Labour dumps their hard-working Thornton Heath councillor

THE TOSS-CARS 2026, Part 2: Inside Croydon reveals the borough’s hardest-working councillors. PLUS: Which Town Hall figure managed just 12 reports to the council’s smartphone app all year?

Reigning champion: Cllr Karen Jewitt

The Labour Party goes in to Thursday’s local elections with the hardest-working councillor in the borough not on the ballot paper.

Karen Jewitt, who has been a councillor in Croydon for 32 years, was one of the six sitting councillors blocked from seeking selection to stand for election by the Labour Party.

With Croydon Labour still under special measures since bankrupting the borough in 2020, Labour’s National Executive Committee supervised the panelling of wannabe council candidates for the party, and together with London region officials, they also oversaw the long-listing and short-listing of ward selections.

In: Ellie Sandover, niece of Keir Starmer, was approved by Labour’s NEC

It was under this entirely opaque and non-democratic system that Ellie Sandover, the 20-something niece of Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, was deemed a good enough candidate to stand for election in a safe Labour ward, as officials presented Labour members in three-seat Bensham Manor ward with a fait accompli, with only three candidates left on the shortlist, as Inside Croydon reported last year.

And it was the same nameless Labour officials who determined that Karen Jewitt was not suitable for selection in her home ward of Thornton Heath, where she has been councillor since 2018, having previously represented Woodside. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, Callton Young, Chris Clark, Croydon Council, Janet Campbell, Karen Jewitt, Lynne Hale, Mayor Jason Perry, Rowenna Davis, Samir Dwesar, Simon Fox, Stuart King, Thornton Heath, Tony Newman, West Thornton | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

These are the questions that Mayor Perry is too afraid to face

ANDREW FISHER has interviewed three of the main candidates standing for election as  Croydon Mayor. Only Tory Jason Perry refused our invitations. What has Perry got to hide? These are the questions Perry has left unanswered

Failed Mayor: Tory Jason Perry

Apparently, “Mayor Perry remains focused on talking directly to residents about the progress being made to restore pride in Croydon and the work still ahead.” Yet he won’t talk to Inside Croydon because, according to him, it is “highly partisan”.

Inside Croydon is so partisan, in fact, that Labour, Liberal Democrat and Green candidates for Mayor all willingly participated in my podcast interview series – and all were asked probing questions about themselves, their policies and their parties.

Links to all three of the Andrew Fisher Interview series, plus the lively Inside Croydon Digital Debate – where Perry failed to show up – can be found towards the bottom of this column.

Given you won’t hear an interview with the incumbent Mayor, Jason Perry of the Conservative Party, here are some of the questions I will have put to him. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, 2026 Croydon Mayor election, Andrew Fisher, Council Tax, Croydon Council, Mayor Jason Perry, The Andrew Fisher Interview | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Purley Way: Croydon’s spill and contamination problem

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If you drive down the Purley Way today, it’s easy to see it as a stretch of retail parks.

Underneath the car parks of the furniture stores, there’s a much older story. This area was once the heart of Croydon’s heavy industry, home to massive gas works and power stations.

While the surroundings have changed, the legacy of that industrial past remains in the soil. Even now, with light industrial units still operating behind the retail frontage, small-scale spills are a constant worry. These incidents have a cumulative effect on the health of the borough. Continue reading

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The Toss-cars 2026: We name Croydon’s laziest councillors

EXCLUSIVE by STEVEN DOWNES, Inside Croydon Editor

Two of Croydon’s councillors, who receive tens of thousands of pounds in allowances from the cash-strapped council over the course of their term in office, submitted not a single members’ enquiry through a purpose-made Town Hall system through the whole of 2025-2026.

That’s the startling discovery made by Inside Croydon as a result of our annual Toss-cars Awards – where we ask the council, through a Freedom of Information request for their official work log data.

With just a few days until the local elections, Croydon residents have a once-in-four-years opportunity to select who will work in their interests at Croydon Council.

After they gave themselves a pay rise last year, all Croydon councillors are now on a basic allowance of at least £12,367, going up to £86,000 for our elected Mayor.

So it would seem perfectly reasonable to want to know how much work Croydon’s elected representatives have been putting in on your behalf.

Or which of our 70 councillors have barely been bothering to make any members’ enquiries on your behalf. Continue reading

Posted in Adele Benson, Croydon Council, Jason Cummings, Mayor Jason Perry, Norbury Park, Richard Chatterjee, Shirley North, Shirley South, Tony Pearson | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

It’s ex-teacher v ‘technocrat’ in Mayor debate on education

The National Education Union in Croydon sent a set of questions to the leading mayoral candidates standing for election this Thursday.

Top of the class: teachers’ union had some questions for Croydon’s mayoral candidates

Disappointingly, as far as the NEU branch secretary, Joe Flynn, is concerned, there were no responses from either the Greens or Liberal Democrat candidates.

Education, now that Croydon’s public education system has been outsourced to a number of private academy chains, is not a priority policy area for the Croydon Mayor – they have little real say or influence in the running of Croydon’s schools. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 Croydon Mayor election, Education, Mayor Jason Perry, Rowenna Davis, Schools | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

True crime show live on stage at Cryer Arts, Carshalton, May 10

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David Lean Cinema screenings for May at the Clocktower

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Time travel by velvet and smoke back to a Paris club in 1896

Magnifique: three hours of almost non-stop music, dance, jokes and near-delirium can be had at Le Chat Noir, where Les Enfants Vagabondes bring their music to your table

STEVEN DOWNES takes a trip back in time and a sip of a once-banned liquor

Everyone these days appears to be on “a journey” of some kind or another.

If you were to take a half-hour journey from East Croydon, via Victoria and the District line, you could step through the doors of a disused Victorian laundry and into a Paris restaurant of la Belle Époque, where the champagne flows, there are Can-can girls (well, girl, actually), eccentric Erik Satie is tinkling a Gnossiene on the ivories, and you can sample intoxicating absinthe, before it got banned.

Le Chat Noir is an immersive theatre experience just opened in West Ken, where a small but energetic cast and band of musicians, plus dozens of hard-working staff, help to create a convincing sense of period, of 130 years ago, when electric lighting had only just been installed and the Eiffel Tower had only just been erected. Continue reading

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Perry couldn’t fix the finances because he can’t even add up

Doesn’t add up: one of the increasingly desperate social media postings from Jason Perry and Croydon Tories has percentages of … 127.9.

As the Town Hall election campaign enters its final days, the simperingly pathetic ‘give me another chance’ messaging from failed Mayor Jason Perry has got increasingly desperate. And deceitful.
WALTER CRONXITE, Political Editor, reports

It’s no wonder Croydon’s Mayor Jason Perry failed to fix the finances. He obviously has no idea about maths.

As the Croydon Town Hall election campaign entered its final stages, the social media outpourings from Perry’s Croydon Conservatives have become increasingly desperate and deceitful.

Friendless: Jason Perry has hiked Council Tax yet the council’s debt has increased on his watch

There is the boastful nonsense about how under Mayor Perry, Croydon’s parks now have a grand total of four Green Flags, when the borough has 127 parks and open spaces. That equates to 3% of Croydon’s parks that, under Perry, have the Green Flag seal of approval. So not much to boast about. But then, Perry’s administration has very little to boast about.

Then there’s piss-poor Perry’s claim to have removed six troublesome Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, when the truth of the matter is that he was ordered to do so by a High Court judge, whose written judgement ridiculed pompous Perry for his public remarks. Cost to Croydon residents for this particular example of Perry’s incompetence? Just another £10million that our cash-strapped council can ill-afford.

The man who promised in 2022 “to fix the finances” has in fact increased the council’s debt burden in four years, from £1.4billion to £1.7billion.

That’s despite hiking residents’ Council Tax bills by 33% to record levels. Earlier this year, Perry had his begging bowl out to central government again, this time for another £119million of emergency borrowing. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, 2026 Croydon Mayor election, Mayor Jason Perry, Transport | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Croydon Bach Choir choral workshop, South Croydon, May 16

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Langley Vale conservation talk, Honeywood Museum, May 28

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Reform’s arrival in Sutton could clear path for ruling LibDems

The elections on May 7 seem likely to return a Liberal Democrat council – one strengthened by seats won from the Tories by Reform, who are fielding some candidates who don’t even bother disguising their racist views and support for the likes of fascist agitator Tommy Robinson.
CARL SHILTON reports

Sutton’s Liberal Democrats, caught in a nasty scandal of their own making over the deselection of David Campanale as their parliamentary candidate, could nonetheless emerge the major beneficiaries of the emergence of Reform Ltd, as Labour and Conservatives in the borough prepare for heavy losses when voters go to the polls next Thursday.

‘Pseudo-science’: Prof Angus Dalgleish is Reform Ltd’s candidate in North Cheam

Ten years ago, the Carshalton and Wallington half of the borough voted strongly for Brexit, and Reform has attracted that core support. Nigel Farage’s motley collection of what were once dismissed as “a bunch of fruitcakes and loonies and closet racists” have chosen candidates for all 55 council seats to be contested. Except that some are no longer just closet racists.

Standing in North Cheam ward is Professor Angus Dalgleish, notorious as a medical adviser to the anti-vax US health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr, and one who claimed that the covid vaccine had caused cancer in the Royal family.

Reform’s national conference was told last September that Prof Dalgleish claimed that the Princess of Wales and King Charles’s cancers were probably caused by covid vaccines. Dalgleish later confirmed his view to the British Medical Journal.

Immunology specialists have described Prof Dalgliesh’s comments as “crass”, “pseudo-science” and “untrue”. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, Barry Lewis, Carshalton and Wallington, Sutton and Cheam, Sutton Council | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Police called after TTIP candidate disrupts police meeting

Police were called out to a meeting held in Woodside on Thursday night when it was interrupted by a man described by eyewitnesses as “aggressive”, “intimidating”, “rude” and “misogynistic”. The disrupted meeting was organised by… Croydon police.

Election candidate: TTIP’s Shane Sobers was described as ‘aggressive’ and ‘rude’ at Thursday’s meeting

The disrupter was Shane Sobers, a local boxing coach who is standing for election to the council on May 7 for the Taking The Piss Party.

Sobers arrived about 30 minutes into the Woodside Safer Neighbourhood Team’s regular ward panel meeting. It is suggested that Sobers had never before attended an SNT meeting.

Ward panel meetings are supposedly, according to the Met, to be “a community-led group where local residents meet regularly with our Safer Neighbourhood Team made up of dedicated police officers and [Police Community Support Officers] assigned to your area”.

Ward panel meetings are usually run by volunteers, and are the Met’s way of getting some feedback from residents about concerns around crime and anti-social behaviour. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, Community associations, Crime, Knife crime, Policing, Woodside | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

£40m Trinity School expansion given planning green light

New build: the £40m expansion of Trinity School was granted planning permission this week

The council’s planning committee has given a green light to a £40million development to expand Trinity School in Shirley Park to ready the independent boys’ school to go fully co-educational by 2031.

The scheme is the first major re-build since the school moved to the site from Croydon town centre 60 years ago (to make way for a shopping centre…). The project is intended to adapt and upgrade the fee-paying school to increase in size by 40%, to 1,400 pupils.

Trinity has admitted girls to its Sixth Form since 2011. The first cadre of 10- and 11-year-old girls in Year 6 and 7 expected to join £30,000 per year Trinity from September 2027. Continue reading

Posted in Alasdair Kennedy, Business, Charity, Education, Jason Cummings, Old Palace, Planning, Schools, Shirley South, Trinity School, Whitgift Centre, Whitgift Foundation | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Blues at The Oval Tavern, May and June, free entry, 6pm start

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Farm Fest annual fund-raiser, Deen City Farm, Merton, Jun 27

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Perry didn’t ‘fix the finances’. He’s increased debt to £1.7bn

CROYDON COMMENTARY: Is Mayor Jason Perry deceiving voters about the state of Croydon Council’s debt? iC reader SIMON JELLIPOT certainly thinks so

At the last local elections in 2022, Jason Perry, the Conservative candidate for Executive Mayor of Croydon, made a pledge to “fix the finances”.

Feeling the heat: Croydon’s £86,000 per year Tory Mayor Jason Perry 

Now, in his flyer to voters seeking re-election in 2026, he purports to show that he has reduced the debt since taking charge of Croydon Council.

He says, and I quote, “Since 2021, we have made £230million in savings.”

He counts the savings that pre-date his taking control of council spending in May 2022.

The majority of those savings came from one-off receipts from the sale of property owned by the council. These are savings that can only be matched by selling off more council assets in the future.

Does this mean that he has stabilised Croydon’s debt as he claims? Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, 2026 Croydon Mayor election, Croydon Council, Mayor Jason Perry | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 14 Comments

Polling stations in Croydon to use voting aid for first time

Voting assistance: the McGonagle Reader will be in use at polling stations in Croydon for the first time next week

For Croydon residents whose vision is impaired, next week’s local elections will represent a breakthrough, as the council is providing special devices in polling stations which will allow them to cast their votes independently and in secret, just like their sighted neighbours and friends are able to do.

At the 2024 General Election, only one-quarter of blind people said that the system allowed them to vote independently and in secret.

Voting is still an overwhelmingly visual process of reviewing a list and marking a cross in a box. Without the right equipment, many blind and partially sighted people are forced to rely on others to mark the ballot in the way that they wish, compromising privacy and dignity. “That simply isn’t good enough in a modern democracy,” says Anna Tylor, the chair of trustees at the Royal National Institute of Blind People, the RNIB. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, 2026 Croydon Mayor election, Age UK Croydon, Charity, Croydon Council, Croydon Vision | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Planning control has got worse under developers’ friend Perry

STEVE WHITESIDE has compiled dossiers of evidence that show that nothing much has changed in the council planning department since 2022. In some cases, for the residents living next to some developments that have gone ahead, things have actually got worse

Not as approved: 12 The Ridgeway in Sanderstead has planning approval. Just not for this building

The developer behind Aveline Apartments, at 12 The Ridge Way in Sanderstead, has appealed against the council’s refusal of its retrospective planning application (23/01763/FUL).

The appeal matters because the refusal is being used as election messaging from Croydon Conservatives. In a recent Facebook post, Croydon South MP Chris Philp listed The Ridge Way among “recent planning victories”, praising Mayor Jason Perry and Conservative councillors for “protecting our local neighbourhoods” by refusing “inappropriate applications”.

An appeal, though, is not won on Facebook. It is won on the record that goes before the Planning Inspector — and 12 The Ridge Way is a case where the record has been contested for years. Continue reading

Posted in Croydon Council, Environment, Housing, Mayor Jason Perry, Nicola Townsend, Planning, Property, Sanderstead | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Plant sale, Pampisford Road allotments, South Croydon, May 4

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Keir Starmer’s niece is council election candidate in safe ward

Happy families: Ellie Sandover (left), a Labour election candidate in Bensham Manor next week, with her Uncle Keir and her mother, Katy Swabey

Party members in Croydon’s second safest Labour ward express concern over the deselection of their sitting councillor, to be replaced with a 20-something with friends in high places.
EXCLUSIVE by STEVEN DOWNES

Sir Keir Starmer’s niece is a local election candidate in Croydon.

Ellie Sandover is a Labour candidate in Bensham Manor, the second safest Labour ward in the borough.

Sandover was selected in August last year, among the first to be announced of Labour’s full slate of 70 council candidates standing in the local elections next Thursday.

Two of Bensham Manor’s sitting councillors, Eunice O’Dame and Enid Mollyneux, both black women, were blocked by Labour from standing as candidates in 2026. For most of the past four years, Mollyneux has been Labour’s shadow cabinet member for community safety.

Asked about Sandover’s Uncle Keir, one Croydon Labour official today claimed, “That’s news to me,” although they avoided providing an outright denial. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, Bensham Manor, Croydon East, Croydon West, Ellie Sandover, Enid Mollyneaux, Eunice O'Dame, Humayun Kabir, Natasha Irons, Sarah Jones MP | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Polls tighten in Town Hall race as Farage’s grifters get closer


SEVEN DAYS TO GO: You probably don’t want to read ‘It’s too close to call’ again, but judging by the latest, London-wide polling figures just published, the race to be Croydon Mayor is tighter than ever.
By WALTER CRONXITE, Political Editor

Croydon could be just a week away from electing a Reform Ltd Mayor.

The JLPartners MRP poll of more than 2,000 Londoners has been extrapolated to put Reform just 3% behind Labour and 1% behind the Tories in the Croydon mayoral and council contests.

Not a fluke?: Ben Flook, the slightly robotic Wallington schoolteacher, and ex-Tory, standing for Reform Ltd

If we expect 100,000 votes to be cast a week today (97,457 ballot papers were cast in 2022), that percentage difference represents a meagre 3,000 votes between the two major parties and grifter Nigel Farage’s bought-and-paid-for candidates.

For an average, two-seat ward, that’s only an 86-vote margin between Labour, Conservatives and Reform Ltd.

With vote shares so badly fragmented and the opinion polls so inconsistent, Croydon’s typical tactical voter is facing a tough call on which boxes to put their Xs in next Thursday. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, 2026 Croydon Mayor election, Ben Flook, Council Tax, Croydon Greens, Croydon South, London-wide issues, Mayor Jason Perry, Peter Underwood, Richard Howard, Rick Howard, Rowenna Davis, Shirley North, Steve Reed MP, Zack Polanski | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 16 Comments

Sutton LibDem ‘should not be a lawmaker’ after court defeat

INSIDE SUTTON: Following a four-year battle, David Campanale is claiming complete victory over the Liberal Democrats who waged a vindictive campaign against him as their own political candidate, all because of his Christian beliefs. By ROSE HILL

Court winner: David Campanale is waiting for a ruling on damages and costs owed him by the LibDems

With local elections just seven days away, the Liberal Democrats in Sutton have been struck a significant blow as one of their highest profile councillors, Luke Taylor, has been identified as “the main instigator” in a case of religious discrimination.

Taylor was elected MP for Sutton and Cheam at the 2024 General Election, but only after his party chose him to replace the originally selected candidate, David Campanale.

Today, Campanale said of MP Taylor, “He should not be a lawmaker”.

Campanale has been fighting a four-year legal battle over his mistreatment at the hands of Sir Ed Davey’s party, following a campaign by Sutton LibDems to oust him as their parliamentary candidate, in part because of his past involvement with the anti-abortion Christian People’s Alliance. The CPA is a fringe, right-wing group which opposes abortion and whose leadership has in the past compared gay rights activists to Nazis

Campanale’s discrimination case was brought before His Honour Judge Johns KC in the Central London County Court on The Strand. Earlier this month, the LibDems caved and abandoned their case. They could now have to pay former BBC journalist Campanale’s costs, which are estimated to be at least £250,000, plus damages, to be settled at a further court hearing. Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, David Campanale, Graham Tope, Luke Taylor MP, Sutton and Cheam, Sutton Council | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

What the Foakes! Surrey keeper ruled out after bowling injury

Freak injury: Ben Foakes, rated England’s best wicketkeeper, has been ruled out of Surrey’s next County Championship game due to a strain suffered when bowling against Essex

HOOK’S SHOT: The county side’s pre-season high expectations fell flat on a succession of flat wickets in the opening month, writes MARCUS HOOK
PLUS: England women’s T20 World Cup call-up for teenager Corteen-Coleman 

While Surrey continue to pull in the crowds, the big question, on the evidence of the season’s opening exchanges, is whether the south Londoners are really equipped to notch up a fourth County Championship title in five years.

The batting isn’t the problem, it’s the pitches and, possibly, the bowling, which appears to be lacking the necessary spark.

Last weekend’s clash with Essex at The Oval, on a flat pitch, petered out to a high-scoring draw with bat dominating ball, in keeping with Surrey’s first two red-ball outings. The match produced a 21st Century attendance record for a championship game – 15,544 across the four days. The previous high was the 14,982 that rocked up for the corresponding fixture last summer.

To lend some context, just 4,245 spectators attended Northants’ seven home championship matches in 2025, while the red-ball games at Leicester averaged just over 1,000. Continue reading

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True crime show live on stage at Cryer Arts, Carshalton, May 10

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