- The Washington Times - Friday, May 11, 2018

London Mayor Sadiq Khan is under fire once again for prioritizing a ban on junk food advertising for the city’s transportation network while citizens grapple with a spate of stabbings.

A flood of negative social-media feedback greeted Mr. Khan on Friday as he unveiled a “package of measures” aimed at curbing childhood obesity. The policy was touted as a “great example” by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, but panned in Mr. Khan’s Twitter feed.

“London has one of the highest childhood obesity rates in Europe, with 40% of children aged 10 & 11 overweight or obese,” Mr. Khan tweeted. “As part of a package of measures in our new London Food Strategy — we’re proposing to ban harmful junk food ads from the entire Transport for London network.”



Some of the immediate reactions included:

  • “Meanwhile, knife crime, shootings and you highlight obesity! Unreal.”
  • And also one of the highest knife crime. What are you going to do about that Mr Khan?”
  • “We also have a really high knife crime rate! Deal with the immediate issue at hand! Increase Stop and Search!”
  • Glad to see your priority is right for the youth of today: death by burger.”
  • “I’d want to be a lean London kid so I could run faster from all the other kids with knives.”

Mr. Khan elicited similar criticism in April after announcing de facto knife control measures as a means of dealing with surging murder rates.


SEE ALSO: Sadiq Khan, London’s first Muslim mayor, bans ads with ‘unrealistic’ bodies


BBC reported “between eight and 15 ’knife crimes with injury’ on average each day in London.”

“Obesity has become a global epidemic, and children face a lifetime of health problems unless we take bolder steps to confront it,” countered Mr. Bloomberg via Twitter on Friday. “@MayorofLondon’s plan to ban junk food ads on the @TfL network sets a great example that other cities can learn from.”

Advertisement

London’s ad ban would prohibit companies like McDonald’s from promoting hamburgers, although images featuring salads would be allowed.

“Although adverts for full-sugar Coca-Cola would no longer be accepted under the plans, Diet Coke ads could still run,” added the U.K. Guardian.

Mr. Khan added that ignoring obesity concerns would be like turning a blind eye to a “ticking time bomb,” the newspaper reported.

Advertisement

• Douglas Ernst can be reached at dernst@washingtontimes.com.

Copyright © 2025 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

PIANO END ARTICLE RECO