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Conservatives' tactics straight out of Trump's playbook: London mayor Sadiq Khan

Khan accused the Conservative party of using "fear" in an attempt to turn religious groups against each other during the mayoral campaign.

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The newly appointed mayor of London Sadiq Khan
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London's new mayor Sadiq Khan on Sunday accused David Cameron's ruling Conservative party of using "fear and innuendo" in a bid to turn religious and ethnic groups against each other during the mayoral campaign and said the tactics were straight out of the "Donald Trump playbook".

Khan, who is the first Muslim to occupy the top post, criticised British Prime Minister Cameron's government and his mayoral campaign rival Zac Goldsmith for their divisive election campaign.

The 45-year-old mayor, who is the son of a Pakistani bus driver and was elected by an overwhelming mandate earlier this week, said he wanted to focus on issues like transport and housing in London.

"But David Cameron and Zac Goldsmith chose to set out to divide London's communities in an attempt to win votes in some areas and suppress voters in other parts of the city," Khan wrote in 'The Observer', his first article a day after being sworn-in as London's mayor.

"They used fear and innuendo to try to turn different ethnic and religious groups against each other -- something straight out of the Donald Trump playbook. Londoners deserved better and I hope it's something the Conservative party will never try to repeat," the Labour party MP said.

Throughout the mayoral campaign, the Tories were seen as trying to paint Khan as a radical, suggesting he had questions to answer because he had shared platforms with extremists in the past and defended them in his time as a human rights lawyer.

"I learnt a great deal throughout the course of the campaign -- about myself, about London and about the importance of reaching out to all sections of society," Khan said.

"But there are two lessons in particular. First, Labour only wins when we face outwards and focus on the issues that the people actually care about. And secondly, we will never be trusted to govern unless we reach out and engage with all voters -- regardless of their background, where they live or where they work," Khan wrote.

Indicating that Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn was failing to appeal to a wide enough electorate, he said, "Labour has to be a big tent that appeals to everyone -- not just its own activists. Campaigns that deliberately turn their back on particular groups are doomed to fail." 

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