Half a million sign petition supporting Uber in London
						
		 
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		 [September 23, 2017] 
		 By Paresh Dave and William Schomberg 
		 
		SAN FRANCISCO/LONDON (Reuters) - Half a 
		million people have signed an online petition in under 24 hours backing 
		Uber's bid to stay on roads of London, showing the company is turning to 
		its tried-and-tested tactic of asking customers for help when it locks 
		horns with regulators. 
		 
		London's transport authorities stunned the powerful start-up on Friday 
		when they deemed Uber unfit to run a taxi service for safety reasons and 
		stripped it of its license from next week, although it can continue to 
		operate while it appeals. 
		 
		The regulator cited Uber's failure to report serious criminal offices, 
		conduct sufficient background checks on drivers and other safety issues, 
		threatening the U.S. firm's presence in one of the world's wealthiest 
		cities. 
		 
		Uber immediately emailed users in London and urged them to sign a 
		petition that said the city authorities had "caved in to a small number 
		of people who want to restrict consumer choice". 
		 
		By 1200 GMT on Saturday, more than 515,000 people had signed in support 
		of Uber. 
						
		
		  
						
		It counted 3.5 million active users in London in the past three months. 
		Even if many tourists are probably included in the total, the figure 
		represents a potential political force of commuters who face long 
		journeys between their home and offices and who use Uber as a cheaper 
		alternative to other taxi firms. 
		 
		Turning to users for help is one of the first steps in Uber's playbook. 
		In Jakarta, Budapest, Toronto and Portland it asked riders to sign 
		petitions and built online tools to contact lawmakers to show their 
		support. 
		 
		Regulators have at least partly relented in Portland, Toronto and 
		Jakarta, but Budapest remains a work in progress. 
		 
		Uber now faces a showdown with London's Mayor Sadiq Khan, who this month 
		said he wouldn't let his teenage daughters use cabs like Uber on their 
		own over fears for their safety. 
		 
		Khan, a leading figure in the opposition Labour Party, said on Friday: 
		"All private-hire operators in London need to play by the rules. The 
		safety and security of Londoners must come first." 
		 
		As mayor, Khan is chairman of Transport for London, the regulator which 
		stripped Uber of its license. 
		 
		London's decision is the first major challenge for new Uber Chief 
		Executive Dara Khosrowshahi, who took over from co-founder and ex-CEO 
		Travis Kalanick. He was forced out after internal and external 
		investigations into sexual harassment complaints, the thwarting of 
		government inquiries and potential bribery. 
		 
		NEW REGIME? 
		 
		So far, Khosrowshahi has adopted a softer tone to the company's crisis 
		in London than his ousted predecessor did when faced with similar 
		problems. 
		 
		"Dear London: we (are) far from perfect" Khosrowshahi tweeted on Friday. 
		But he noted that 40,000 drivers and millions of riders were dependent 
		on the service. "Please work with us to make things right." 
						
		
		  
						
		The early signs of Khosrowshahi's strategy suggest he is likely to 
		follow earlier game plans, said Bradley Tusk, an Uber investor who 
		advised on policy in New York City for the company. 
		 
		“A lot of people rely on it, so there’s going to be a lot of fertile 
		ground to mobilise,” Tusk said. “If real people are angry, it’s a lot 
		harder for regulators.” 
		 
		However, while Uber has been ready to turn to make campaigns personal in 
		the past, Khosrowshahi may take a more moderate tone, by temperament and 
		necessity. 
		 
		
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			A photo illustration shows the Uber app logo displayed on a mobile 
			telephone, as it is held up for a posed photograph in central London 
			September 22, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville 
            
			  
In New York City, Austin, Texas and Washington, D.C., Uber hired political ad 
agencies and consultants and blasted political leaders for supporting measures 
that could eliminate jobs and worsen traffic. 
 
During a stand-off in New York City in 2015, Uber named a mock feature on its 
app after the city's mayor, Bill de Blasio, and used it to warn users that a 
regulatory proposal he backed could increase waits for rides. 
Kalanick issued tweets criticizing opponents, including an all-capitalized 
message saying "WATCH THIS!" which linked to a video that suggested the mayor 
was obstructing social progress. 
 
"They have a lot more scrutiny on them now," said Reed Galen, a political 
consultant who worked with Uber on a campaign in Austin, Texas. "Going with the 
old idea of punching the local leader in the nose, that strategy doesn’t work 
when you’ve had the issues Uber has had." 
 
Khosrowshahi's statements Friday were an "absolutely different take," Galen 
said. 
 
In an internal email seen by Reuters, Khosrowshahi said there was a "high cost" 
to having a bad reputation. He described it as "critical" that employees "act 
with integrity in everything we do, and learn how to be a better partner to 
every city we operate in." 
 
WAITING GAME 
 
For a company known for the speed of its growth, Uber has shown patience when 
needed. It has long treated tussles with government as inevitable challenges, 
but ones it sees as temporary setbacks. 
  
Uber has suspended its services for months in some markets, including Alaska and 
Texas. But it’s been able to return within a year or two in most cases by 
working out new rules or turning to higher authorities such as courts and state 
governments. 
 
The efforts have a cost. Uber and rival Lyft Inc together spent more than $10 
million on a failed ballot-box campaign in Austin and millions more on lobbying 
elsewhere in Texas. 
 
Uber continues to engage in a cat-and-mouse game with city officials in many of 
the 600 plus cities in which it operates. 
 
It suspended services in July in Finland but plans to re-enter Helsinki next 
year after the country passed a law de-regulating taxi services. 
 
Whether Uber continues such tactics - for instance, seeking action from 
Britain's parliament to supersede London authorities - is unclear. But Tusk said 
he would be surprised if Uber was not already in touch with members of 
parliament. 
 
In a sign of early political opposition to London's move, Greg Hands, the 
minister for London in Britain's Conservative government, hit out at what he 
called a "blanket ban" on Uber. 
 
"At the flick of a pen Sadiq Khan is threatening to put 40,000 people out of 
work and leave 3.5 million users of Uber stranded," Hands tweeted late on 
Friday. 
 
"Once again the actions of Labour leave ordinary working people (to) pay the 
price for it." 
 
(Additional reporting by Eric Auchard in Frankfurt; Editing by Peter Henderson 
and Andrew Bolton) 
				 
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