POLITICS: EYEING LONDON
London’s first Muslim mayor Sadiq Khan on his visit last year to Pakistan was received as nothing less than a celebrity in his homeland. The 45-year-old son of a bus driver was touted as an immigrant success story when he elevated himself to the rank of mayor of western Europe’s largest city.
Though he took a different route, his rise is rivalled only by Sajid Javid, coincidently another son of a Pakistani-born bus driver. Currently, Javid is Home Secretary but bookies’ favourite to become next prime minister. Such a high promotion within the Tory party for a Pakistani immigrant’s son or daughter has not been seen since Baroness Sayeeda Warsi became the party’s chairperson and the first Muslim woman in the British cabinet.
London has the most diverse workforce: 40 per cent of the population in London belong to a Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BME is used to describe people of non-white descent in the UK) background. Whereas this diversity is not equally reflected in leadership positions, slowly but surely, progress is visibly underway .
Pakistani-origin Britons have a history of rising among the ranks in UK’s local bodies politics and the number of elected councillors has almost doubled recently
Recently, a large number of Pakistani-origin candidates were elected as councillors in all parts of the UK; a dozen of them were elected as mayors and lord mayors after recent local council elections. The number has almost doubled since the first Pakistani-origin lord mayor was elected in 1985.
Those elected include a directly-elected mayor of London Borough of Newham and a powerful leader of a council in another North London borough.
The rise in numbers is seen as a stepping stone for many Pakistani-origin politicians who want to emulate the success of Sadiq Khan.
GATHERING MOMENTUM
The most significant among the newly-elected Pakistani-origin councillors is Rokhsana Fiaz. As Mayor of Newham, she has become the first directly-elected female mayor of any London borough.
Newham includes many areas which have substantial Asian populations, such as shoppers’ favourite Green Street, East Ham, Forest Gate, Stratford and West Ham — home to the Tablighi Jamaat’s London Markaz and the proposed site for a multi-thousand capacity mosque.
Backed by Momentum, a grassroots left-wing pressure group within the Labour Party which supports Jeremy Corbyn, Fiaz unseated Sir Robin Wales, who was deselected by the local Labour Party during the nomination process in March 2018.
Wales had ruled Newham for 23 years — first as a Labour council leader and then as directly-elected mayor when the role was created in 2002. Under his leadership, Newham has seen great transformation, not least because of the regeneration that came with the 2012 Olympics, which saw what is now known as the London Stadium built in the borough.
Fiaz, who won with 53,214 votes against Rahim Khan of the Conservative Party who got only 8,627 votes, hopes to hold a referendum during her four-year term and abolish the system of directly-elected mayors which she thinks is “too top-down, too hierarchical” and “may not necessarily be the best model.”