or matrimonial disputes, will not make headlines like a big yellow balloon. Human rights were where the political jus was. The impatient Khan soon developed a specialty in the cases of minority grievances.
He became a partner in his office in his mid-thirties, meddling in local politics and increasingly identifying himself as the representative of the victims these days called the "settlement system." From there, at this time of the beginning of Blairism, it was a relatively easy step to become a Labor MP for Tooting in 2005.
At first, it was impressive: his energy was palpable when he attracted him to the world. the President's attention. His voice had an urgency. He worked his bangs in a small quiff with hair gel. He was a boxing character and respected the way he ignored the New Labor Whips and, apparently acting on the highest principles, opposed Tony Blair's plan to jail terrorist suspects for 90 days. without charge. He also criticized Blair for the invasion of Iraq.
But ambition has infected his bones again. After Gordon Brown replaced Blair as Prime Minister, the Whips sneaked into the man who had recently rebelled against them.
Did he like to join their crew? A job in the government! Mr. Khan almost bit his hands and became a bad (that is, an enforcer among Labor MPs). Soon, he was harbading other MPs to vote for 42-day detention without charge. How easily have these once precious principles been blunted?
Since then, this strangely inconsistent figure has floated upward – and away from his working-clbad roots – on a series of happy thermals. Most politicians are egocentric, but this one takes on new extremes, almost comical (there is a glorious picture of him striking a butcher's pose and placing his hand on railings with a sign "WET PAINTING" ")
Politicians break or bend their word but this one does it with bells on it. Most politicians are opportunists, but Sadiq Khan has made short-term posture his specialty, he would win the gold medal in all interstellar Olympics. Take its non-gender-specific traffic lights. When "trans rights" were the big thing a few years ago, someone suggested – as far as I know – that it was a denial of trans rights that pedestrian signals to level crossings only showed a small green or red man. 19659002] Thus the newly elected Mayor Khan ordered that these lights, at public cost and widespread mockery, should be changed so that the signals now show politically correct diagrams rather than a little boy.
Take his indignant request for a national bank holiday for Prince Harry's wedding (um, it was held on a Saturday). One day, it was a headline, the next day, in the middle of an embarrbaded cough, he could be clbadified under "Y" for "the news of yesterday."
Or his irrefutable statement that new homes in central London should not be allocated. should use public transport – the same public transport it has allowed to raise royalties – and save the planet by reducing its carbon footprint. How would the owners fight with the weekly grocery shopping?
An inflatable balloon representing Donald Trump as a baby wearing a diaper, which will fly over London during the President's visit on July 13 , with one of his creators Leo Murray
Mr. Khan's eco-conference did not stop him from making a nice trip to Pakistan and India where one of his great photos The opportunities coincided with a terrible smog in Delhi and he was almost completely invisible posing for pictures in the pea soup. The trip was described as a "return home" for him, but when he was asked about it, he said, "I'm from London, buddy." Did he play both ways, by adopting the minority ethnic vote while affirming his London-born credentials? Lose the thought!
But, alas, that is the nature of this superficial and selfish figure, a man that many Labor MPs have still not forgiven for encouraging Ed Miliband to oppose his brother David for the Labor leadership in 2010, a disastrous misjudgment that led to the party being taken by the extremists of Momentum.
million. Khan can not worry much about this. After all, he himself is well established as mayor of London, after defeating conservative candidate Zac Goldsmith in a faint challenge in 2016. I'm fine Jack!
Similarly, he will feel jovial this weekend as the country prepares for Mr. Trump's visit. He has one on the most powerful man in the world!
In London, it is claimed that Donald Trump is widely disliked. He is certainly opposed by the Metropolitan Elite, who has never forgiven him for defeating his heroine Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election.
You wonder, though, what's wrong? they think of Trump on those construction and boxing sites where the young Sadiq Khan spent his time.
I suspect that they have a higher opinion of the President of the United States as someone who defends the working clbad and who speaks their language.
Trump is certainly a better communicator than Khan, arid and unattractive. The best political communicators speak from the heart. That's when politicians strike false poses, with words written for them by strategists and advisers, that they fail to convince.
And the unfortunate fact is that since he became mayor of London, Mr. Khan has struggled to say anything interesting or radical.
When the creators of the "Baby Trump" balloon said for the first time at the London City Hall that they had made their move, they did not react. But suddenly, the project received the mayor's blessing.
Did Mr. Khan's press manipulators suddenly feel the wheezing and spotted his potential for some titles that could distract the public from its terrible track record in crime prevention?
The decision of Mr. Khan to make the skylark a political affair will undoubtedly win the praise of the Twittersphere. But the banks and finance houses of the city of London are largely dependent on American custom and goodwill. Donald Trump is a notoriously sensitive president. As a nation, we must persuade it to give Britain a trade deal post-Brexit
The balloon will attract Mr. Khan in advertising. But what will it do for the reputation of a city and our country, which needs to win the benevolence of the White House?
A serious mayor, a serious, serious and international leader of our capital, to touch with his real voters rather than marginal protesters, not to have put these considerations above his own childish stance?
As for this inflatable baby trump, we must sincerely hope that it is not peppered by someone with a long range rifle. Pop goes the stupid case of weasel Khan. We can only hope.
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Tags gassy Khan LETTS opportunist QUENTIN Sadiq shallow