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Newham mayoral election 2026: meet the Conservative party candidate Terri Bloore

In a borough that has not had a single Conservative councillor since 1994, Bloore says reception on the doorstep has been 'surprisingly positive'

Photograph of Conservative party candidate for mayor of Newham, Terri Bloore
Conservative party candidate for mayor of Newham, Terri Bloore. Photograph: Terri Bloore
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Of the eight candidates standing to be elected as mayor of Newham, one is in the Labour party and three used to be.

Aside from the Labour candidate Forhad Hussain, the Green Party’s Areeq Chowdhury, Reform’s Clive Furness and Newham Independents leader Mehmood Mirza are all former Labour party members.

Not so Terri Bloore, the Conservative Party’s candidate – and this, she says, is what makes her different.

In a borough that has not had a single Conservative councillor since 1994, Bloore says reception on the doorstep has been “surprisingly positive”.

“I was taken aback, actually, by some of the comments from residents who have said, I voted Labour all my life, my parents have always voted Labour, yet we need change,” she told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS).

“There’s a realisation that some of the other mayoral candidates are from Labour, they’ve defected from Labour, and we need change.”

Locally, Bloore says Labour “is not strong on the economy, and is not strong with finances”.

“We’ve seen that with the mishandling of the finances over the last few years in Newham,” she says. Bloore says that, in contrast, the Conservatives “can be trusted”.

“The fact we’ve got a plan and it’s not just words, what we’re saying is resonating with businesses, the community and residents”, she says.

Pledges to freeze council tax are a bold move at a time when councils across the country are struggling to fund the rising costs of services they are legally required to provide.

Council finance staff predict that – based on current spending – the Town Hall will be £15.5 million short of what it needs to cover spending by 2029. And that is assuming council tax rises by 5 per cent each year.

But Bloore says there are other ways of generating cash, such as fining more people for littering and anti-social behaviour – and selling the council’s Docklands headquarters at Royal Albert Dock.

“It’s a £111 million pet project from Labour, and it stands practically empty,” she claims.

“It’s for people who work in the council who could work from home. I’ve walked past many-a-time and it looks derelict – I mean there’s not many people there.

“So, this building could be resold. That would be £111 million that could be sold off to freeze the council tax.”

Another thing Bloore would like to see is “a thorough audit of where the money is going” at the council, claiming “there is absolutely no transparency over the current Labour finances”.
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She says: “We need to be able to see exactly where that money’s spent, and see the ins and outs. But we’ve not seen that in comparison to other councils.”

The Town Hall’s current Labour administration says much of the blame for councils’ struggles is because they were “underfunded” by Conservative governments.

Demand for social care, special educational needs services and temporary homelessness accommodation has risen, as have costs. But funding has not kept pace. Yet Bloore says this is “pushing blame to another party”.

“They’re bound to say that,” she says. “That’s politics 101.” Instead, Bloore says the council could “prioritise” its relationship with voluntary and community groups that could “help alleviate the pressure the council’s under”.

Similar to other candidates, Bloore promises that a Conservative-led council would deliver “safe streets” and a “clean Newham”.

Unlike others, she has also touted plans for a “Newham First” card that could be used to access council services such as libraries, and also give older people discounts at council gyms and for parking.

Yet the parties widely-tipped to gain most from a predicted drop in Labour’s support are the Greens, the Newham Independents and Reform UK, rather than the Conservatives.

Bloore is sceptical. “If you look throughout history, there’s been Labour and there’s been the Conservatives, and there’s different smaller parties that have their moments”, she says.

“Those parties wax and wane in terms of popularity, and the fact they’ve not got the experience – they’ve not got the heritage of running a national government, running local government.”

Bloore says the Conservatives are targeting every ward in the borough.

If she does win, the Conservatives would have their first experience of running Newham in the borough’s entire history. However, there is a lot of competition.

The LDRS is aiming to interview candidates from as many parties as possible ahead of the elections on Thursday 7 May.

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