London Assembly Clash: Neil Garratt Confronts Sadiq Khan Over Knife Crime as Tensions Rise in Heated Exchange

Neil Garratt Humiliates Sadiq Khan Live As London Assembly Erupts Over Knife Crime
Neil Garratt humiliates Sadiq Khan live as the London Assembly erupts in chaos over knife crime. What began as a routine exchange quickly turns into a brutal public confrontation. Sharp questions expose uncomfortable statistics and unanswered failures. Gasps ripple through the chamber as pressure mounts and tempers flare. A tense political moment that left the room stunned and viewers glued to their screens.
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A tense moment unfolded at City Hall as London Assembly member Neil Garratt sharply challenged Mayor Sadiq Khan over the capital’s knife crime crisis during a live session of the London Assembly.
What began as a routine line of questioning quickly turned into a heated political confrontation, with Garratt pressing the Mayor on recent crime figures and long-standing concerns about the effectiveness of City Hall’s violence-reduction strategy.
During the exchange, Garratt pointed to statistics on serious youth violence and asked whether the Mayor accepted responsibility for what he described as persistent failures to bring knife crime under control across parts of the capital. He also questioned whether current prevention programmes were delivering meaningful results on the ground.

Sadiq Khan responded by defending his record, highlighting investment in youth services, policing resources and the work of the Violence Reduction Unit. The Mayor said tackling knife crime remains one of the most complex challenges facing London and stressed that progress depends on coordinated action between City Hall, the Metropolitan Police, local councils and central government.
The atmosphere in the chamber became increasingly tense as both sides talked over one another, with the Speaker stepping in to restore order and move proceedings forward.
The exchange reflects growing political pressure on the Mayor as public concern over knife crime remains high. Recent incidents across the capital have renewed debate over policing levels, early-intervention programmes and whether existing strategies are sufficient to protect young people.
Opposition members say the Mayor must deliver clearer results and greater transparency on crime trends, while the Mayor’s office continues to argue that long-term investment in prevention and community support is essential to reducing violence sustainably.