Episode

Sadiq Khan: You Cannot Be Popular Every Single Day in Government

Podcast
Full Disclosure with James O'Brien
Published
Feb 13, 2026
Duration seconds
4007
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://www.lbc.co.uk/radio/podcasts/james-obrien-podcast-full-disclosure-interview/
Audio
https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/4597d87d-592b-4863-9a75-de7fbad7ad3e.mp3?aw_0_1st.showid=95158cfb-f74f-4f9c-8f47-00bd976ab01d&aw_0_1st.episodeid=4597d87d-592b-4863-9a75-de7fbad7ad3e
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/full-disclosure-with-james-o-brien-242753/episodes/sadiq-khan-you-cannot-be-popular-every-single-day-in-government
Markdown
/podcast/full-disclosure-with-james-o-brien-242753/sadiq-khan-you-cannot-be-popular-every-single-day-in-government.md

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Summary

From the son of a bus driver on a South London council estate to the first Muslim mayor of a major Western capital, Sadiq Khan’s story is inseparable from the story of modern London. But with that journey has come a decade at the sharpest end of British politics. In this episode of Full Disclosure , James O’Brien sits down with the Mayor of London to trace the path from a crowded flat in Tooting to City Hall. Khan reflects on his parents’ migration from Pakistan, the racism he experienced growing up, and the teachers who helped him see that the rooms of power were not off limits. He describes the leap from human rights lawyer to MP, the gamble of running for mayor, and the reality of governing a city through terror attacks, Brexit, a pandemic and deep political division. They discuss the resurgence of overt racism, the personal cost of public life, and why Khan refuses to let abuse dictate his politics. He speaks candidly about the backlash he faced over equal marriage, the solidarity he believes minorities must show one another, and the responsibility he feels to prove that London remains a city where progress is possible. Attention also turns to the future of the Labour Party. As calls emerge for Keir Starmer to stand down, Khan addresses the speculation directly. He reflects on party unity, leadership under pressure and the dangers of allowing internal divisions to overshadow the broader task facing Labour. For Khan, the question is not about personalities but about purpose: what Labour is for, who it represents, and how it responds at moments when confidence wavers. At its heart, this is a conversation about resilience, representation and the fragile idea of social progress. Can a city that once displayed signs reading “No Blacks, No Irish, No Dogs” continue to mov…