Showing posts with label Greens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greens. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Newham Council Annual General Meeting 2026

 

A belated report on the AGM last week in the beautiful main hall of East Ham (also referred to as Newham but disputed by West Ham) Town Hall. 

We are not in my view really into "pomp and circumstance" in Newham but this is the formal Annual General meeting of the Council and I freely admit to liking appropriate local historic traditions but this meeting is also very political. 

While many do not understand that we have in Newham, a directly elected Executive Mayor, with very strong powers (I would prefer a different governance model but that boat has sailed), the AGM does elect important constitutional posts such as the Chairs of Council and of other important committees. 

The election of these important positions was disrupted by some simply bizarre and aggressive interventions by the so called "Newham Independent Group" who stormed off in the middle of the meeting because they I think they did not understand what was going on. 

In the election on May 7th, the Labour Candidate for Executive Mayor, Forhad Hussain, won convincingly and will the be Executive Mayor for the next 4 years. 

Labour is the single largest party but we did not win a majority of seats on this occasion (next time will be different). The Independents came next then the Greens. Council officers had made a recommendation to all the Groups about sharing Chairs of Council committees according to the number of seats each Group they held. 

While I would of course rather the Labour Councillors elect all Chairs that was not going to happen . I will not comment on all the discussions that went on but it is crystal clear that the independents were wheeling and dealing and for them to suggest otherwise is just hypocritical and rather silly. 

Labour and Green members voted largely to adopt the original Council officers recommendations about a fairish allocation of positions while it was clear to me that the independents did not understand that they had been given some of the most important positions in the Council outside the Executive but they still were against? 

I pointed out to them during the debate that Mayor Forhad Hussain had "put the hand of friendship out to the Independent group and to the Greens”.

However, the fact of the matter is that the Independent group did not wish to work with the mayor for the betterment of Newham and our residents.” https://www.newhamcitizen.co.uk/newham-independents-green-labour-council-roles/

Apart from this daftness the meeting ran smoothly and it was good to meet up with many comrades and guests. 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Newham Green candidate accused of Criminal Offence & Election Fraud by giving ‘false address’ ....

 

Home address information published by the council for a range of those seeking election in the east London borough is regarded by others as breaching regulations

A Labour councillor seeking re-election to his local ward in Newham has reported a Green Party challenger to the police, claiming there has been “a potential case of election fraud” due to the Green candidate providing the council with incorrect information about where he lives.

In an email to the Met’s designated officer dealing with electoral law, Steve Brayshaw, who is defending his seat in Royal Victoria ward for Labour, claims that the Greens’ Rob Callender “submitted a false address in his nomination papers”.

Brayshaw points out to the Met officer that although Callender’s nomination statement – which is published on the council’s website (reproduced below) and has already appeared on ballot papers to postal vote applicants – lists him as residing at an “address in Royal Victoria”, the electoral register shows that he lives in a block of flats in North Woolwich within the neighbouring Royal Albert ward.

Brayshaw informs the Met officer that he regards the situation as “a criminal matter” relating to the Section 65A of the Representation of the People Act.

Providing a false statement on a nomination paper in England or Wales can result in an election win being invalidated, an unlimited fine, up to one year in prison or both.

 

Screenshot 2026 04 27 at 10.27.00

Callender, who was the Greens’ candidate for Mayor of Newham in 2022 and fought the local West Ham & Beckton parliamentary seat for his party in the 2024 general election, has previously described himself as living in North Woolwich. A campaign video for his Royal Victoria campaign this year, uploaded to Instagram on 16 April (pictured above), states only that he lives “in the Royal Docks” area rather than specifying the Royal Victoria ward.

He also contested Royal Victoria ward in 2022 alongside running for Mayor. In that year his nomination statement home address information was “address in Newham”.

Speaking to On London, Brayshaw called on Callender to “immediately publicly acknowledge that he has provided voters in Royal Victoria with misleading information, correct the record with Newham Council and stand down”. He reiterated his view that “the police need to take action”.

The London Green Party has been approached for comment. Meanwhile, another Newham Green candidate, Rajeev Kumar, debating Brayshaw on a private Royal Victoria Docks Facebook page, has acknowledged that Callender lives in Royal Albert ward but added: “As I know for a fact, this is a simple mistake made when someone else finalised the form. It happened due to that person’s confusion.”

Brayshaw’s initiative over Callender is taking place amid confusion and dispute about Newham Council’s stewardship of the candidate nomination process and the rules governing information to be provided in the “home address” section of the papers candidates must submit.

Local elections rules for England and Wales state that if a local government candidate prefers his or her full home address to not be published they may instead make known the name of the “relevant area” in which they live, and that for London council elections the “relevant area” is the the borough in which the candidate resides. No other type of area is mentioned as being acceptable.

The same definition of a “relevant area” is used in the homes address guidance for candidates published on the website of the Electoral Commission, the independent agency whose duties include setting standards for how elections are run (below).

Ec address guidance

In Newham’s case, therefore, the “relevant area” for council candidates would normally be Newham itself and the words “address in Newham” appear on the “homes address” column of the vast majority of nomination statements for the borough’s 24 electoral wards, all of which are on the council’s website (under Statutory Notices).

However, On London has found 16 examples spread across eight wards where neither a candidate’s full home address nor “address in Newham” – or, legitimately, another London borough, where relevant – is listed in the “home address” box.

As well as Callender, these include Shabd Pyari, his Green Party running mate in Royal Victoria. Like Callender, Pyari’s nomination statement specifies “address in Royal Victoria” in the home address section, although On London understands that, unlike Callender, the electoral register lists her as residing in the ward of that name. Every other Green candidate for a Newham Council seat has given their home address as Newham.

Nine of the 16 deviations from the borough name rule are by standalone Independent candidates, raising the possibility that they didn’t know about the “relevant area” rule when filling in their nomination papers. Three are by the small Christian People’s Alliance party, one is by a candidate running under the banner of “Communities United” and one, in Boleyn ward, is by the local Newham Independents’ Party, which is posing a major challenge to Labour’s dominance in much of the borough this year.

In 2023, the Newham Independents Party gained one of Boleyn’s three seats from Labour in a by-election and will hope to win all three on 7 May. The other two Newham Independents Party candidates for Boleyn have “address in Newham” in their nomination statements.

In most of the 16 cases, the home address entry is the name of the ward the candidate is contesting, though three of the standalone Independents have provided the names of other Newham wards and two of them have said they live in areas of London whose names are not those of wards – respectively, “Plaistow”, a suburban part of Newham, and “Ilford”, which is a town in the neighbouring borough of Redbridge.

Brayshaw has represented Royal Victoria ward for Labour since its creation in 2022, its predecessor ward, Royal Docks, since 2009, and has lived in the Royal Victoria ward area throughout that entire period. He argues that Callender and Pyari presenting themselves as residents of Royal Victoria ward gives them an advantage they shouldn’t have, because candidates thought to be unequivocally local can be favoured by some voters over others whose home address information is less specific about where they live.

As well as running for Mayor, Callender contested Royal Victoria ward in 2022, finishing third in the two-seat ward behind Brayshaw and another Labour candidate. The recent increase in the popularity of the Greens means that this year the ward is being seen as a marginal the Greens have a chance of winning.

Two candidates running as Independents in the Labour-held three-seat East Ham South ward, Suhel Rob and Kamal Hussain, whose published home address information is the name of the ward, have jointly posted on TikTok: “Why would you vote [for] a candidate that may not be from your local area. Larger parties send candidates to different areas all the time, so it’s possible they don’t understand East Ham South as much as we do.” Every other candidate for the ward has given their home address as Newham, in line with the rules.

A number of other Labour candidates in Newham are unhappy that opponents’ address details other than their full addresses or the alternative borough address have been accepted by the council and will appear on ballot papers for 7 May. They include Rohit Dasgupta, an incumbent candidate for Canning Town South who lives in the ward and said he believes “the rules are clear: candidates should only publish the local authority area, not a specific ward. How has this been allowed to happen, and what checks or questions were raised during the nomination process?”

However, when approached by On London for comment about the Newham situation, the Electoral Commission said that Returning Officers, the local government officers who administer elections, “must accept nominations at face value” – wording that suggests Returning Officers are not required or able to correct or block home address information that doesn’t adhere to the rules or is demonstrably untrue.

Newham Council responded in a similar way when asked about its stewardship of this year’s elections. A spokesman said: “Nomination papers are accepted on face value, and an incorrect ‘relevant area’ does not invalidate a nomination paper under law.”

Brayshaw told On London that taking this approach “opens the system to confusion and abuse before a vote is cast. Candidates who follow the rules can get penalised by others taking advantage of the fact that no one will stop them from putting literally anywhere as their home address if they think it will help them get more votes. That cannot be fair, and challenging the outcome later is not easy.”

The Electoral Commission told On London, “Returning Officers are responsible for the conduct of the election for their electoral area, ensuring that it is administered effectively and in accordance with the law” and that “This includes administering the nominations process.”

But it added, “Candidates are responsible for ensuring they are eligible to stand and their nomination papers are submitted correctly” and it pointed out that “once a nomination has been accepted by the RO [Returning Officer], it cannot be challenged during the election, though it may be challenged after the election through an election petition”.

Sunday, November 16, 2025

Newham Full Council Meeting 10.11.25 - Motion on Housing

A photo collage of myself speaking against a Green motion on housing and in favour of an amendment by my ward colleague, John Whitworth. 

I was to the point that while I recognise that political debate can be rough, the sheer hypocrisy of the Newham Greens is simply breath taking. They very "angrily" criticise Newham for not building more homes but when I check their party record while they were in power in Brighton, in 7 years they only built 497 homes while in the last 7 (actually 4) years Newham has built 1662 homes (more of course are needed). 

More than 3x than they built when they were in power in a much richer council! Thankfully now the Greens have been kicked out of power in Brighton by voters due to their incompetence. 

Hat tip pics to yet another John.

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

Newham Council Annual General Meeting 2023

Yesterday evening was the Formal Annual General Meeting of the London Borough of Newham Council in the Old Town Hall in Stratford. It is the nearest we usually get to "pomp and ceremony" in Newham Council meetings. 

On the way in we were lobbied effectively by a well organised branch of the local Rental Union on tenants rights. 

At the start of the meeting, we had terrific songs  by a local primary school choir.  It was nice to see the outgoing Chair of Council (in a Executive Mayor Council such as Newham, this position is somewhat similar to a traditional Civic Ceremonial Mayor) Cllr Winston Vaughan, in his red robes, fur and cocked hat being given a lovely send off. The new Chair, Cllr Rohima Rahman, also wore red robes but as the first female Chair of Bangladeshi descent in Newham, also wore her traditional headdress. 

She was a very good chair and had to deal with the obligatory "shouty" protest in the hall which disrupted the meeting for 15 minutes and then some sharp political debates about committee positions between the Labour Group and the 2 Green Councillors. For my pennyworth I must say that I found it disconcerting that our Greens make a play as being the Party of democracy and principle but then went on to make some pretty partizan and frankly, silly, claims over their influence and "achievements". 

My long standing Colleague, Cllr Stephen Brayshaw made some very pointed remarks while, our Executive Mayor, Rokhsana Fiaz, also pointed out some pretty obvious inaccuracies in what had been said by them. 

Afterwards there was some nice snacks in the Courtyard, then my ward colleague, John Whitworth and I, went off to a quiet beer (or two) at the nearby, King Eddies. 

Sunday, June 26, 2022

My Week 20.6.22-25.6.22

 

A really busy but interesting week. It was my first day back at work after almost 2 weeks holiday (Malta then UNISON conference in Brighton) so lots of tenancy and trade union issues to try and sort out (not helped by major IT/server problems). 

Monday evening was the full council meeting at the Old Town Hall in Stratford.  I spoke in favour of the Climate emergency update and gave what I thought was a gentile dig at the two new Green Councillors for opposing it. While their job is to be the opposition to the majority group at Newham Council, they should not in my view just oppose everything for the sake of opposition. I was pleased that they abstained at the actual vote and did not "oppose" the update. 

I was also really pleased that former long serving Councillor, Pat Holland, was awarded as an "Alder Person" for the Borough in recognition of her work for residents. 

Tuesday evening was another meeting at the Old Town Hall. This time the local Housing Forum, which was really positive. It was great that senior Housing managers met up with residents, face to face, to listen and respond to their concerns (similar to speed dating!). 

On Wednesday evening I attended virtually my UNISON branch General Purposes & Finance Committee meeting. 

Thursday evening we had a virtual induction for my new role as a member of Education, Children & Young People Scrutiny.  Which I am really looking forward to being a member of this so important committee. 

Friday evening I met up with former housing colleagues from Tower Hamlets UNISON for a birthday beer and curry. 

Saturday morning I covered the Councillor surgery for my colleague Cllr Whitworth at Stratford Library, who is away on leave. I had what I thought was a constructive meeting with local residents about very serious and multiple ASB issues. But also was able to look at the various historical pamphlets and documents in the library (see picture of Queen in 1953 and Vicarage Lane E15 in 1960's)

Sunday, I had a lovely recovery walk in Chilterns which I will post upon separately.