Ghislaine Maxwell's nephew to stand as councillor in Tower Hamlets at local elections

Ted Maxwell is running as an independent candidate for the Bethnal Green West ward in Tower Hamlets

Ghislaine Maxwell's nephew to stand as councillor in Tower Hamlets at local elections
Ghislaine Maxwell's nephew to stand as councillor in Tower Hamlets at local elections Photo: Evening Standard

The nephew of convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell is standing for election as a London borough councillor in May.

Ted Maxwell, 39, is running as an independent candidate for the Bethnal Green West ward in Tower Hamlets in the May local elections.

The grandson of disgraced newspaper tycoon Robert Maxwell is campaigning on a pledge to make streets safer, and against what he calls the “poisonous” party politics in the borough.

The council was controlled by Labour for nearly 30 years before being taken over by Mayor Lutfur Rahman and the Aspire Party in 2022.

The current council has been investigated for channelling funding to Bangladeshi community groups, and have previously been linked to allegations of family voting, the illegal practice of influencing a family member in casting their vote.

Maxwell’s candidacy has drawn attention because of his name, despite there being little evidence of a close relationship with his aunt, Ghislaine.

Ghislaine Maxwell is currently serving a 20-year sentence in the US for sex trafficking related to the case of Jeffrey Epstein, her former partner, while Ted’s grandfather, Robert Maxwell , stole £400m from the pension funds of companies in his media empire.

Ted is the son of Kevin Maxwell, Robert’s youngest son, and his ex-wife Pandora.

He grew up in an 11-bedroom mansion on the banks of the Thames, but has lived in the Bethnal Green area for 15 years, and he currently works as a project manager for the development of London’s Royal Docks.

Ted Maxwell told the Telegraph: “My aunt’s actions 20 years ago have nothing to do with me and, of course, I do not condone them.

But not a single person has mentioned it or asked about it out of the few thousand people I have spoken to.

“People are worried about black mould on their walls, bad maintenance in their building or anti-social behaviour on the streets and they are trying to evaluate whether I can help with that or not.”
Maxwell says that he offers voters a clean slate, saying: “I’m properly independent with no party structure around me.

I don’t have a legacy of local decisions that people may not like.

People are thinking of voting for me because it’s a way of trying something that is definitely different from other options.”
Killer bragged ‘I stabbed him fully’ after murdering student on railway tracks
Tea, cakes and mortality: Why we should all visit a London Death Café
Woman accused of slashing sister’s throat felt ‘unappreciated’, court hears
Art After Dark is back with an exciting calendar of cultural events
He has said he would campaign to introduce more infrastructure that would allow people to walk and cycle more, and supports plans that restrict vehicle access near schools during peak hours.

“As an independent councillor, I will do what’s right, not what a party boss tells me to do.”

Source: This article was originally published by Evening Standard

Read Full Original Article →

Share this article

Comments (0)

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Leave a Comment

Maximum 2000 characters