Five London Boroughs Defy Khan’s Climate Car Tax, Won’t Install Nanny Cams

Another borough in London has come out in defiance of Mayor Sadiq Khan’s plan to expand the Ultra Low Emissions Zone (ULEZ) charge throughout the capital by refusing to install the cameras needed to enforce the ‘green’ agenda policy

The Sutton Liberal Democrats, who are currently in control of the council which governs the borough at the local level, have said that they intend on fighting the “unfair” expansion of the climate fee from Central London to the entire metropolitan area, and will seek to block the installation of ULEZ cameras in their part of the city.

“We are taking this step to send a strong signal to the mayor that he must start listening to local people,” the council said in a statement reported by The Telegraph.

“Though the mayor has the right to overrule us, and may attempt to force this unpopular decision on the residents of Sutton, we are clear that would be the wrong thing to do.”

The move comes as four other local governments in London — the borough councils for Bexley, Bromley, Harrow, and Hillingdon — have announced that they will take action to challenge the legality of Khan’s plan, which is set to be imposed upon the city in August.

The leader of the Bromley council said that the mayor had “blatantly ignored” the opinions of Londoners and had used “questionable, selective, and incomplete findings” to justify the expansion of the tax.

Meanwhile, Bexley and Hillingdon questioned whether the adverse economic impacts on working-class families would actually be outweighed by the minimal improvements to air quality.

The Ultra Low Emissions Zone (ULEZ) was introduced in 2019 by Khan in Central London, charging cars that failed to meet its emissions standards a fee for traveling through the center of the city.

The Labour politician plans to extend the policy throughout the city by August, meaning that any “non-compliant car” will be taxed at a rate of £12.50 per day.

The expansion threatens to impact some 200,000 cars, meaning that many working-class people who need to drive into London for their jobs will be severely financially impacted.

Though ULEZ was initially pitched as a means of reducing pollution, it has become something of a money-making scheme for the tax-hungry city government, which took in nearly £100 million in revenue in 2021.

It has been estimated that expanding the scheme will see the mayoral government take in as much as £400 million per year.

Khan has argued that despite the unpopularity of the plan, due in large part to the economic crisis impacting the nation, including soaring inflation, falling wages, and high taxes imposed by Westminster, the expansion of the ULEZ program is needed in orderto clean up the air in the city.

The Greater London Authority Conservatives transport spokesman, Nick Rogers, said of the pushback from the local councils:

I am pleased that many boroughs are already taking action to protect residents from Sadiq Khan’s Ulez tax and would encourage all boroughs to do likewise.

See more here climatechangedispatch

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Comments (2)

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    Howdy

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    “The expansion threatens to impact some 200,000 cars, meaning that many working-class people who need to drive into London for their jobs will be severely financially impacted.”
    Khan is synonymous with money. He wants to do this, but no measures in place to relieve the drag on families. There are the trains, but as seen in the past, he runs them as well, and the government (johnson), gave him money hand over fist to try and effect a decent service. It failed.
    Why was he re-elected is beyond me.

    This is the labour promise. Well skint you for our own sick ideals and you don’t matter.

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