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English Audio Request

wacissa
986 Words / 1 Recordings / 0 Comments
Note to recorder:

Natural speed please (think NPR/Radio4 and other speech radios speed).

I'm aware of how long this is but my students are preparing for an exam in which they'll be asked to listen to recordings of articles.
If you skip some words or stumble over others as you read, do not feel you have to start all over again. You can simply repeat the sentence or the words in question, and I will edit the file afterwards.
(if the file needs some editing, let me know in the comments)

Merci !

Sadiq Khan: "Why give up the best job in the world to be Labour leader?"
By George Eaton, The New Statesman, May 15, 2017.

At 8am on 7 May 2016, Sadiq Khan walked into the Mayor of London’s office for the first time since being elected. Khan’s victory had immediate potency: he was the first Muslim to lead a Western capital city. Yet he was determined to be “more than a symbol”. Since entering City Hall, Khan has frozen Transport for London fares until 2020, launched the Night Tube, announced the new £10 “toxicity charge” on the most polluting vehicles and invested heavily in skills for the city’s workers.
No cause animates him more than solving London’s housing crisis. In 1968, Khan’s Pakistani immigrant parents secured a council house in Tooting, the constituency their son was later elected to represent in parliament. After saving for a deposit, the Khans bought their own property for £13,000. Too few, the mayor often laments, have that opportunity today. In London, where the average house costs over £600,000, home ownership has fallen from 60 per cent of the population in 2000 to roughly 45 per cent.
On the morning of 3 May, just before the first anniversary of his election, I joined Khan at County House, Beckenham, in the southern suburbs of London. The mayor was at this block of flats to meet the first tenants to benefit from his London Living Rent. “I thought it was too good to be true,” Emma Mahama, a 29-year-old NHS worker, said of the scheme, which pegs rents at a third of the average local wages.
As Khan met tenants in the spacious flats, he emphasised that the policy – inspired by a similar one introduced by the mayor of New York, Bill de Blasio – was designed to allow them to save for a deposit.
Speaking to the mayor, who was dressed in his trademark outfit of open-necked white shirt and dark suit, I asked whether the job had fulfilled his expectations. “It’s been amazing. I don’t want to pretend that it hasn’t,” he said.
Khan, who was little known in Britain before standing for mayor, swiftly became a figure of global prominence. In the US, which he visited last September, the Beltway is fascinated by the rise of a Muslim politician in the age of Donald Trump. Among the journalists in Beckenham was the New Yorker’s Sam Knight, who is profiling Khan for that magazine.
The mayor spoke with pride of having appointed the first female Metropolitan Police commissioner in the force’s 188-year history (Cressida Dick) and also the first female fire commissioner (Dany Cotton). Khan, who has two daughters – aged 17 and 15 – is a passionate feminist, a cause he dates back to his childhood, when he and his six brothers shared the housework and cooking with their sister and mother. “We never thought we were superior because we were boys.”
His management style grates with some. The mayor takes decisions with a close-knit group of senior aides and his relationship with the London Labour Group has been acrimonious at times. A London Assembly member told me the mayor still does not “really understand how City Hall works”.
Although he is proud of his record of never having lost an election he has contested – since he first stood for his school council, aged 11 – 2016 was a year of defeats. Against his choice, the UK voted to leave the European Union and Jeremy Corbyn was elected as Labour leader for a second time (but Khan maintains that he does not regret nominating the left-winger in 2015 – a decision that led some MPs to accuse him of opportunism). Then, in November, Donald Trump was elected as US president.
“Will London fall?” was the headline on a recent New York Times report about the effects of Brexit. Did Khan believe the capital’s status as a first-rank global city was threatened? “Yeah, it is, especially if it’s an extreme hard Brexit,” he said. “One of the things that we did on 24 June, the day after, was begin a campaign – three simple words: ‘London is open’. The idea is to show the world that even though we voted to leave the EU, we’re not going to stop being open-minded, outward-looking; we’re not going to stop being a place where you can come to invest. We’ve got the best talent.” He continued, “It beggars belief. We’ve got a million Londoners who are EU citizens, who, a year on, haven’t been given a guarantee about their future. [May] should be giving them a cast-iron guarantee. Don’t be surprised if they leave here and go back to their countries of origin.”
The mayor praised the shadow Brexit secretary, Keir Starmer,whom he has known since their days as lawyers, for recognising “the importance of privileged access to a single market”. But he added: “There is an issue on the doorstep . . . Everyone is clear about my position in London, you know where you stand with the Tories – extreme hard Brexit – [and] you know where you stand with the Lib Dems: they wish the referendum had never happened and want a second one. People are less clear about Labour’s position nationally.”
Among many in Labour, Khan – the party’s most senior elected politician – is increasingly spoken of as a future national leader. Allies say both that he wants the job and that he has the credibility required to make the opposition electable once more: polls show him to be the party’s most popular politician. But he knows that the mantle of “leader-in-waiting” is one best avoided. “I’ve got the best job in the world. Why give up the best job in the world to be Labour leader?” he said. And asked whether he would stand for a second term in 2020, he didn’t miss a beat: “Absolutely.”

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  • Sadiq Khan: "Why give up the best job in the world to be Labour leader?" ( recorded by RosieMarie ), American

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