What I witnessed on polling day
— In medieval times the east of London reeked of urine from tanning, boiled bones for soap and other unpleasant trades that would not operate inside the controlled boundaries of the City of London. Today, different but equally unpleasant smells prevail there: allegations of corruption, voter fraud and a stolen election.
There are continuing investigations into such allegations, which will run their course. I was on the ground on election day, as a polling agent for John Biggs, the Labour candidate for mayor of Tower Hamlets. Regularly visiting the polling stations to check turnout, I found that, at each station, there were always far more than the two campaigners permitted from incumbent mayor Lutfur Rahman’s Tower Hamlets First party. Outside the Brick Lane polling station, there were usually about two dozen men (they were almost always men), thrusting leaflets and ‘sample’ ballot papers into voters’ hands as they squeezed past. I am told some of these sample papers actually tumbled out of ballot boxes when they were opened at the count.
I saw a man take a ballot paper off a woman I assumed to be his wife, and move to fill it in for her, until the presiding officer shouted at him to stop. He then stared intently at her, standing, in my view, much too close while she voted. There have been widespread reports of similar behaviour across the borough.
Everyone at the count that night had campaigned hard for weeks, and spent the day getting out the vote. Suddenly, we were locked in a room with no refreshments for hours on end, waiting for the count to commence after an interminable vote verification process. It took eight hours to verify just the votes for the mayoralty, and a further six to count them.
Large numbers of Rahman’s supporters appeared outside, in anticipation of his victory. At about 6pm we were told by the police that we could not leave the building because they could not guarantee our safety. This included the safety of two members of parliament and a member of the shadow cabinet. I personally did not feel threatened: I think the atmosphere for them was one of celebration and excitement. But there were people, including the police, who differed in their assessment.
Five police vans parked outside and officers formed a barrier across the entrance to the art deco Troxy cinema where the count was taking place. The atmosphere became tense, with the police fearing a rush to enter the building when the result was announced. They were also concerned that should Rahman not win in the first round, the crowd might erupt in anger at a result they had been told would be a cakewalk. Announcements were made to stop tweeting sampling or predictions as this was apparently adding to the tension outside.
When Rahman was finally declared the winner, after a second round, at 3am and by a small margin, he was asked by the police to quickly address his supporters and then encourage them to move on. While the mayor did that, a few of us who asked to leave were bundled out of a side door.
The returning officer then chose to commence the council election count just after 3am. Exhausted council staff, who had spent an entire day staffing polling stations and then had counted votes all of the next day, had to try to focus tired eyes on counting votes from some highly marginal wards. Apparently the candidates were asked what they wanted to do. Few trusted that the ballot boxes could be sealed again without the risk of overnight tampering, itself a sad state of affairs.
The issue of race appeared frequently in the campaign. Criticism of Rahman was deflected by the lazy and offensive brush-off that it was a racist attack. Genuine policy differences were dismissed as an attack on the Bengali mayor and his community. It was astonishing to see Biggs, who has fought the extreme right in the East End throughout his career, smeared as a racist.
This hit home to me when I tweeted a picture of the police vans outside the count. Astonishingly, it was retweeted hundreds of times. To my horror it was mainly being done so by the far-right in Tower Hamlets – lots of English Defence League members, saying it was proof of sharia law in the UK and the ‘Bengali-isation’ of the borough. Utter nonsense, of course. But Rahman played with fire and has stoked this community polarisation.
Labour lost the mayoralty and some first-class councillors. Thankfully, some excellent Labour councillors were also returned. Tower Hamlets needs a fiercely strong and capable Labour party and the new leader of the Labour group, Rachael Saunders, and her colleagues will have to work with local members of parliament Rushanara Ali and Jim Fitzpatrick to provide this leadership and hold the re-elected mayor to account for the good of the East End.
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Tom Sleigh is a councillor in the City of London and a member of Tower Hamlets Labour party
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Typical labour lies. In case you forgot all the video evidence that exists of polling stations shows only labour activists over crowding the entrances. This is and always has been a feature of Tower Hamlets labour, and Tory and respect party leaders always complained against labour about it. Now suddenly it’s Tower Hamlets First… How convenient.
If it’s illegal, it is also illegal when labour do it.
This is really concerning when in the 21st century the electoral commission cannot ensure a safe and fully democratic election in a London borough. In order to ensure a fair democratic process, if Tower Hamlet’s council and the presiding officer cannot be counted on then then another council or body external to area should oversee and count the vote, including making sure that the rules around polling stations are strictly adheared to.
Jimmy. I saw this on Facebook. More than 2 activists (the post suggests 38 others too!). Could they get any closer to the polling station? Oh and what an interesting shirt. At first I thought it was a jockey looking for his racehorse, but then realised it was a straightforward “if you are bangladeshi you will vote for Lutfur” ploy.
Let me remind everyone, in case they had forgotten, that Ken Livingstone openly supported Lutfur Rahman when the latter had been kicked out of the Labour Party. Jimmy Jones is suffering from severe delusions. And where were the police? They were certainly very much in evidence at the polling stations in Camden, at least at the couple at which I acted as a number-taker and at the one I voted at.
The Labour Party has actively promoted equal respect for all cultures…good, bad or completely wicked…for years. Some may find the consequences laudable. Others not. None should find them surprising.
In view of yesterday’s report, it is all the more scandalous that the police did nothing on the day to disperse the “supporters” at the polling station, no doubt out of fear/cowardice. As a teller in Camden and previously in Tottenham I can assure Jimmy Jones that we always scrupulously respected the two-person rule. Some of the polling officials even left us standing out in the rain, we considered it a massive privilege if they gave us a chair and actually allowed us to shelter.