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Race for City Hall

Two weeks to go - no more Mr Nice Guy!

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Both candidates' campaigns need some sharp focus to seduce the undecideds

Democracy is such a vexing activity - a terrific idea in theory, but so rarely is there anyone worth choosing. When "London decides" on her next elected representative on May 1, it will be from a menu of less than appetising candidates, led by a shop-soiled incumbent and a challenger whose photo hangs on the wall of every reputable clown school in the land.

Barring an act of god, death or negative voter turnout, either Ken Livingstone or Boris Johnson will ascend the throne of office. Pre-election polls tend to favour whomever has commissioned them, so those conducted on behalf of the Evening Standard give Boris a healthy lead, those ordered up by the Guardian or trades unions have them neck and neck. What we do have, though, for the first time since the mayoral election was reconstituted in 2000 is a race, not a Livingstonian victory procession. But what must the candidates now do to seize victory?

Ken has to keep the sleaze on the outside. Think of any submarine film, and there's always a scene in which the boat is holed beneath the surface and mattresses, planks (generally available beneath the waves in times of crisis), and anything else that comes to hand is pressed into surface to plug the leaks. Ken has done a pretty good job of patching the holes made by unreliable and greedy cronies, and Boris hasn't really made his accusations of waste and mismanagement stick.

Boris has to keep his mouth foot-free. As the pressure mounts, the fear that their candidate is going to say something inappropriate is going to grip the Johnson campaign until they can barely breathe. It is almost unthinkable that "old" Boris won't resurface at some point in the next two weeks.

Ken needs a fresh idea. He could try standing on his record alone - plenty of people still vote for Ken because of his ancient cheap travel stunt Fares Fair, after all - but he could badly do with something shiny and new in the shop window. That eye-catching bauble would preferably be something for all of London - a lot of Livingstone's efforts seem to be devoted to minorities, the Square Mile and green causes.

Boris needs to name names. The pretender has taken a vigorous battering over his refusal to divulge the identity of his team. Voters don't give a flying one who gets the transport brief, for instance, but his failure to provide a list has left him exposed to accusations of ineptitude and poor planning from his rivals. He claimed this week that Bob "21 million-a-year" Diamond of Barclays would be helping - not enough to drown the critics.

Both need to talk policy. Policy in this election has been limited to three major battlegrounds: crime, transport and crime on transport. Neither Ken nor Boris has produced anything memorable, vote-winning or inspiring in these areas, the first two of which are of genuine concern to Londoners, the third being of little concern to anyone other than the candidates themselves and those unfortunate enough to require the services of a night bus. Ken wants longer sentences for knife possession, Boris was tricked into saying his crusade against bendy buses would cost GBP100 million. Ho hum. Either they are keeping their big headline initiatives under wraps, afraid that Londoners will have forgotten them by polling day or, as is more likely, they need to disguise the fact they haven't got any.

Boris is still out in front on Betfair, at 1.6, Ken trails, but is narrowing the gap slightly, at 2.66.

Hyde Park Corner

Vote for Boris but back Ken - then it's a win win situation!

1 May 2008

We've forgotten the weather here - it's going to be a massive factor. Just seen the forecast and it's rain all the way. How many of the 'Can't Be Arsed' brigade will that keep indoors? I reckon plenty and that means BoJo voters will not be out in strength. Ken is still in it and I've had a nibble at 3.2 - ridiculous odds given his winning record.

29 April 2008

Brian Paddick holds the key to this election. Good Old Bri is no politcian but who will his loyal (and blimey they'd have to be loyal!)supporters give their second preference votes to? I reckon it will be to Boris - Lib Dems, bless 'em all, seem to vote on principles for some reason and I think Ken has too many skeletons in his closet to be a consideration. So get on Boris.

29 April 2008

Boris is on the charge - 1.46 now. Can anything stop him? Maybe worth a lay on Thursday morning if he is sub-1.4 ahead of exit poll favourables for Ken?

29 April 2008

Ken is a sleazed-up waste of time. We need a change and a new direction, and although Boris wouldn't be my number one choice to carry the torch anew he'll have to do. I am so much more optimistic about Mayor Johnson than I am about the current joke - the only thing Ken should be an incumbent of is prison.

29 April 2008

As long as he brings free food he's always welcome in Lambeth...

29 April 2008

What's that saying? Beware of Greeks bearing gifts? I don't know whether that applies to MPs from Henley offering doughnuts but bloody hell - beware, beware, beware!! Come on, London - wake up! Boris is still 1.6. If he wins, I'm leaving - will the last one out , please turn off the lights!

28 April 2008

Boris is making the mistakes but Ken isn't capitalising yet. Is it because his current abode is made of too much glass? This election looks like a Boris win simply because Ken isn't getting fired up about it and people just can't bothered. I think the market's about right - low voter turnout and a Boris win (may the Good Lord help us all!).

25 April 2008

Dear Ken - where is the rabbit that you were going to pull out of the hat? Do it now before this buffoon does the unthinkable!!
I still think Boris is a lay - 1.6 is great value at this point because it's going to be close...

22 April 2008

2.8 is a massive price on Ken. Steam in before it's all gobbled up!

21 April 2008

I love the picture on this story. Ken looks a bit careworn and clueless (as he has done all the way through his campaign) but Boris has clearly been told: "The easiest way to keep your foot out of your mouth is to stuff your thumb in there instead"
To which Boris replied: "Yah, that's a great idea Mr Nameless-Advisor. I say, you don't know my old Nanny do you? She used to say something similar."

18 April 2008

"Ken has to keep sleaze on the outside"... Likely?!

18 April 2008

I don't think Boris can hold back much longer - he's said nothing, nadda, nowt. This last two weeks will definitely see him break rank, surely? Ken lies in wait. Lay Boris asap.

17 April 2008

oh dear not a good performance from Boris last night. ken is coming back. get on!!

16 April 2008

Is it really a good time to be laying Ken? Surely it's still too risky. Perhaps the overall feeling - excusing the cliche - is that it is just time for change, and what exactly that change is doesn't matter.

Saying that, having Mayor Johnson on the same platform as Mayor Bloomberg does scare me somewhat!

15 April 2008

Boris offers something completely different to Ken, and is not just some 'novelty factor' as you describe. True, he will have to do something, but if you look at half of what Ken has 'done' over the last term I'd rather it be Boris ballsing it up than him. Alas, maybe he'll even be bold?

Agree I'd get the money on Ken at the moment though as these odds will be evens again before too long.

14 April 2008

Everybody knows that Boris has the novelty factor. He's the quirky, dinner party option - "Boris is a breath of fresh air!" they shout - but when push comes to shove he's actually going to have to DO something and that we all know would be a disaster.

So I'd get my money on Ken - or at the odds currently offered, lay Boris - because Bozzer isn't going to be out front for much longer.

14 April 2008

Boris for Mayor!!

14 April 2008

Ken will win this, surely? Who is ACTUALLY going to vote for Boris? Ken might be a bit creepy and even a bit dodgy, but Boris...?! No.

11 April 2008

Love Ken's rant there, though to be fair he probably had a fair point. Those idiots at the GLA have been so spiteful about the whole thing. Frankly, they're as bad as each other and a bad representation of London and of what Londoners want.

Who to vote for? God knows.

11 April 2008

Wet cement or not, Ken is on the charge! He's come in to 7-4 from 9-4 today and Boris is drifting - now 4-7. Never doubted it would happen, London will finally come to its senses I reckon.

That Newsnight debate was a bit shambolic for everyone but Ken - Boris mumbled and couldn't come up with any real facts (he's not a bad performance though) while Paddick was hopeless. Ken was just solid, nothing spectacular, but then he's the one there to be shot at so pretty good overall.

9 April 2008

We all know the Olympics are going to cost a fortune - so what? It's going to be a great event and Londoners shouyld be glad we've got it. I don't hear Boris piping up and saying we shouldn't have the Olympics - why? Because we all want it, no matter how much a vocal few shout and moan. Boris couldn't organise his way out of a paper bag - the only reasonable choice, Olympics or otherwise, is Ken (even if he's about as active in this election as a bag of wet cement).

9 April 2008

I knew it - Ken's employing computer hackers!! I think we've got him running scared.

But blimey! Is that the best he's got?!?! What about policies, Kenneth? What about reaching out to Londoners and offering them something new?

The answer is KL is MIA or AWOL, or maybe he's just filling his face at KFC!! Whatever the case, Boris has got this sewn up.

8 April 2008

Shouldn't the title of 'most-hard-done-by' go to the London public for having two sub-standard excuses for human beings to choose from to be their Mayor?!

8 April 2008

The latest debate was last night on Newsnight: http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_4670000/newsid_4679900/4679986.stm?bw=bb&mp=wm&news=1&bbcws=1

9 April 2008

I think there is a TV debate planned for the 21st on ITV - will Ken even bother to turn out?? It seems he's given up and allowing the blonde 'headed' one a free run at it. C'mon Ken, you can do better than this current lily-livered effort!

8 April 2008

Is there not a telvised debate planned sometime in the next few weeks? If not I'd be shocked and, frankly, disappointed. How are Londoners like myself supposed to make their decisions when all we hear about are the individual candidates making a mess of themselves? When are we going to hear about the issues?

Frankly I'd rather not have any of them.

8 April 2008

Congestion charge... 20mph speed limits... What next? Square wheels?

7 April 2008

Boris will surely make many more blunders before the campaign is over, whether or not Labour start to take him seriously. It should certainly get interesting nearer the time but at [1.5] he is miles too short for me, a lay if anything.

7 April 2008

Is Ken's 'secrets' closet now empty? I'm amazed he's managed to keep that under wraps for so long - will he be coming out with the 'Vote Ken - it's not for me, it's for the children' line? Surely he needs this job more than Boris now?

7 April 2008

Damn right, vote Boris!!

10 April 2008

Finally Ken can stop doing the hard work for Boris by shooting HIMSELF in the foot

7 April 2008

Describing Ken Livingstone as "a maverick craftsman of social policy" makes me want to barf

7 April 2008

Links

Voter Test - don't know who to vote for or bet on? This will help you decide by aligning your views with a candidate.

Mayoral Debate - Newsnight 08/04/2008

BBC - London Mayoral Election homepage

Evening Standard - London Mayoral Election homepage

London Elects - A complete guide to the election

UK Polling Report - For the latest polls on the election

Ken Livingstone - Official campaign website

Boris Johnson - Official campaign website

Brian Paddick - Official campaign website

Boris Watch

REGISTER TO VOTE - Informaion on how to go about it

Dates

2nd May - Election count and results announced

1st May - Election day, voters go to the polls (having placed their bets on Betfair!)

23rd April - Last day for proxy vote applications

16th April - Last day for voter registration and postal vote applications

28th March - Deadline for candidates' nominations

How it works

Voting takes place on 1st May and the counting is the following day. The supplementary vote system is used for the Mayoral Election, so it is different from the normal general election voting system most of us are used to.

Under this system voters express their first choice candidate and then a second choice. To win, any candidate needs to receive over 50% of the vote.

If no candidate receives 50% of first choice votes, the top two candidates go to a second round. Voters whose first choice has been eliminated but whose second choice is one of the top two candidates will have their second preference vote added to the first-round totals.

This gives a result whereby the winning candidate has the support of the majority. For more information on the way the Mayor is elected click here.