GB
  
You are currently viewing the United Kingdom version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
19 MIN READ TIME
PROFILE

The rise and fall and rise again of Lutfur Rahman

The populist mayor of Tower Hamlets, in London’s East End, was barred from office following a scandal. Now re-elected and energised by Gaza, is his party coming for Keir Starmer? by Miles Ellingham & Cormac Kehoe

At a meeting in Tower Hamlets Town Hall, Mayor Lutfur Rahman is being roundly bollocked by a local petitioner over the council’s plans for Victoria Park. “Once again,” she proclaims, “the mayor has decided that he knows better than the Tower Hamlets people, that he can ignore the Tower Hamlets people and that he can cut out community groups as he sells off access to Victoria Park.”

Her disdain for the mayor and his newly founded Aspire party is not uncommon around here. One Aspire councillor attempts diplomacy, responding that, with the cost-of-living crisis, Tower Hamlets must administer its assets wisely. “I agree,” she replies, “and what’s more, I think it should start with the mayor’s office.” Applause erupts from Labour’s side of the chamber, acknowledging last year’s row over the mayor’s decision to spend around £450,000 of public money on an office upgrade, £50,000 of which went on a new meeting table and luxury chairs.

Rahman looks benevolently off into the middle distance. He’s not bothered. Why should he be? Following his landslide victory two years ago, he is more powerful than ever, having soundly beaten his Labour opponents in the race for mayor and for control of the council. On his side of the room, Aspire’s intake deliberate merrily. It’s easy to spot who’s who; whereas Labour has a mixed pool of representatives, Aspire’s councillors are exclusively British Bangladeshi men.

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of Prospect Magazine
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue May 24
 
£8.99 / issue
This issue and other back issues are not included in a new subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription. Prospect Magazine
PRINT SUBSCRIPTION? Available at magazine.co.uk, the best magazine subscription offers online.
 

This article is from...


View Issues
Prospect Magazine
May 24
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


Columns & Regulars
Brief encounter
Ranulph Fiennes, explorer & author 
THE PROSPECT GRID
Our monthly cut-out-and-keep guide to who falls where on the taste hierarchy
Contributors
The writers in this month's issue
People
Susan Hall, Giles Bristow, Konrad Bergström, Ken Currie, Helena de Bres
Philosopher-at-large: Is porn immoral?
Sasha Mudd
Fitting the internet into a small room
Ethan Zuckerman
Letters
Words from our readers
IN FACT
You would not believe...
The joy of lex: Wirdle
Sarah Ogilvie
Stephen Collins
Cartoon
The Greens can break through—if they grow up
Sam Freedman
Angela Hewitt, concert pianist
Angela Hewitt, concert pianist
Puzzles
Crossword & Bobby Seagull's brain teaser
Crossword & Bobby Seagull's brain teaser
Features
Traces of war
From Chernobyl to Odesa Oblast, Ukrainians are gathering evidence of what they say are Russian war crimes—not only against their compatriots, but against the environment itself
The Resistance
As the US presidential election approaches, Team Trump is preparing for power—and democracy’s defenders are tooling up
The Culture
Brothers in thought
Inequality was traditionally the central concern of economists—until it wasn’t. It may be time to re-read the classics
Not a one
The peasantry are a near-disappeared class to whom we are still connected. How long, however, until we forget them entirely?
Choosing to end it
How many of us occupy a liminal realm between life and death? And how many can pick their own way forward?
The anomaly hunters
If the entire universe is to make sense, we must find the places where it doesn’t make any sense at all
Books in brief
Recommended reading...
Pop: The corridors of power chords
Has music lost its sense of politics? Absolutely not
Film: Siren call
Recent films demand that we listen to them—deeply—as well as watching them
TV: Love in the time of binge-watching
This is how ‘One Day’ was meant to be adapted
Stage: Going solo
The pandemic has led theatre producers to cost-effective single-performer shows
Classical notes: Filial slaughter
The Oedipus complex is probably Sigmund Freud’s signature
Lives
Courtroom drama
Displaced life
A day at the ranch
Sex life
Farming life
Farming life
Move it
Mindful life
Divine inspiration
Clerical life
OK doomer
Young life
Super fan
Sporting life
Cover story
Candid Calvin
Former GB News presenter Calvin Robinson is an anti-woke crusader—and just possibly Britain’s strangest cleric of all time
GB SPEWS
I watched Britain’s most ghastly television news channel so you don’t have to
The Marshall plan
Hedge fund manager Paul Marshall is on a God-driven mission to transform the religious fabric of the nation–and he has the money to do it
The gospel according to GB News
Sir Paul Marshall aspires to become the most powerful media mogul in the UK since Rupert Murdoch