
A row has broken out in Royal Victoria ward after Labour figures questioned Green candidate Rob Callender over an address discrepancy on nomination paperwork, first reported by On London.
Labour councillor and chief whip Steve Brayshaw—who is currently fighting to keep his seat in the ward—reported his Green Party rival to the Metropolitan Police. The accusation? “Election fraud” because Callender’s nomination papers listed his home as “address in Royal Victoria,” while the electoral register places him a few streets away in the neighbouring Royal Albert ward.
Callender has strongly denied any wrongdoing. In a response posted to local WhatsApp and Facebook groups, he clarified that he signed his forms with the standard disclosure “address in Newham.” Somewhere between his signature and the printing of the ballot papers, an administrative or processing error occurred.
“I have never claimed to live in Royal Victoria Ward, but have referred more broadly to the Royal Docks. As an experienced candidate… I can categorically say that I did not submit anything false.”
Callender also pointed out that he lives in the Royal Docks area regardless—just across the ward boundary in Royal Albert. The council has confirmed this doesn’t affect the validity of his nomination.
Honestly, this all feels extraordinarily petty from Labour. Nobody seriously believes voters in Royal Victoria are making their decision based on whether a candidate lives a few streets one side or the other of a ward boundary within the same Royal Docks community. The idea that this is some grave democratic scandal – let alone ‘election fraud’ – is difficult to take seriously.
More importantly, the fact Labour has chosen to elevate such a minor technical issue says a great deal about the political mood in the borough. Royal Victoria is one of the Greens’ stated target seats in this election, and Labour clearly knows it faces a genuine challenge. If the party was confident about its record and support, it would talk about housing, public services, transport and the future of the area — not calling the Met over a nomination form.
This is not the first hint that Brayshaw knows he’s in trouble. Back at the council’s budget setting meeting in February he devoted his entire contribution to the debate to a culture war rant about the Greens.
If the best Labour chief whip can do is play amateur detective with address labels, it’s a clear sign he knows his time in might be up. And that is the real story here.