We challenge the Mayor to take action on inequality. Support our campaign by signing our petition below

We challenge Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, to take action on inequality. Support our campaign by signing our petition and help us send a message to the Mayor.

We call on you, Sadiq Khan, as the elected Mayor of our city, to recognise the profound harm inequality is causing and to commit to our five steps for a fairer London.

As the Mayor of London we ask you to commit to immediate and long-term action to narrow the gaps between rich and poor, to make reducing inequality a central and continuous priority for your administration, and to take our five steps to a fairer London:

  1. put fairness and equity at the heart of your programme to tackle London’s housing crisis
  2. make fair pay and fair incomes central to your plans for London’s economy
  3. put fairness between generations, and between our communities at the centre of long-term planning for London
  4. ensure that all Greater London Authority policies are judged to help narrow the gap between rich and poor, so that all Londoners feel part of our city
  5. set up a standing Fairness Commission to assess and monitor the impacts of regional and national inequality

Help us persuade Sadiq Khan to take action on inequality. As well as signing the petition please cut and paste the message above and email him at: 

[email protected]

 

Our Manifesto for the Mayor of London: 

Five steps for a fairer London   Download here

Step One:  Housing – put fairness and equity at the heart of efforts to tackle London’s housing crisis:

- intervene to tackle the broken property market, where only the very rich can afford to buy, where even young professionals are stuck paying extortionate rents, while new flats are kept empty by their investor owners.

- Bring down rents to truly affordable levels, so families don’t have to give over half their income to the landlord, and where taxpayers money is poured into the pockets of private landlords through Housing Benefit.

- Invest in new council homes for rent at prices that are truly affordable so that council homes are no longer only homes of last resort for the poorest.

- Make sure that new developments always contain a mix of properties so that people from all backgrounds can live together in the same neighbourhoods, making London once again a shared, open and honest city.

Step Two: Fair pay and fair incomes:

- launch a Fair Pay mark for employers to encourage all businesses to publish salary levels and reward those who achieve a ratio of ten to one between their highest and lowest earner.

- ensure that all Mayoral organisations introduce pay ratios and move towards becoming ten to one employers.

- re-double efforts to eradicate low pay, building on the London Living Wage

Step Three: A fair future for the next generation

- Lobby central government for fairer taxes so that everyone has a more equal start in life & taxes redistribute wealth from the top downwards

- Make sure that where you live, your race, gender or disability doesn’t unfairly limit your life chances

- Allocate more investment to help young people – reduce the cost of education, create real, paid apprenticeships, challenge un-paid internships

- challenge the super-rich, global corporations and the top of the financial services sector to stop taking grossly unfair rewards and recognize that businesses suffer, society suffers and our city is diminished by gross inequality

Step Four:  Equity in all policies – we are all Londoners

- make sure transport and planning policies work to reinforce fairness and do all they can to narrow health, opportunity and income gaps – for example give young people free travel for their first six months of employment

- make sure London-wide education programmes target resources at the most disadvantaged, but involve all young people

Step Five: Shine a spotlight on fairness and inequality

-establish a standing, city-wide, representative fairness commission, to monitor changes over time, highlight areas of concern, identify new and better responses and celebrate the successes of Londoners, as together ,we make the city a fairer place.

Inequality is tearing at London’s social fabric. We need a Mayor who understands that money is power and that it needs to be shared out more equally.

We know that inequality is bad for us and bad for our city. This manifesto sets out five steps for the next Mayor of London to begin the task of turning London from a global capital of inequality to a global capital of equity and fairness.  

We call on the next Mayor of London to sign up to five steps for a fairer London.

 DOWNLOAD OUR Our Manifesto for the Mayor of London:

Who's signing

Lucy Conder
Ian McGill
Emily Reeves
iuliana simion
Hilary Davies
Christopher Murphy
Kenneth Loakman
Andrew Roberts
Anna Kostyrina
jo barlow
mable kong
Ana Gutierrez
Andrew Hayward
Robin Howells
Christina Alkaff
Hugh Adams
Mary Gardiner
Catherine Bercusson
Oliver Lipscombe
John Courtneidge
David Kirby
Vanya Gant
Rk Sany
Olivia Harwood
Matt Owen
Vinicius Rodrigues Sant Anna
Rhiannon England
Jan Potter
Mozahid sheshr
206 SIGNATURES
GOAL: 5,000 signatures

Will you sign?


Showing 197 reactions

  • Lucy Conder
    Lucy Conder
  • Ian McGill
  • Emily Reeves
  • iuliana simion
  • Hilary Davies
    Thank goodness you exist!
  • Christopher Murphy
    We are all human beings, we are all the same, we are all equal, growing income gaps are not conducive to equality.
  • Kenneth Loakman
  • Andrew Roberts
  • Anna Kostyrina
  • jo barlow
  • mable kong
  • Ana Gutierrez
    Sign the My Fair London Mayor of London 2016 petition: Our Manifesto for the Mayor of London -5 steps to a fairer city
  • Ana Gutierrez
  • Andrew Hayward
    The evidence that inequality is the major driver of health problems is overwhelming. The proposed actions will improve the health and lives of millions of Londoners.
  • Robin Howells
  • Christina Alkaff
  • Hugh Adams
    Hugh Adams
  • Mary Gardiner
  • Catherine Bercusson
  • Oliver Lipscombe
  • John Courtneidge
    As ‘The Spirit Level’ book shows, greater income equality is good for all of us – our co-inhabitants and Planet Earth, too. (See The equality Trust website for on-line videos that show this.)


    So, if we deal with the five mechanisms that create and sustain inequality happiness, sustainability and security for all result.


    The Co-operative Alternative to those five mechanisms (Theft, Rent, Interest, Profit, Unequal-pay for work) are outlined at the Occupy London web-site page: http://occupylondon.org.uk/co-operative-socialism-by-john-courtneidge/


    I hope this helps!
  • David Kirby
  • Vanya Gant
    World Class Capital; world Class inequality. So little care. So much for our “socialised” society.
  • Rk Sany
  • Olivia Harwood
  • Matt Owen
  • Vinicius Rodrigues Sant Anna
  • Rhiannon England
  • Jan Potter
  • Mozahid sheshr