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Anti-LTN candidate elected mayor despite five-year ban for "corrupt and illegal practices"

Lutfur Rahman has been elected mayor of Tower Hamlets in London, a post he was removed from seven years ago following multiple breaches of electoral law

Tower Hamlets' mayoral race has been won by Lutfur Rahman — an outspoken critic of low traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs), who was removed from the same mayoral post in 2015 after being found guilty of electoral fraud, including "corrupt and illegal practices".

Representing Aspire, the party he formed in 2018, Rahman, in part, based his campaign around pledging to reverse LTNs in the London borough, claiming they had increased congestion and contributed to more CO2.

> Low traffic neighbourhoods encourage a quarter of Hackney’s residents to cycle more, poll finds

Rahman overhauled Labour incumbent John Biggs in the second round by 40,804 votes to 33,487, a result that Andrew Wood, an independent councillor for Canary Wharf, told the Independent was due to Biggs isolating working-class voters by introducing LTNs.

"Our roads have been closed, blocked up. It's contributing to more CO2 in the borough when the idea was to reduce it," Rahman claimed. "We're going to look at our roads, we're going to consult and reopen our roads."

The former solicitor's election was accepted as "decisive" by beaten Mr Biggs, however has not been welcomed by many. Conservative peer Lord Hayward called Rahman's return "depressing", and said his five-year ban was "inadequate".

The Aspire politician was removed from office in 2015 after being found guilty of vote-rigging, buying votes and religious intimidation, although police and the CPS (Crown Prosecution Service) concluded there was insufficient evidence for criminal prosecution.

Despite recently writing he had "never, ever acted dishonestly" on election leaflets, back in 2015, election commissioner Richard Mawrey said Rahman had "driven a coach and horses through election law and didn't care", and ordered the disgraced mayor to pay £250,000 in costs.

Mawrey added that Rahman had played the "race and Islamophobia card" and was "no doubt behind illegal and corrupt practices". Rahman was found to have, along with his supporters, used religious intimidation, vote-rigging and wrongly accused his Labour rival as racist to gain power.

A £1.7 million investigation by Scotland Yard concluded there was insufficient evidence for prosecution.

Now back in power, and with LTNs in his sights, Rahman told the BBC he was glad voters had given him "another chance to serve them".

"The people of the borough gave a verdict today. I was in the court of the people and they said in a loud voice that they wanted Lutfur Rahman and his team to serve them for the next four years," he said.

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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15 comments

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Wales56 | 2 years ago
1 like

"Labour’s defeat in Tower Hamlets, east London, was one of the biggest upsets at the local elections. It is a response to Islamophobia, state racism and Labour’s attacks on working class people. 

Under Biggs the council has attacked workers’ rights and made major cuts to key frontline services such as children’s special needs provision, adult social care day centres, youth provision and more. 

Unison union members fought a long strike in 2020 after the council imposed its version of fire and rehire on 4,000 workers. As John McLoughlin, Unison branch secretary (pc). told Socialist Worker, “Nobody in Tower Hamlets Unison will shed any tears to see that the mayor who sacked us in 2020 is now sacked himself.”

Tower Hamlets is one of the poorest areas in Britain. The council’s own review last year said, “Poverty in Tower Hamlets is nothing short of an emergency. On the eve of the pandemic, in a typical classroom of thirty children, seventeen were living below the poverty line. More than four in ten older people were living in low-income households.”

In those conditions, Rahman speaks to many people who feel abandoned in the face of relentless cuts and crushing pressure on their pay, benefits and pensions. In particular, he appeals to Muslims who feel battered by worsening state racism on top of the other class assaults.

It’s good Biggs has gone, but prepare now to confront .. Rahman if they let down the people who voted for them. "

from - Why Labour deserved to lose in Tower Hamlets (socialistworker.co.uk)

Avatar
Jenova20 replied to Wales56 | 2 years ago
2 likes

Wales56 wrote:

"Labour’s defeat in Tower Hamlets, east London, was one of the biggest upsets at the local elections. It is a response to Islamophobia, state racism and Labour’s attacks on working class people. 

Under Biggs the council has attacked workers’ rights and made major cuts to key frontline services such as children’s special needs provision, adult social care day centres, youth provision and more. 

Unison union members fought a long strike in 2020 after the council imposed its version of fire and rehire on 4,000 workers. As John McLoughlin, Unison branch secretary (pc). told Socialist Worker, “Nobody in Tower Hamlets Unison will shed any tears to see that the mayor who sacked us in 2020 is now sacked himself.”

Tower Hamlets is one of the poorest areas in Britain. The council’s own review last year said, “Poverty in Tower Hamlets is nothing short of an emergency. On the eve of the pandemic, in a typical classroom of thirty children, seventeen were living below the poverty line. More than four in ten older people were living in low-income households.”

In those conditions, Rahman speaks to many people who feel abandoned in the face of relentless cuts and crushing pressure on their pay, benefits and pensions. In particular, he appeals to Muslims who feel battered by worsening state racism on top of the other class assaults.

It’s good Biggs has gone, but prepare now to confront .. Rahman if they let down the people who voted for them. "

from - Why Labour deserved to lose in Tower Hamlets (socialistworker.co.uk)

Rahman should have been barred from ever running for public office again. He was finally thrown out last time for siphoning off taxpayer funds to bribe Bangladeshi voters into voting for him. I don't see why he won't do it again to stay in power, although more carefully this time.

Avatar
lesterama | 2 years ago
4 likes

Private Eye has plenty of stories about him

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mdavidford | 2 years ago
0 likes

Quote:

The former solicitor's election was accepted as "decisive" by beaten Mr Biggs, however has not been welcomed by many.

[pedant]Well (for whatever reason) it appears to have been welcomed by the majority of those who voted. There may have been many who didn't welcome it, but that's not quite the same thing.[/pedant]

Avatar
Jenova20 replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
2 likes

mdavidford wrote:

Quote:

The former solicitor's election was accepted as "decisive" by beaten Mr Biggs, however has not been welcomed by many.

[pedant]Well (for whatever reason) it appears to have been welcomed by the majority of those who voted. There may have been many who didn't welcome it, but that's not quite the same thing.[/pedant]

Probably because he was bribing them with taxpayer money into voting for him last time. They likely expect he'll start doing it again now he has power again.

Avatar
EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
4 likes

From what I've been told his party were using the same ol' tactics this time around. He should've been banned for life.

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brooksby | 2 years ago
6 likes

It's unbelievable that Rahman was allowed to stand for public office ever again! Private Eye used to document his practices... Un. Be. Leeevable.!!

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chrisonabike replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
2 likes

Yup - I doubt LTN / no LTN is the big reason behind this shyster (favourite of Private Eye as you say) getting back on the horse.  Unfortunately in some places it's the same story as Boss Tweed - once someone's figured out what rings the bell with voters and got their hooks in they're hard to flush.

Anyway that's London, good luck y'all, back to holding the SNP councillors' feet to the fire on "transport beyond the tram" and adding provision for modes other than motor transport to all their new housing...

Avatar
eburtthebike | 2 years ago
9 likes

I bet we're all glad that the government* is gutting the electoral commission, removing its autonomy and making it subject to the will of, you guessed, the government*.

*If this utter shower of sh*t can be dignified with that totally undeserved epithet that is.  Still, it's nice that the tories lost 500+ seats, and generally, anti-LTN candidates didn't do well.

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Boopop | 2 years ago
4 likes

Anti-LTN'ers just love misinformation don't they? A modal filter is not the same as a road closure. 🤮

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alexuk | 2 years ago
5 likes

He wasn't voted in for his stance on LTN. I spent many years living in that borough, he was voted in for another reason. I reason we can't say.

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Boopop replied to alexuk | 2 years ago
0 likes

Woops, this wasn't supposed to be a reply to the above.

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open_roads replied to alexuk | 2 years ago
3 likes

Vote early and often. And if you can't do that, ask a community elder to vote for you.

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Brauchsel replied to alexuk | 2 years ago
2 likes

I'd guess his main opposition to LTNs is that it makes it harder for his "supporters" to drive round to community members' houses to "remind" them to vote correctly. 

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Bill H replied to Brauchsel | 2 years ago
2 likes

Also makes it easier for his voters to drive in from Ilford and even further out into Essex. 

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