Election countdown: splintered voting could see Davis win


Less than one month until election day, our Political Editor, WALTER CRONXITE, looks at the latest polls and by-elections to assess – or guess – how the Croydon electorate will vote for executive Mayor on May 7

While the government Commissioners worry about Croydon’s voters not voting Labour or Conservative, the Greens are emerging as the leading third-party challenger in the Mayoral election.

The Commissioners, appointed last summer by the Labour government because Tory Mayor Jason Perry had lost control of the council’s finances, used their first report to Whitehall to express a view over the outcome of the local elections, which are being held on May 7.

Voting shares across the country, for decades conventionally split between the two biggest parties, have been splintering between three, four and even five parties in recent by-elections, council elections held last year and in national polling since.

This, the Commissioners, headed by Ged Curran, wrote in their report, risks “the potential for May’s local elections to result in a more fragmented and complex make-up of the council”.

Commissioner: Ged Curran

This ought to be seen as entirely inappropriate and a very poor lapse of judgement by the Commissioners, whose job it is to ensure that the council’s senior officials are undertaking their work properly in reducing the Town Hall’s £1.4billion debt, and not to lecture the public about how they exercise their democratic rights on polling day.

It is, after all, that same voting public who have been saddled with one of the highest rates of Council Tax in London, and who are shouldering the burden of the Commissioners’ £1,000-plus day rates. They are entitled to express an opinion at the polling stations in May on how they would like things to be managed over the coming years.

It is difficult enough as it is for candidates from outside the usual duopoly to break through and win even a modicum of power in Croydon, even without such high-handed opinions offered by government appointees. In 2022, Croydon Council elected one LibDem and two Green councillors – the first time in 20 years that parties other than the Reds or Blues had managed to win seats at the Town Hall.

The local elections in less than one month’s time seem likely to deliver up more change among the borough’s 70 council seats, with our prediction from a fortnight ago, based on the latest national polling then, suggesting that 12 councillor seats could go to fringe parties this time round, including for the first time some to Nigel Farage’s Reform Ltd.

Since 2022, the election of councillors in Croydon has been rendered an electoral sideshow: it is the executive Mayor who holds power, with the councillors in the Town Hall Chamber now just a support act.

And our latest bit of number-crunching suggests that despite the unpopularity of the Prime Minister and the reputation of her party colleagues in Croydon previously, Labour’s Rowenna Davis seems likely to be declared Croydon’s new Mayor on May 8.

Davis could win with the votes of barely 1-in-4 electors in Croydon, thanks to that shift in support for third parties such as the Greens, Reform and the Liberal Democrats.

All change: recent national polling predicts that the red-blue duopoly is in for a tough time at the local elections, whatever Croydon’s Commissioners might say

There have been many indicators that grifter Farage’s political momentum may have already peaked. Even offering voters financial bribes (and handing the dummy cheque for energy bills to his old pals) having failed to work.

The Greens won a by-election for Kent County Council this week, from Reform Ltd, who only took control of that authority 12 months ago. It is worth noting that the Cliftonville by-election in Thanet was caused by the jailing of the Reform councillor, found guilty of controlling or coercive behaviour towards his wife. So much for Farage’s party’s vetting process…

Here in Croydon, the Conservatives remain weak in the north of the borough while Labour’s strong tide in the General Election in Croydon South in 2024 appears to have ebbed away. The national poll standings for the Conservatives and Labour have fallen by half since 2022. It seems likely that the Red-Blues between them will do well to get half the votes in the Croydon Mayoral election.

That takes into consideration that the drop in support for Labour in London is less acute than what is happening nationally. Croydon is – or at least, has been – one of the strongest Red-Blue duopolies in the country.

Green boost: Zack Polanski has helped Croydon Greens’ candidate Peter Underwood (left)

But the Greens could crack this in the Mayoral election, despite the antithesis for the position that is held by Peter Underwood, their candidate.

The transformation in the Greens’ standing under the leadership of Zack Polanski – such that they are now winning council by-elections in Kent – could see them leap from a pretty dismal fifth place in 2022 to being the biggest challengers to the established parties of power.

Trump’s war on Iran and other conflicts in the Middle East have damaged the Reform vote. In south London, the LibDems are focused on defending Sutton and winning in Merton, so have little time (or money) for campaigns in Croydon.

In national polls, the Greens have edged 2.5% closer to Labour since late March (the timing of our previous election prediction). Greens are seen by many as the way to express concerns about the Middle East conflict – the authoritarian Labour government was rounding up anti-genocide demonstrators in central London again today.

Yet Labour in Croydon has some reasons for optimism.

The absence from the ballot paper of Andrew Pelling, fourth in 2022 as an anti-Labour independent mayoral candidate, lets loose almost 7,000 Pelling votes that could transfer to Labour this time. Pelling, who will be standing in his 19th Croydon election on May 7, and for his fourth different party, hopes his voters will support Liberal Democrat Major Howard (Pelling is a LibDem council candidate in Shirley North).

Bad business: libraries, cinemas and shops have all closed under Jason Perry’s disastrous mayoralty

All that the Conservatives have for their campaign is, again, the disastrous management of the council by Labour’s Tony Newman and his “Gang of four”. Unfortunately for the Tories, after 33% Council Tax hikes and another £500million of Exceptional Financial Support required from central government, the public has seen that Jason Perry’s mayoralty over the past four years has been equally disastrous. And the Mayor has managed to do that all on his own…

Labour in Croydon underperformed their Greater London Labour vote change by 6.7% in 2022. The Davis campaign feels that they are going to regain all of that lost ground. It’s a bounce back from the Newman effect as voters forgive or, more likely, forget Labour’s past troubles. Much has changed since those dark days of 2020.

The 2026 election comes down to whether the Faragists take more votes from the Tories than the Greens take from Labour.

But with leading Labour councillors being stood down by the party’s regional officials in secretive moves that have bypassed grassroots members in Croydon, and censorship of Davis’s election manifesto, over the next month, opponents will be able to claim with some force that faceless party officials will be calling the shots in Croydon, not Davis.

Davis felt that discretion was the better part of valour when it came to removing reference in her manifesto to the Gaza genocide and the use of the council’s pension fund investments.

Censored: Labour’s Rowenna Davis

The story has been picked up by the Daily Express, accusing the Davis campaign of pandering to “far-Left extremes”. Hardly. But, this wild allegation may help Blue Labour Davis from losing many more left-wing voters to the Greens.

With the postal votes dispatched to voters in just over a week, the current standing of the Mayoral election, based on London polling and local factors appears, to be:

Rowenna Davis, Labour 25%
Jason Perry, Conservatives 23%
Peter Underwood, Greens 22%
Ben Flook, Reform Ltd 18%
Richard Howard, LibDems 11%
Others 1%

Labour remains the favourites with the bookies, but 11-1 for the Greens looks generous odds. As with today’s Grand National, much will depend on how the contenders handle the final furlongs…

Read more: Labour forces Davis to erase ‘genocide’ from her manifesto
Read more:
Commissioners: council lacks focus and robust delivery plans
Read more: Take a step back in time for the start of the election campaign
Read more: Perry agrees to pay £½m to reclaim flats at Red Clover Gardens
Read more: Four black women among six councillors rejected by Labour

For more information on where to vote on May 7 and who is standing for election, use our widget here:


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This entry was posted in 2026 council elections, 2026 Croydon Mayor election, Ben Flook, Council Tax, Croydon Greens, Croydon South, London-wide issues, Merton, Peter Underwood, Richard Howard, Rick Howard, Shirley North, Sutton Council, Tony Newman, Zack Polanski and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

16 Responses to Election countdown: splintered voting could see Davis win

  1. Ken Towl says:

    First past the post looks truly past its sell-by date. 100% of the power when 75% of the electorate vote against you…

    • Imagine all those transferred votes Perry might have got from the frothing-at-the-mouth, anti-ULEZ, flag-shagging, Farage fans if they had not reverted to FPTP…

    • Chris Cooke says:

      In the 2022 PPP won with 50.4% of the vote after the 2nd round.

      In the first he got 34.8%.

      So he got 100% of the power when almost 66% of 1st round voters didn’t want him.

      If you don’t like FPTP then what system would you replace it with?

      Bear in mind the previous Tory government changed the Mayoral electoral system to FPTP whilst the current government is changing it back to the supplementary vote system that was in place in 2022 (but the legislation hasn’t been passed yet)

      • Ken Towl says:

        Hi Chris,

        It’s not that I don’t like FPTP, it’s more that I think a more representative system would be, well, more representative, and allow people to express what they really want rather than having to second guess the spoiler effect.

        Perry got 34.8% in another time when there was still pretty much a duopoly. Those days are over. With 5 parties all taking a decent chunk of the vote, you can get in with much less, so FPTP is even less fit for purpose now than it was then.

        As for alternatives, I imagine you are familiar with them. If not, google “STV”, a logical step beyond the compromise of the supplementary vote, and see what you think.

        • Chris Cooke says:

          Yes I’m aware of several options and their advantages and disadvantages but I’d like to know – since you raided the issue – what you would replace FPTP with.

        • sally peters says:

          Suggest you do some googling, Ken. Your point is simplistic and sounds better (to you) in theory than reality.

          Systems like STV increase fragmentation and lead to post-election deals voters never chose. FPTP at least gives clear outcomes and accountability.

          The spoiler effect is overstated—FPTP forces broad coalitions before elections, not after. With more parties, that clarity matters even more.

          STV isn’t a clear upgrade—it trades simplicity and decisiveness for complexity.

          Get googling……

          • It’s you who should get googling Sally.

            Northern Ireland – part of the United Kingdom – has had the Single Transferable Vote for over 50 years. It’s used for their local authority and national government elections.

            People there get who they voted for, here we end up with who we didn’t vote for

    • Wasn’t there a first and second preference in the last mayoral election? How would that have worked this time?

      • Ken Towl says:

        Same way it did last time. First you pick the one you really like, then you choose the one out of the two most likely to win that you can tolerate. It’s not ideal (see STV for ideal) but it at least allows you a cost-free shout out to the party you really like and, maybe, even gives them a chance of winning.

        • sally peters says:

          second time you need correcting, Ken.

          It still relies on strategic voting: voters must anticipate viability in their second choice. Preferential systems like STV instead embed these trade-offs, reducing the need for such calculations.

  2. Brian Finegan says:

    The definition of insanity is voting for the same thing over and over and expecting different results.

  3. Peter kudelka says:

    It’s a bit like supporting Crystal Palace, almost relegated season after season and then you win two trophies. I am not sure which political party fits the analogy, though Labour do go in for strikers and taking the odd bung or two.

  4. Sue Hunter says:

    I think we’ve reached the point of ‘Anything would better than Jason Perry’

  5. Sally Peters says:

    oh no!!!!!!, Chris Clarke, the planning shadow lead!! I can no longer vote for a Labour Mayor. No way.

    Chris (ignorance and stupidity personified), doesn’t just drop the ball—he seems surprised it was ever his.

  6. David Tanner says:

    I’m sure the good people of Croydon will see sense and vote in the Green candidate for Mayor, or will it be the joke party,Deform,that win?, or maybe piss poor will be voted back in? Or maybe the toadying Labour candidate will win? Nah I’m sure they will see sense and vote Green, actually I’m not that sure!

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