Tomorrow Transport for London workers will walk out in their 52nd day of industrial action since Mr Khan was first elected to City Hall. Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) will strike for 24 hours in a deadlocked dispute over jobs, pensions and conditions.
It is the second day in a week action has been taken, with a stoppage on Tuesday leading to the Tube being suspended during the rush hour, with only a few services running later in the day.
Disruption continued on this morning, with a knock-on impact on services expected on Friday as well.
In contrast to Mr Khan’s record over the past five and a half years, Boris Johnson and Ken Livingstone, oversaw 51 stokes between them over a 16 year period.
The damning record comes despite the incumbent promising an end to strike action when he was first seeking election in 2016.
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Andy Lord, TfL’s chief operating officer, said: “I would ask anyone who needs to use the Tube on Thursday to check before they make their journey, consider whether they are able to work from home and use alternative modes of transport where possible.
“It’s highly unlikely there will be an Underground service running during the strike action and, if any service is provided, it will not continue into the evening.
“Services will also be severely impacted until mid-morning on Friday March 4 because of a number of factors including the placement of drivers and trains following a day without service.
“I apologise to customers for this and understand they will be frustrated by this strike action, but urge them not to take it out on those who are trying to help.
“We haven’t proposed any changes to pensions or terms and conditions, and nobody has lost or will lose their jobs because of the proposals we have set out, so this action is completely unnecessary.
“We know our customers deserve better than this continued disruption and that is why we’re urging the RMT to talk to us so we can find a resolution to this dispute which has already damaged London’s recovery from the pandemic.”
Slamming Mr Khan’s record on tube strikes, Conservative MP Steve Baker told The Telegraph: “Let’s not kid ourselves that working from home is cost-free. It puts our own heating bills up at a time when we can ill afford it, and it has an impact on those businesses that support our workplaces.
“Sadiq Khan is in a fool’s paradise if he thinks working from home is the solution to his failure to handle Tube strikes.”