What you need to know as Tower Hamlets heads into local elections

Aurelia FosterLondon
News imageReuters An aerial view of the Canary Wharf skyscrapersReuters
Global banks and high end apartments sprawl Canary Wharf

What happened in Tower Hamles at the last council election in 2022?

The Aspire Party won the mayoral election and control of the council. Labour was reduced to 19 seats, its lowest number ever on Tower Hamlets council.

Aspire: 24 seats (+24)

Labour: 19 seats (-23)

Conservative: 1 seat (-1)

Greens: 1 seat (+1)

Since the election, two Labour councillors have defected to Aspire, one Labour councillor has become an independent and four Aspire councillors have become independents.

The mayor has significant powers over local services such as housing, including local regeneration schemes and affordable housing targets, planning and waste collection.

Election expert Tony Travers on what might happen in Tower Hamlets

What might happen in Tower Hamlets?

Professor Tony Travers of the London School of Economics said Tower Hamlets operates in a slightly different political axis to the rest of London politics.

"Mayor Lutfur Rahman and his Aspire party control the borough at the moment and given what we can see about the rest of politics, Labour's weakness, not that much Green activity there, looks as if Aspire will hold on to Tower Hamlets - and Lutfur Rahman must be pretty safe as a bet to win the mayoralty."

Why do the local elections in London matter?

At the moment, Labour are dominant in London - they have 21 of its 32 councils, a record-equalling high.

The Conservatives run just five - having lost their former "crown-jewel" councils of Wandsworth and Westminster to Labour at the last borough elections in 2022.

The Liberal Democrats run three councils in south-west London and will be looking to gain Merton from Labour.

The Aspire Party run Tower Hamlets and two boroughs are currently in no overall control.

Nick Bowes, insight director from the London Communications Agency, said: "These are likely to be the most consequential elections in London, certainly for the past 20 years - possibly since the first borough elections in 1964."

He added: "The ways things are fragmenting in the polls it's very difficult to predict exactly what's going to happen but it does look like being a very bad night for Labour and the Conservatives in London."

When are the 2026 local elections in Tower Hamlets and who can vote?

More than six million Londoners can vote in the council elections on Thursday 7 May 2026.

All 32 London boroughs are up for election.

There are also elections for the mayor in five boroughs: Croydon, Hackney, Lewisham, Newham and Tower Hamlets.

All candidates in the Tower Hamlets Council election are listed on the borough's website.

Use our tool to see what elections are being held in your area.

Key dates in Tower Hamlets Council local elections

The deadline to register to vote is Monday 20 April 2026.

The deadline to apply for a postal vote is Tuesday 21 April 2026 at 17:00 BST - you must be registered to vote before you can receive a postal vote.

The deadline to change existing postal or proxy voting arrangements is also Tuesday 21 April 2026 at 17:00.

The deadline to apply for a proxy vote is Tuesday 28 April 2026 at 17:00.

Photographic voter ID is required to vote at a polling station - if you do not have valid Voter ID, the deadline to apply for photo ID to vote (called a Voter Authority Certificate) for this election is Tuesday 28 April 2026 at 17:00.

Election Day: Thursday 7 May 2026 from 07:00 to 22:00.

You can find more information about voting in Tower Hamlets on the borough's website.

News imageGetty Images A market stall with many pairs of leather boots on display and passers byGetty Images
Brick Lane is famous for its numerous curry houses and vintage market

Where is Tower Hamlets and who lives there?

The London Borough of Tower Hamlets sits on the north bank of the Thames in east London and is bordered by Newham, Hackney, and the City of London.

What's it like? It spansthe historic East End of London and a swathe of the regenerated London Docklands.

In recent years, Tower Hamlets has become notable for changing demographics, with high levels of immigration, and the transformation of its skyline as a large number of skyscrapers are built.

Neighbourhoods: Bethnal Green, Bow, Mile End, Whitechapel, Stepney, Wapping, Shadwell, Spitalfields, Limehouse, Poplar, and the Isle of Dogs.

Places of interest Victoria Park, Tower of London, Brick Lane, Spitalfields, Mile End Park, Young V&A, London Museum Docklands, St Katharine Docks, Wilton's Music Hall, Whitechapel Gallery and Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park - part of which falls inside Tower Hamlets.

Pub quiz fact: It is the youngest borough in the UK, with a median age of just 30. It is also the most densely populated borough in England.

Population: 331,886 in 2024, according to 2024 estimate.

Demographics: According to the 2021 census, 44% as Asian, 39% identify as white, 7% as black, 5% as mixed race and 2% as another ethnic group.

Tower Hamlets is the youngest borough in London and the average age of its residents is 30 - 21.5% of the population are under 20 years old and 45.1% are aged from 20 to 39 years old.

Average property price: According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the average residential property price in Tower Hamlets in December 2025 was £464,000.

Average monthly rent: The ONS reported that the average monthly rent in February 2026 in Tower Hamlets was £2,389.

Council tax: Band D council tax in the borough for 2026/27 is £1,837.78.

Transport: The borough is served by nine Tube stations: Aldgate East, Bethnal Green, Bow Road, Bromley-by-Bow, Canary Wharf, Mile End, Stepney Green, Tower Hill and Whitechapel, according to Transport for London.

It has several rail, Overground and DLR stations including Limehouse, Langdon Park, Poplar, Wapping, All Saints and Westferry.

News imageGetty Images The East London Mosque, a modern red brick building. A large number of males in Islamic dress appear to be walking away from it towards the camera.Getty Images
The East London Mosque near Whitechapel is one of the largest in western Europe

What is the local history of Tower Hamlets?

The name Tower Hamlets originated in the 16th Century to describe the small settlements, or hamlets, to the east of the Tower of London where inhabitants were required to defend the Tower.

Historically, it is characterised by the East End of London.

By the 18th and 19th centuries, areas such as Whitechapel and Stepney became densely populated, driven by the London docks and textile and manufacturing industries.

The borough was a centre for successive waves of migrants, including Huguenots, Irish, Jews, and later Bangladeshi communities, especially around Brick Lane.

Heavy bombing during World War Two caused widespread destruction, followed by post-war rebuilding. The London docks began to decline in the late 20th Century, but the Isle of Dogs was regenerated, creating Canary Wharf as a global financial hub.

What is the electoral history of Tower Hamlets?

Tower Hamlets was a safe borough for the Labour party from its formation in 1965 until 1986 when the Liberal Democrats won control of the council.

Labour won it back in 1994 and faced little opposition to their control until the people of Tower Hamlets voted to introduce a directly elected mayoral system in 2010. The former Labour leader of the council, Lutfur Rahman, who had been barred from standing for Labour, stood as an independent and won the mayoralty in October 2010.

Then at the next set of local elections in 2014 Rahman's supporters, under the new banner of Tower Hamlets First, won 18 seats on the council, plunging Tower Hamlets into no overall control.

But controversy and legal action followed. Rahman was removed as mayor the following year and the election was declared void, after an election commissioner found Rahman guilty of "corrupt and illegal" election practices, which he denied.

Rahman was banned from standing for election again for five years and the mayoral race was re-run, with Labour's John Biggs becoming the elected mayor in 2015. Labour won back control of the council in 2018. Rahman was elected mayor in 2022.

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