London Mayor Poll Finds Nearly A Third Of Londoners Uncomfortable With A Muslim In Charge Of Their City

A Remarkable Proportion Of Londoners Would Be 'Uncomfortable' With A Muslim Mayor
|

Almost a third of Londoners would be uncomfortable with a Muslim mayor, a survey has found.

The YouGov poll for LBC found that 31% of people in the city would be uncomfortable with a Muslim taking the highest directly elected office in Britain.

Labour's Sadiq Khan and Conservative Sayeed Kamall are both Muslims standing to be elected London Mayor in 2016.

Open Image Modal

Sadiq Khan is one of the most prominent candidates of the mayoral race and a Muslim

The poll results were published ahead of an LBC debate at 7pm on Thursday, featuring candidates vying to succeed Boris Johnson.

YouGov President Peter Kellner told LBC: "There's a very clear age gap here. If you ask people in their 20s, around two thirds are comfortable and only around 20% less comfortable.

" If you look at the over 60s, then more of them are uncomfortable than comfortable.

"So there is the problem for a Muslim candidate amongst older voters, but much less of a problem for younger voters."

In July, Mr Khan said that electing a Muslim mayor would "send a message to the rest of the world.”

He told the Guardian: "If Londoners decided to do that, the message it would send to the rest of the world would be quite awesome.”

“The reality is that we are a beacon in all sorts of ways. I think it’s just worth thinking about the impact it could have. It shows the confidence of Londoners – that we don’t simply tolerate but respect each other."

A Huffington Post UK poll, published to coincide with the 10th anniversary of 7/7, found more people regard Islam as a threat to the country than at the time of the attacks.

The poll for LBC also asked if people would comfortable with a gay mayor and found 71% would be, while 16% would be uncomfortable.

Dame Tessa Jowell was the preferred candidate of 42% of polled Labour supporters, with Mr Khan in second place on 21%.

Zac Goldsmith is building a big early lead to be the Conservative candidate but those polled said they would vote for Dame Tessa over him in a fight between them by 53% to 47%.

Labour's London Mayoral Candidate Runners & Riders
Sadiq Khan(01 of05)
Open Image Modal
Pros: Shadow London minister Sadiq Khan helped mastermind Labour's local election victory this year in the capital. Cons: Khan, who managed Ed Miliband's leadership campaign, may be too much of an "establishment" candidate. Also, will the shadow justice secretary leave the cabinet to run for Mayor if Labour win the next election?
Tessa Jowell(02 of05)
Open Image Modal
Pros: Jowell is credited with bringing the 2012 Olympics to London as culture secretary. Cons: Her undying loyalty to Tony Blair, who she is quoted saying she would "jump under a bus for", means she will have his legacy hanging over her. (credit:PAUL ELLIS via Getty Images)
Diane Abbott (03 of05)
Open Image Modal
Pros: Left-wing Labour MP Diane Abbott is the first black woman to be elected to the House of Commons and knows how to make a good speech.Cons: Is she too much of a left-winger for the Boris-voting parts of London? (credit:Christopher Furlong via Getty Images)
David Lammy (04 of05)
Open Image Modal
Pros: Lammy is young, at 42-years old, and as MP for Tottenham, is well-rated for how he reacted to the riots that broke out in his constituency in 2011.Cons: Lammy is gaffe-prone: he had to apologise for claiming the BBC made a "silly innuendo" about the race of the Pope, and did stunningly bad at general knowledge on Mastermind.
Christian Wolmar (05 of05)
Open Image Modal
Pros: First person to declare his interest in being Labour's London mayoral candidate, Wolmar is a knowledgable transport expert. Cons: Most Londoners have never heard of him. (credit:KevinStandlee/Flickr)