Evans above! Labour’s General Secretary to stand down

WALTER CRONXITE, political editor, on the end of an error

Nice drop of red: David Evans

David Evans, the former key aide to Tony Bliar and one-time Croydon businessman who was installed as party General Secretary after Keir Starmer became Labour leader, is to stand down from the job later this month. The predicted elevation to a place in the House of Lords cannot be too distant.

Evans became a notorious figure in Croydon politics, through his close personal relationships with the council’s Labour leadership, including Alison Butler, with whom he fathered a child, as well as his part in masterminding Labour’s 2014 Town Hall election victory, and the hundreds of thousands of pounds of council contracts that flowed the way of his The Campaign Company in the months thereafter.

Evans’s close associate, Tony Newman, the leader of Croydon Council from 2014 to 2020, has been on “administrative suspension” by the Labour Party since early 2021, shortly after the financial collapse of the council. Under Evans, disciplinary action against Newman has never been actioned.

In his time as Labour General Secretary, Evans also introduced the controversial – and easily manipulated – Anonyvoter online election system, without ever going to anything resembling a competitive tendering process, but instead taking on a package from a company jointly owned by a Croydon Labour councillor.

Arch-Blairite Evans had been integral to the planning for Labour’s General Election victories in 1997 and 2001, after which he stood back from a daily role in the national party machine to establish his public relations consultancy in Suffolk House on George Street.


Watch more: #TheLabourFiles: MP Reed, Evans and the Croydon connection


Evans was installed by Starmer as General Secretary in May 2020.

“It has been the privilege of my life to be General Secretary for the Labour Party,” 63-year-old Evans said in a carefully prepared statement issued through a Labour website.

“It has always been my plan to serve for one General Election and take the organisation from shattering defeat to being a party of government.

“Now both have been achieved, it is the right time both for me and the party for a new General Secretary to take over.

“A new General Secretary being in post from the end of this year’s conference will give them the necessary time to lead the next chapter of change, taking over at the same early stage of the political cycle that I did.

Close relationship: Alison Butler, Croydon Labour’s former deputy leader

“All my thanks go to the Labour Party staff, representatives and volunteers – without their hard work and support our successes simply would not have been possible.”

Starmer said: “David has been a hugely consequential General Secretary. It is in no small part down to David’s leadership, vision and courage that we rebuilt the Labour Party and secured a landslide election victory in July… He leaves the Labour Party organisation in a strong position, ready for the challenges of the future.

“On behalf of the whole Labour Party we thank him for his service to our party and look forward to him making significant contributions in the future.”

Momentum, the organisation of grassroots Labour members formed to support the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn, characterised Evans’s time in charge as being “ridden with attacks on members’ rights, corrupt selection processes and the misuse of the online voting system Anonyvoter”.

Read more: Grassroots Labour Party members in calls to sack David Evans
Read more: Newman and Hall resign as councillors claiming a ‘witchhunt’
Read more: Questions asked over Town Hall Mayor’s business deal
Read more: Starmer’s Labour is ‘losing members, losing funds, losing staff’
Read more: MP Reed ordered investigation of councillor emails at Lambeth


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2 Responses to Evans above! Labour’s General Secretary to stand down

  1. derek thrower says:

    Hi Ho Hi Ho it’s off for more Public Relations contracts I go. So Evans is back to use his contacts with good knows how many Labour MP’s with less than 35% of the national vote to forge a client list which will probably serve him well for the next decade with such deficient poltical opposition. Doubt he will be covering the back of Big Tone anymore when he has some serious money to make uptown.

  2. The Campaign Company is still limping along, somehow. Back in February, it was very nearly struck off the government’s Companies House register, and not for the first time either. It was meant to have filed its accounts for 2022 just after Christmas, but 250 days later, they are still nowhere to be seen.

    The most recent statements available online, for the year ending 31 December 2021, show a worsening situation. It owed more money than it had, with net assets of minus £178,045 and just £571 in the bank. How Dave’s wife Aline kept a straight face when assuring the accountants that it was a going concern is a mystery.

    What’s he going to do now? Make The Campaign Company profitable or wind it up? Its creditors should be told

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