The London Mayor is sharpening his knives for the long-delayed third runway – but is this a matter of policy or political manoeuvring?
Commentary: The battleground on expansion of the west London airport will be climate change not air pollution or noise blighting the lives of local residents
Rachel Reeves has told London Mayor Sadiq Khan she is certain to defeat his bid to sabotage her Heathrow expansion scheme. Asked if Mr Khan was able to stop to her third runway plan, the Chancellor replied: ‘No.’ The capital’s Labour mayor could mount a legal challenge, she said, but he would not prevail in the end.
Rachel Reeves is facing fierce opposition within Labour over her plans for a third runway at Heathrow Airport.
Sadiq Khan has confirmed he “remains opposed” to a third runway at Heathrow Airport, putting him on a collision course with Rachel Reeves.
Sadiq Khan has vowed to block the third Heathrow runway "with any tool in the toolkit" in a rift with the government after Rachel Reeves said she would back plans.
Heathrow expansion would undermine London's 'clean air' progress - The mayor also cast doubt on the project’s economic benefits and said it would worsen noise levels suffered by west Londoners
Reeves made an announcement on Heathrow during a major speech outlining Labour's plans to deliver economic growth.
Justine Bayley lives in Harmondsworth, a village in Hillingdon in west London, which would be partially demolished to make way for a third runway at Heathrow Airport. She told BBC London the expansion plan isn't "realistic" when the mayor of London has pledged to reduce pollution and noise.
Reeves accused of ‘sacrificing nature and the climate’ with new Heathrow growth plans - Environmental groups accuse chancellor of ‘dystopian’ announcement while Labour mayor of London Sadiq Khan hits
Mayor of London Sir Sadiq Khan has said his views on Heathrow Airport expansion “haven’t changed” as he warned about the “climate emergency”. Chancellor Rachel Reeves is expected to use ...
Reeves made an announcement on Heathrow during a major speech outlining Labour's plans to deliver economic growth.