Local Labour members angry at ‘travesty’ of selection process

Uncharacteristic ‘openness’ from the Labour Party exposes their latest sham selection process, with candidates for next year’s local elections being named without grassroots members in most wards getting any say at all.
EXCLUSIVE by STEVEN DOWNES

The fix is in: Croydon Labour announced this and eight other ward selections last night, with local members largely removed from the process

The fix is in.

After stubborn silence for months from the Labour Party on the matter of their candidate selections for next year’s local elections in Croydon, last night they used social media to issue a blitz announcement of their candidate selections in nine of the safest Labour wards in the borough.

In the majority of cases, the selections appear to have been made with minimal, if any, involvement of grassroots Labour members.

As one angry, disenfranchised Croydon Labour member shared on a WhatsApp group in a ward where the three candidates “selected” was neatly stitched up by the all-powerful NEC and Labour’s London region, “Rowenna Davis: If you want to be Mayor of Croydon, you need to stop this travesty.”

And they also appealed to Croydon West MP, Sarah Jones: “Take action for justice and for democracy.”

Inside Croydon has already reported how unnamed officials on the NEC – the National Executive Committee – and regional party chiefs had blocked six sitting councillors from being selected to stand again at next May’s local elections.

Four of those blocked from seeking reselection are black women. Five of the six represent wards which can be considered “safe Labour” areas.

The blocked councillors are Eunice O’Dame (Bensham Manor ward), Enid Mollyneaux (also Bensham Manor), Sherwan Chowdhury (Broad Green), Alisa Flemming (Norbury Park), and Karen Jewitt (Thornton Heath), as well as Patsy Cummings in Crystal Palace and Upper Norwood, a ward where Labour’s grip on power appears to be slipping.

And so, combined with several “big beast” retirements from the Town Hall, having created the vacancies the NEC/London region then delivered up fantasy shortlists, seemingly deliberately laid out to ensure that, wherever possible, the “selection” was a foregone conclusion, with not enough candidates to require the staging of a members’ meeting.

Councillor candidate: Rowenna Davis has been named as standing in Waddon ward, despite being Labour’s candidate for Mayor

That Labour is running its bogus selection process in August, at the height of the holiday season, only underlines what a sham the whole thing is: even some of the candidates for selection are away with their bucket and spades, and would have been unable to make a case for their selection at any meeting of members in the ward which we are led to believe they wish to serve.

Ordinary Labour members across the borough have been receiving emails from an official at London region, advising them that there’s no reason for them to turn up for their short-notice selection meetings.

“Your selection meeting was scheduled for…,” the email begins, giving a date.

“This is following an interview and assessment process by NEC/REC [regional executive] members with successful applicants being placed on a longlist. The NEC subsequently shortlisted people from that longlist to enable wards to host independent selection meetings.”

That’s a nice, Orwellian touch: “to enable wards to host independent selection meetings“, when the whole process has been rigged to avoid such “independent selection meetings”.

The official’s email then lists the shortlisted candidates for the particular branch.

“Because…,” the official then names a couple of the approved names on that shortlist, “… have been selected in other wards, the remaining number of people on the shortlist are equivalent to the amount of vacancies.

“This means that the remaining people on the shortlist are now selected as candidates and there is no longer a need to have a selection meeting.”

As one disgruntled Labour member put it: “How very convenient.”

Just to rub in the fait accompli nature of the whole charade, the Labour regional official then names the candidates for the ward who have never been selected by local members.

“These are your local Labour representatives as we head for the 2026 elections, and they need you to get behind them wholeheartedly,” the members are ordered.

And so, between 6.37pm and 8.40pm on a Friday night, someone at Croydon Labour HQ was busy pushing out specially designed, approved graphics, one each for South Norwood, West Thornton, Woodside, Bensham Manor, Selhurst, Waddon, Norbury and Pollards Hill, Norbury Park and Addiscombe East wards.

Keeping to the script: Croydon Labour confirmed nine ward selections in one night

Each one declared “Congratulations” to various named re-selected councillors or newly selected wannabe councillors.

Every tweet carried the endorsement of Rowenna Davis, with her “People first” slogan, as part of her campaign to be Croydon’s next elected Mayor.

“They will continue to work hard for our community and put the people of…”, with the name of the relevant ward inserted, “…first,” was the very on-message message to accompany each announcement.

A total of 23 candidates were named in this uncharacteristic flurry of openness from the Labour Party. Inside Croydon has had no answer to its question about how many of these wards, or branches, had actually held a selection meeting, allowing grassroots party members to have a say in who it is who will represent them in next May’s elections.

A reasonable assumption would be very few, if any at all.

Because while Davis and the Labour Party will be expecting Croydon voters to put their trust in them on polling day next year, Labour still doesn’t trust its own members, five years after putting Croydon Labour into “special measures”.

Unsurprisingly, after previous selection stitch-ups and fixes in Croydon Labour going back a decade or more, Labour members are furious.

“This is a new low in the Croydon Labour Party, even lower than those who bankrupted the council,” one member has said in an open messages intended for the party’s local leadership.

“Don’t take the members for granted.

“You may get away with the fake selection process next week, but the real election is in May 2026,” they warned.

Another Labour member has branded the selection stitch-up as “an utter disgrace.”

The 23 candidates named by the Labour Party last night to stand in next May’s Croydon local elections are (*indicates current councillor):

Safer seat: Julie Setchfield

Norbury Park: Julie Setchfield and Appu Srinivasan*.

Setchfield, a vice chair in Croydon West CLP and Fairfield branch secretary, was a losing candidate in Fairfield in 2022. This suggests that even Labour insiders think they won’t be regaining that ward from the Greens. Setchfield takes the place of the deselcted Alisa Flemming.

Mrs Anonyvoter: Maddie Henson

Addiscombe East: Chris Galpin and Maddie Henson*.

Tory council cabinet member Jeet Bains holds one of the two council seats in this ward. But it could be a Labour gain in 2026 if Reform take away enough votes from the Conservatives. Sitting councillor Henson is better known as “Mrs Anonyvoter”, a director of the firm that has provided the widely distrusted voting system to the Labour Party, and which remains subject of a Scotland Yard investigation into election fraud in Croydon East.

Norbury and Pollards Hill: Leila Ben-Hassel* and John Wentworth.

Old mates: John Wentworth (left) with MP Steve Reed

This represents a comeback to Croydon Town Hall politics after an eight-year absence for local Labour enforcer Wentworth. Wentworth is known to be close to Steve Reed, the MP for Streatham (and Croydon North when he can be bothered), having been his election agent at at least two General Elections. Wentworth stood down as a councillor in 2018. Notably, he has not sought to seek election in his old stomping ground of Crystal Palace and Upper Norwood, where the LibDems are hoping to scoop all three seats in 2026.

Wentworth replaces one-term councillor Matt Griffiths, who is not seeking re-election.

Waddon: Sam Attwater, Rowenna Davis* and Ellily Ponnuthurai*.

Safely selected: Sam Attwater (right) with Davis (left), Ponnuthurai and Stuart King, the leader of the Labour group at the Town Hall

Attwater could become Croydon’s youngest councillor next May, as without the distraction of Andrew Pelling as an independent candidate, Labour should regain all three seats in this ward. Attwater is a Waddon resident who has just graduated from his degree course at Manchester University, is described by one local as “a 21-year-old white male with no real-world experience, but a capable deliverer of Labour leaflets”. Waddon is among the wards which had its selection meeting cancelled when their approved candidates were reduced to just the required three.

As Jason Perry did in 2022, mayoral candidate Davis is on the ballot paper as a councillor candidate as well, just in case…

Selhurst: Mohammed Islam* and Catherine Wilson*.

No change. For a change.

Bensham Manor: Humayun Kabir*, Mohana Manoharan and Ellie Sandover.

Manoharan and Sandover come in to the places vacated by the blocked Enid Mollyneux and Eunice O’Dame. Sandover’s name appeared on the shortlists of more than one ward, her selection here helping to render members’ meetings elsewhere unnecessary.

MP’s aide: Cllr Amy Foster

Woodside: Amy Foster* Brigitte Graham* and Jess Hammersley-Rich*.

Again, no change, although only because first-term councillor Graham appears to have been persuaded to stay on the ballot paper after previously wavering over the pressures of public duties against her family responsibilities. Foster works in the parliamentary office of Croydon East MP Natasha Irons, and is one of Croydon Labour’s better performers in the Town Hall Chamber.

West Thornton: Janet Campbell*, Stuart King* and Chrishni Reshekaron*.

No change, all heavy-hitters, with current Labour group leader King, Campbell, his deputy, and cabinet member Reshekaron.

Favoured one: Melanie Felton

South Norwood: Melanie Felton, Chris Herman* and Stella Nabukeera*.

Melanie Felton is among the “chosen ones” of local activists, a keen deliverer of leaflets and much-favoured by senior Labour figures. She was Labour’s losing candidate last year in the Park Hill and Whitgift by-election, when selected from “the shortest of shortlists”. She takes the place on the ballot paper of Louis Carserides, another short-stay councillor who is standing down in 2026.

As one well-placed local source said this morning: “I have little doubt there are shenanigans going on. Why else would they be announcing so many selections at once, when the usual process sees selection results announced in dribs and drabs – if at all – over a period of several weeks?”

Croydon’s local elections, including votes for 70 councillors, are due to be held on Thursday, May 7, 2026, alongside the borough’s second mayoral election.

Read more: Four black women among six councillors rejected by Labour
Read more: Labour deputy leaders Young and Collins to stand down in 2026
Read more: Fix! Internal Labour inquiry confirms selection stitch-up
Read more: #TheLabourFiles: MP Reed, Evans and the Croydon connection


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About insidecroydon

News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
This entry was posted in 2026 council elections, 2026 Croydon Mayor election, Addiscombe East, Alisa Flemming, Amy Foster, Appu Srinivasan, Bensham Manor, Brigitte Graham, Catherine Wilson, Chrishni Reshekaron, Christopher Herman, Croydon East, Croydon West, Enid Mollyneaux, Eunice O'Dame, Fairfield, Janet Campbell, Jeet Bains, Jess Hammersley-Rich, John Wentworth, Karen Jewitt, Leila Ben-Hassel, Louis Carserides, Maddie Henson, Matt Griffiths, Mohammed Islam, Natasha Irons, Norbury, Norbury Park, Patsy Cummings, Rowenna Davis, Sarah Jones MP, Selhurst, South Norwood, Stella Nabukeera, Steve Reed MP, Streatham and Croydon North, Stuart King, Thornton Heath, Waddon, West Thornton, Woodside and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

14 Responses to Local Labour members angry at ‘travesty’ of selection process

  1. Labour again demonstrating why it is polling at 20% and why it is now losing safe council seats to the Greens and Liberal Democrats along with Reform. How many lessons does it need to learn before they find out it has been made redundant.

  2. Jim Duffy says:

    Shameful manipulation to exclude local party members, exposed by Inside Croydon.

  3. Sir, is the Chris Galpin who has just been gifted a Labour Party candidacy for Addiscombe East by any chance related to the Chris Galpin who recently featured in your esteemed organ’s reports about bike parking at East Croydon station, with support from Labour MPs and Councillors? I think we should be told.

  4. David White says:

    Labour has imposed a selection of nonentities and careerists. There is virtually no democracy in it for ordinary Labour Party members, as this article shows. The fact Steve Reed’s pal John Wentworth has been dragged back after 8 years of retirement to fill a gap shows how desperate the party is.

  5. David Williams says:

    It’s more a case of valuing loyalty and just always turning up for a bit of canvassing all over Croydon and smiling away over actual knowledge and ability. Although I suppose the knowledgeable ones should know this and play that stupid game too if they want a better chance of being selected.

    It’s a dumb way of choosing people, but that seems to be London Labour and the NEC for you. There is no way some of the newly installed picks are more capable than some of those axed.

  6. Leslie Parry says:

    As I have said many times before and it being just one of the reasons I left after over 50 years of support Croydon Labour are the worst I have ever come across. However these stitch ups for selection will proceed as the local Labour MO’s will not rock the Party Boat!

  7. Nick Goy says:

    Is there a theme to this, eg. right-leaning ‘candidates’ selected while ‘left-leaning’ existing or potential councillors are removed or barred?

  8. Andrew Pelling says:

    Labour national poll standing halved since the time of the last Croydon local elections.

    Conservative national poll standing down more than a third.

  9. John Nunn says:

    Can someone tell me what Rowennas travesty is please.

  10. John Nunn says:

    The problem is the ones who do the selection, not the ones who are selected. That is the travesty.

  11. Moya Gordon says:

    The blocked councillors are Eunice O’Dame (Bensham Manor ward), Enid Mollyneaux (also Bensham Manor), Sherwan Chowdhury (Broad Green), Alisa Flemming (Norbury Park), and Karen Jewitt (Thornton Heath), as well as Patsy Cummings in Crystal Palace and Upper Norwood.

    If I were one of these blocked candidates I would run as an independent. I’m sure many local people would be willing to volunteer to help them with their campaigns. Crowd Funder too.

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